REVIEWED BY JONATHAN LEWIS:

HAWAII FIVE-O “…And They Painted Daisies On His Coffin.” CBS, 07 November 1968 (Season 1, Episode 5). Jack Lord (Det. Steve McGarrett), James MacArthur (Danny Williams), Zulu, Kam Fong. Guest star: Gavin MacLeod. Writer: John D. F. Black. Directed by John Peyser.

   A tense, well written episode from Hawaii Five-O’s first season, “…And They Painted Daisies On His Coffin,” has two intersecting storylines. The first and central one concerns Danny Williams (James MacArthur) who, after a night of light drinking, confronts and kills a teenager who he witnessed trying to break into a car. The kid was hardly an angel, having had fired a gun at Dano.

   The problem is: when the rest of the police arrive at the scene and find the kid’s body, the gun has mysteriously disappeared. What Dano and McGarrett (Jack Lord) don’t immediately know, but the audience does know is that the deceased’s seventeen-year-old girlfriend was in the apartment and absconded with the weapon while Dano wasn’t looking.

   A good part of the episode is devoted to exploring the devastating impact that killing a suspect has on Dano. The media has already judged him as guilty. And so, it would seem, has the District Attorney who has him booked for murder. It’s up to McGarrett and his team to find the gun and the girl.

   This is where the episode moves squarely into the realm of what could only be called “hippiesploitation.” McGarrett tracks down the girl he’s been looking for. Turns out she’s a junkie and getting her supply from a flamboyantly deviant dealer named Big Chicken. Portrayed by Gavin MacLeod, who would go on to appear in The Mary Tyler Moore Show and star in The Love Boat, Big Chicken is the type of over-the-top counter-cultural criminal figure omnipresent in late 1960s crime television. It’s a solid memorable performance.

   All told, this episode is a rather cynical exploration of societal darkness in brightly lit Hawaii and still packs a bit of a punch.