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    Emma Peel was a fictional television spy played by Diana Rigg in the British 1960s adventure series The Avengers.


        Emma Peel
            Character
            Emma Peel in videogames
            Emma Peel Avengers Episodes (in chronological order)

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    Character
    The partner of John Steed, Peel was introduced as a replacement for the popular Cathy Gale, played by actress Honor Blackman, who left the series at the end of the programme's third season to co-star in the James Bond film Goldfinger.

    Elizabeth Shepherd was cast as Emma Peel and production on the fourth season began. After filming all of one episode and part of a second, however, the producers decided that Shepherd was not right for the part, and she was dismissed. No footage of Shepherd as Peel is known to have survived.*

    The producers scrambled to find a replacement and found her in Diana Rigg; the Shepherd episodes were subsequently refilmed.

    The character was notable for a number of characteristics. She is a feminist heroine, eschewing traditional "damsel-in-distress" portrayals of women (she is rarely bested in any fight and rescues Steed as often as he rescues her.) She's a master of martial arts and a formidable fencer. A certified genius, she specializes in chemistry and other sciences. She is often seen in episodes engaging in artistic hobbies and had success in industry at the helm of the company of her late father, Sir John Knight. The name "Emma Peel" is a play on the phrase "Man Appeal", or "M. Appeal".* which the production team stated was one of the required elements of the character.

    Her style of dress typified the period, and the character is still a fashion icon. John Bates was brought in as the costume designer for Emma Peel in the second half of Season 4. He created a wardrobe of black and white op-art mod clothing and mini skirts. Before this, people had believed that lines, circles and other bold patterns would not work on the television cameras of the day. It was also filmed before the mini skirt had become mainstream. Bates even had to stop leaving hems on the mini skirts because the production team kept lowering them again. He also licensed his designs to several manufacturers under the Avengerswear label and these pieces were sold in various shops throughout the country. She is often best-remembered for the leather catsuit she wore early on in her first season, but in fact Rigg disliked wearing leather and John Bates designed softer stretch jersey and PVC catsuits for her instead. For the colour season, the designer was Alun Hughes who used bold colours and lurid, psychedelic patterns. Hughes also created the Emmapeeler catsuit which was made of stretch jersey in bright block colours. The Emmapeelers and several other pieces from this season's wardrobe were also licensed and sold in the shops. She drove a convertible Lotus Elan coupé at high speeds, and convincingly portrayed any series of undercover roles, from nurse to nanny. Her favorite guise was that of a women's magazine reporter, trying to interview big business tycoons and rich playboys.

    Peel's interactions with Steed range from witty banter to sexual tension. The tension was never broken except for a chaste peck on the cheek she gives Steed at the end of her final episode before departing with her husband, Peter Peel. He was a test pilot and was lost on a mission. When he returns, at the end of "The Forget-Me-Knot", Peel leaves Steed and her spy career behind. In the distant shot in which he appears, Peter Peel looks suspiciously like Steed.

    In real life, history had repeated itself and Diana Rigg had chosen to leave the series for a number of reasons, one of which was in order to accept a role in the James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service, much as Honor Blackman had left the series for Bond several years earlier.

    Emma Peel was replaced by the much younger agent Tara King played by actress Linda Thorson, but appeared one last time in an episode of The New Avengers entitled "K is for Kill." Rigg had declined an offer to appear on the series, so stock footage of her from an Avengers episode was used instead.

    The character was revived and reworked for the 1998 film version of the show, with Uma Thurman playing Peel and Ralph Fiennes playing Steed.

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    Emma Peel in videogames

    Emma Peel seems to be the inspiration for the videogame character Cate Archer in the first-person shooter game No One Lives Forever.

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    Emma Peel Avengers Episodes (in chronological order)

      The Murder Market
      The Master Minds
      Dial a Deadly Number
      Death at Bargain Prices
      Too Many Christmas Trees
      The Cybernauts
      The Gravediggers
      Room Without a View
      A Surfeit of H2O
      Two's a Crowd
      Man-Eater of Surrey Green
      Silent Dust
      The Hour That Never Was
      The Town of No Return
      Castle De'ath
      The Thirteenth Hole
      Small Game for Big Hunters
      The Girl from Auntie
      Quick-Quick Slow Death
      The Danger Makers
      A Touch of Brimstone
      What the Butler Saw
      The House That Jack Built
      A Sense of History
      How To Succeed....At Murder
      Honey for the Prince
      The Fear Merchants (This episode saw The Avengers change from b/w into colour)
      Escape in Time
      The Bird Who Knew Too Much
      From Venus With Love
      The See-Through Man
      The Winged Avenger
      The Living Dead
      The Hidden Tiger
      The Correct Way to Kill
      Never, Never Say Die
      Epic
      The Superlative Seven
      A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Station
      Something Nasty in the Nursery
      The Joker
      Who's Who???
      Death's Door
      Return of the Cybernauts
      Dead Man's Treasure
      The £50,000 Breakfast
      You Have Just Been Murdered
      Murdersville
      The Positive Negative Man
      Mission...Highly Improbable
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Emma Peel". link