Perry Mason (TV film series)
A series of 30 Perry Mason television films aired on NBC from 1985 to 1995 as sequels to the CBS TV series Perry Mason. After a hiatus of nearly 20 years, Raymond Burr reprised his role as Los Angeles defense attorney Mason in 26 of the television films. Following Burr's death in 1993, Paul Sorvino and Hal Holbrook starred in the remaining four television films that aired from 1993 to 1995, with Sorvino playing lawyer Anthony Caruso in the first of these and Holbrook playing "Wild Bill" McKenzie in the last three.
Perry Mason (TV film series)
Perry Mason is a fictional character, an American criminal defense lawyer who is the main character in works of detective fiction written by Erle Stanley Gardner. Perry Mason features in 82 novels and 4 short stories, all of which involve a client being charged with murder, usually involving a preliminary hearing or jury trial. Typically, Mason establishes his client's innocence by finding the real murderer. The character was inspired by famed Los Angeles criminal defense attorney Earl Rogers.
Robert W. Douglass illustrated "The Case of the Crying Swallow" for the August 1947 issue of The American Magazine
Warren William as Perry Mason in The Case of the Lucky Legs (1935), with Genevieve Tobin and Patricia Ellis
Donald Woods portrayed Perry Mason in The Case of the Stuttering Bishop (1937)
William Hopper and Raymond Burr in the CBS-TV series Perry Mason (1957–1966)