Jessica jaunts to Paris at the behest of an old friend whose fashion boutique is in financial trouble. When a local loan shark is murdered, Jessica must dig deep to find the truth.

Season 4, Episode 1: A Fashionable Way to Die (September 20, 1987)
Jessica flies to France to attend a big fashion show of one of her old friends. Will someone die? Have you ever watched this show?
Who’s in it, outside of Angela Lansbury?
Lee Bergere (Maxim Soury): A veteran character actor best known for extensive television work across the 1960s–80s, including frequent appearances in suspense and crime dramas. Best known to science fiction fans for playing Abraham Lincoln in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode “The Savage Curtain.” He’s also in the movies Time Trackers and played Joseph Anders on Dynasty.
Bill Beyers (Peter Appleyard): Primarily a working television performer who was in Tuff Turf.
Danielle Brisebois (Kim Bechet): Famous as a child star playing Stephanie Mills on All in the Family and Archie Bunker’s Place, and Molly in the original Broadway cast of Annie. She later became a successful songwriter (co-writing “Unwritten” for Natasha Bedingfield).
Randi Brooks (Lu Watters): Appeared in the cult sci-fi comedy The Man with Two Brains and the 80s action-horror Terror on Highway 91, as well as TerrorVision and Hamburger: The Motion Picture.
Taina Elg (Claudia Soury): A Golden Age film actress with a strong background in stage and screen, but she was also in Hercules In New York.
Juliet Prowse (Valerie Bechet): A celebrated dancer and performer known for musical films and television variety work. She’s in Who Killed Teddy Bear.
Barbara Rush (Eva Taylor): Known for Magnificent Obsession, The Young Philadelphians and her long-running role on 7th Heaven. Remembered for science fiction and suspense films such as It Came from Outer Space.
Fritz Weaver (Paris Inspector Hugues Panassié): A distinguished stage and screen actor strongly associated with high-profile genre television. Known for standout roles in psychological thrillers and science-fiction/horror classics like Creepshow, Demon Seed and episodes of The Twilight Zone.
Karen Hensel (Marie): A steady television character actress with a long career of guest roles across soap operas, crime dramas and procedural series, including the movies Psycho 3 and Caged Fear.
Michel Voletti (Officer Luter): Appears frequently in European film and television productions, often in supporting roles as law enforcement or authority figures.
Bonnie Ebsen (Yvette): Daughter of Buddy Ebsen; she appeared in several 80s hits like The Fall Guy and Hunter. She’s also in Black Magic Woman, which stars Apollonia and Mark Hamill.
Louise Dorsey (Dede): She’s the daughter of legendary crooner Engelbert Humperdinck and was the voice of Jetta on Jem.
Jean-Paul Vignon (Emcee): A character actor frequently cast in sophisticated or stylized supporting roles, often in European-influenced productions and genre-adjacent television.
Jules Hart (Margo): Appearing under the name Julie Silliman, she’s most often associated with television guest roles and supporting appearances in dramatic and thriller-oriented episodes.
Smaller roles include Alain Saint-Alix as a bellman, Louis Plante as Albert (as Louis R. Plante), Larry Carr, Paul LeClair and Ken Clayton as fashion show spectators, Conrad Hurtt as a cop and Nico Stevens as a reporter.
What happens?
Jessica does what she does best: flies to France, walks into an absolutely glitter-soaked mess and immediately becomes the only competent investigator in a 10-mile radius of haute couture after someone dies.
Her old friend Eva Taylor is on the verge of a career breakthrough, finally ready to shine at a major fashion show, if only she hadn’t signed her soul away in a contract with Maxim Soury, a man who treats financial backing like organized extortion but with better tailoring. He offers her funding and a loan extension in exchange for 50% of her brand, which is not a good deal, but she has to accept it.
Meanwhile, the supporting cast is busy turning Paris into a soap opera:
- Valerie Bechet, nightclub chanteuse and Maxim’s discarded mistress, is singing heartbreak ballads professionally while living one bad mood away from homicide.
- Lu Watters, inexplicably broke fashion superstar, is bleeding money thanks to Maxim’s blackmail operation involving some very inconvenient photographs from her past.
- Officer Panassie is busy being confidently wrong about literally everything, including why Jessica wants to be anywhere near him.
Then Maxim turns up dead.
Naturally, the glitter immediately curdles into suspicion; everyone has a motive, and Eva is one bad headline away from becoming the designated scapegoat. J.B., meanwhile, is forced to untangle a web of blackmail, jealousy, and fashion-industry moral rot while politely tolerating French bureaucracy and men who think she’s there for romance instead of forensic reasoning.
Who did it?
The killer turns out to be Valerie Bechet.
Maxim’s habit of discarding women like seasonal collections finally catches up to him when he pushes things too far, this time involving Valerie’s daughter, Kim. The realization that Maxim has set his sights on the next generation is the final straw. Valerie, already simmering with resentment over being tossed aside and replaced, decides the show must go on permanently without its producer.
One dramatic confrontation later, Maxim is dead, Valerie’s nightclub act takes on a whole new level of tragic irony, and Jessica is left doing what she always does: solving a murder while everyone else processes the emotional wreckage of dating financially predatory villains in couture.
Eva is cleared, the fashion show limps forward in scandalous glory, and France once again learns the hard way that if Jessica Fletcher shows up, someone in your social circle is statistically going to go to Heaven. Or Hell. Or whatever.
Who made it?
This was directed by TV veteran Nick Havinga and written by Donald Ross, the man who wrote Hamburger: The Motion Picture.
Does Jessica dress up and act stupid? Does she get some?
Dudes in France love some le belle-âge J.B. But as far as we know, no hanky panky.
Was it any good?
Yes!
Any trivia?
While the episode is busy serving murder, fashion and scandal, it’s also quietly swinging with some deep-cut jazz references:
- Valerie and Kim Bechet tip their hats to Sidney Bechet, the legendary New Orleans clarinetist and soprano sax player who brought his sound to Europe as early as 1919—and later spent much of his final decade living it up in France.
- Inspector Hugues Panassié is named after Hugues Panassié, a major French jazz critic and author who championed traditional jazz and wrote books such as The Real Jazz.
- Officer Luter is a nod to Claude Luter, the Parisian bandleader who frequently collaborated with Bechet during his French years.
- Eva Taylor shares her name with Eva Taylor, a 1920s vocalist who recorded extensively with her husband, bandleader and songwriter Clarence Williams.
- And then there’s Lu Watters—borrowed from Lu Watters, a (male) trumpeter who helped spark a New Orleans-style revival scene in San Francisco back in 1940.
In the unmistakably Paris-set exterior shots, it’s not actually Angela Lansbury you’re seeing up close. A stand-in of similar build steps in, dressed identically but with slightly darker hair, cut shorter in the back. The camera then goes into full “don’t look too closely” mode, keeping her at a distance, filming from behind, or, conveniently, staging cars in the foreground. When she arrives at Le Jules Verne, the illusion gets especially cheeky: just as she turns toward the camera, another character’s hat swoops in to block her face.
Give me a reasonable quote:
Paris Inspector Hugues Panassié: The color is immaterial. Place her in custody. Panassie has done it again, huh?
Jessica Fletcher: Yes, Inspector, I think you have.
Paris Inspector Hugues Panassié: Merci, madam.
Jessica Fletcher: I think you’ve once again arrested the wrong woman.
What’s next?
When a prisoner is released from jail after serving 20 years, he returns to Cabot Cove to prove he was wrongly convicted. Swamp Thing is in this episode!
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