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The following is a list of episodes for the Hawaiian Eye detective series. The American television series ran on the American Broadcasting Company 1959–1963. [1]Private investigator Tracy Steele (Anthony Eisley) and his half-Hawaiian partner, Tom Lopaka (Robert Conrad), own Hawaiian Eye, a combination detective agency and private security firm, located in Honolulu, Hawaii.
The series was parodied in a 1962 episode of The Flintstones in Season Three's "Hawaiian Escapade", billed as Hawaiian Spy with Wilma and Betty as huge fans of the show, in particularly over its hunky lead star, Larry Lava; where they win to be on the set of the production shot on Hawaiirock's Rockiki Beach (a parody on Waikīkī Beach) in the ...
Anthony Eisley (January 19, 1925 – January 29, 2003) was an American actor best known as one of the detective leads, Tracy Steele, in the ABC/Warner Brothers television series Hawaiian Eye. Early in his career, he was credited as Fred Eisley [ 1 ] and later was sometimes billed as Tony Eisley .
The Kamehameha Cloak (Hawaiian Eye) was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 01 October 2008 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were merged into List of Hawaiian Eye episodes. The original page is now a redirect to this page.
Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club graded the episode a B−, writing, "Valerie's mental illness just seems a little too controlled, a little too cool, somehow. Like Hopkins ' Lecter , she's what we secretly wish crazy people were like—Machiavellian monsters who always make it to the final reel."
9.10 [11] The body of university professor Elliot Thomas is found being fed to pigs and Max determines he was shot. As Jerry is given the task to wait for the pigs to defecate the bullet, Danny and Eric are enlisted to go undercover as a stand-in professor and student respectively to find the killer.
In its original American broadcast, "Hawaii" was viewed by 10.335 million viewers with a 4.3 rating/11% share in the 18-49 demographic making it the highest-rated episode of the season. [3] The episode also came second in its timeslot after American Idol. [4] It was also the best performance against American Idol both in viewers and ratings. [4]
The episode received positive reviews from critics. It holds a 96% positive rating with an average score of 7.6 out of 10 on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. The critics' consensus reads: "'Knots Untie' is an excellent, albeit unevenly scripted, foundation for the dangerous and degenerative societal clash it foreshadows." [3]