The Ten Li'l Grifters Job
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| Title | The Ten Li'l Grifters Job |
| Season | 4 |
| Episode | 2 |
| Airdate | July 3, 2011 |
| Written by | Geoffrey Thorne |
| Directed by | Arvin Brown |
| Guests | William Russ Steven Flynn |
| Previous episode | The Long Way Down Job |
| Next episode | The 15 Minutes Job |
| Episode list | Season 4 |
| “ | Yes, Parker, I'd tell you if I murdered the mark. | ” |
From TNT: When a mark is killed suddenly in the middle of a sting, the team must scramble to complete the con and find the killer… before Nate goes down for murder.
Contents |
The Client
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An unnamed attorney is suing Morris Beck on behalf of a group of victims, following the collapse of three buildings his company built. Beck is responsible for her dismissal from a major Boston law firm (McGann, McCoy & Baker), and has the money to keep the suit from reaching a resolution. The attorney needs the plans for the buildings within one week, or the suit will be dismissed, and asks the team to recover them.
The Mark
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Morris Beck of Beckworx Construction. Beck's company is responsible for shoddy construction leading to three building collapses in ten years. Beck designs the buildings himself and supervises construction, but has never been held accountable for his sub-standard methods. He maintains a collection of blueprints which would prove his culpability in the building collapses and his responsibility for the injuries and deaths that resulted.
Beck owns a home on an island off the coast of Massachusetts. He throws an annual gala that includes a competition, with a guest list consisting largely of his competitors. The upcoming party is a murder mystery night, at which guests must dress as fictional detectives.
The Con
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It was a dark and stormy night... Not exactly what the team is counting on as Nate and Sophie meet with an attorney who is suing Morris Beck, the owner of a construction company using every means available to keep his case from coming to a decision. Fired from her law firm, she needs the team's help to find the blue prints to that will prove he is responsible for the collapse of three buildings, along with the injuries and deaths that accompanied them.
The con starts out simple enough: Nate and Sophie, as Dexter Gordon and Yma Sumac, meet with Beck on the pretext of reviewing plans for a new building in the middle east. With a few keystrokes, Sophie sends Hardison a skeleton key that will allow him access to Beck's computer records, and the blueprints. Instead, Hardison receives file numbers and GPS coordinates that indicate the plans are kept in a vault at his home, located off the coast of Massachusetts.
The team discover the way into his house is an upcoming murder mystery party he is holding the next night. Each of Beck's guests must attend as a famous literary detective: Ellery Queen (Nate), Irene Adler (Sophie), Charlie Suringo (Eliot), Nancy Drew (Parker) and a Hardy Boy (Hardison). Also attending the party are Beck's disgruntled partner Thomas Case (Inspector Bucket), his unappreciated assistant Porter (Mannix), an angry union boss, and Beck's spoiled daughter, along with many of his competitors, none of whom had any love lost for Beck.
The party begins with a drunken Beck greeting, and taunting, his guests.
Episode Notes
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- The episode title is adapted from an alternate title of Agatha Christie's 1939 mystery novel, And Then There Were None, in which guests at a house party on a remote island off the English coast die one-by-one in the manner of the verses of the children's nursery rhyme "Ten Little Indians".
- Yma Sumac, Sophie's cover identity, is the name of a Peruvian singer popular in the 1950's. Nate's identity, Dexter Gordon, was a popular and innovative jazz saxophonist whose career spanned over fifty years.

Added by LeverageGuru- Nate's costume reproduces the costume Tim Hutton's father, Jim, wore in the 1975-6 NBC television series Ellery Queen. Unappreciated for its nostalgic style at the time, only 23 episodes of the series were made. Tim would later follow in his father's footsteps, starring in the period detective series Nero Wolfe, which ran for two seasons on A&E.
- Sophie's character, Irene Adler, features in the Sherlock Holmes novel "A Scandal in Bohemia."
- Eliot's Charlie Siringo was a real-life detective. Born in Texas, he was a Pinkerton agent who in his time worked with Wyatt Earp, pursued Butch Cassidy, and chased cattle rustlers in New Mexico, before becoming a detective novelist. He died in California in 1928.
- Parker and Hardison portray fictional teenaged detectives Nancy Drew and one of the Hardy Boys, mainstays of adolescent detective fiction from the 1920's to 1960's and beyond.
- At the opening of Act Two the band is heard playing music suggesting "Harlem Nocturne", made famous as the theme music for the 1984 series Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer, starring Stacey Keach.
- Other detectives appearing in the episode included television's Mannix (CBS, 1967-75), Magnum P.I. (CBS, 1980-88), Starsky & Hutch (ABC, 1975-79), and Miami Vice's Crockett and Tubbs (NBC, 1984-90), along with fiction's Dick Tracy, Sherlock Holmes, Inspector Bucket (from Dickens' Bleak House) and Hercule Poirot. Film detectives range from the Keystone Cops to Inspector Clousseau (The Pink Panther).
- The episode also includes a variety of traditional mystery plot devices, including the stormy night, a black-out during which the victim is murdered, a canny police detective, figured silhouetted against a lighted window and a collection of characters who have little reason to like one another, much less the victim.
Trivia
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- Careful examination of the episode when Hardison first looks up the island shows him searching for "Misery Island." Misery Island is a real island off the coast of Salem, Mass, but is currently a protected reservation.
- Beck's ill-used assistant complains about the time it took him to plant clues, such as the wrench in the library. This was a reference to the much-loved mystery game, Clue, where players must identify the murderer, the murder weapon and the location (Miss Scarlett, with a wrench, in the library.)
Episode Media
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Production Blog with Chris Downey and writer Geoffrey Thorne