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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/b23e7301de6e98a0a5ad440ea13f8c93.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350: '' Before [[Creator/PierceBrosnan he]] [[Film/GoldenEye was James Bond]], he was Remington Steele''.[[note]]This was an actual {{Tagline}} used when the series was released on DVD.[[/note]]]]
3
4->''"Try this for a deep, dark secret: the great detective, Remington Steele? He doesn't exist. I invented him. Follow. I always loved excitement, so I studied, and apprenticed, and put my name on an office. But absolutely nobody knocked down my door. A female private investigator seemed so...feminine. So I invented a superior. A decidedly ''masculine'' superior. Suddenly there were cases around the block. It was working like a charm...until the day ''he'' walked in, with his blue eyes and mysterious past. And before I knew it, he assumed Remington Steele's identity. Now I do the work, and he takes the bows. It's a dangerous way to live, but as long as people buy it, I can get the job done. We never mix business with pleasure. Well, almost never. I don't even know his real name!"''
5-->--'''Laura Holt''''s OpeningNarration for Season One
6
7A 1982–87 Creator/{{NBC}} series about private investigator Laura Holt and the handsome, nameless conman with a fascination for ''{{film noir}}'' who strolled into her life and very publicly took over the identity of her fictional "employer". To the surprise of both Laura and her partners Murphy Michaels and Bernice Fox, the conman with five passports (all in the names of Creator/HumphreyBogart roles) turns out to be not too bad at detective work, although the degree to which he relies on the plots of old movies as his inspiration infuriates just about everyone.
8
9After the first season, Murphy and Bernice were replaced by a single character, Mildred Krebs, to allow more stories to focus on the growing chemistry and hesitant romance between Laura and "Steele". Eventually Steele became a considerable investigator in his own right, relying less on his knowledge of movies and more on the experience he'd gained with Laura.
10
11''Remington Steele'' made a lasting star of Creator/PierceBrosnan and won him the role of Film/JamesBond. Not without some controversy, though; Brosnan was cast in ''Film/TheLivingDaylights'' after ''Steele'' had been cancelled, but as soon as the announcement had been made, NBC uncanceled the show '''at the very last minute''', using contractual obligation to force Brosnan to give up the role and return to TV. Creator/TimothyDalton ended up playing Bond in that film, and Brosnan had to wait for almost ten years to play Bond in 1995's ''Film/GoldenEye''. The show also made a lesser star of Creator/StephanieZimbalist (daughter of Creator/EfremZimbalistJr) for the duration of its run.
12
13Originally written as a {{dramedy}}, with Steele intended to be a comic-relief figurehead while the focus was on Laura, but Brosnan's charisma and the chemistry between him and Zimbalist took over the plots.
14
15One of the show's more prominent quirks was the fact that it [[IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming always used the word "Steele" as part of every episode title]]. At first these were clever and/or amusing puns often related to the plot -- "Steele Crazy After All These Years", "You're Steele The One For Me" -- but as time went on the writers ran out of good 'steel/steal/still' puns, and took to just inserting the word into titles, seemingly at random ("Small Town Steele"). In one episode they managed to use both characters' names ("Red Holt Steele").
16
17The trope TheRealRemingtonSteele, while not occurring in the show, takes its name from it.
18
19----
20!!This show provides examples of:
21* AccidentalMisnaming: In the first season, Steele invariably referred to Laura Holt's secretary Bernice Foxe as "Miss Wolf". It seemed Steele genuinely couldn't remember her last name, even though she told him it a million times. He seemed to have no problem remembering her first name though.
22* ActorAllusion: Even though he wouldn't be Bond for another 9 years until Film/GoldenEye in 1995, Remington Steele could be seen as almost a prequel series to Pierce's Bond. Steele is seen handling similar situations that a secret agent would find himself in, and proves his cunning and wit through many episodes. Pierce can be frequently seen wearing tuxedos. Steele even has a MysteriousPast, perfect for his role as Bond. As the series progresses, Steele begins to take on more of a [[TookALevelInBadass serious personality as he improves his detective skills]], sometimes becoming indistinguishable from that of Pierce's Bond. Later on in the series, Steele's British background becomes canon and is heavily implied he is connected to British Secret Intelligence. He even shares the same accent as Bond, and the series ends [[AmbiguousEnding very ambiguously.]]
23** In one scene, Steele has [[SexualEuphemism a rather innuendo-laden conversation with Laura about Ornithology.]] This scene is almost directly replicated in Film/DieAnotherDay, when Bond meets and flirts with Jinx. He even has binoculars, a blue shirt and cigar, just like what he had in Remington Steele.
24** Film/TomorrowNeverDies has Paris Carver. Paris just happens to be an old flame of James Bond, played by Creator/TeriHatcher, a brunette not unlike that of Creator/StephanieZimbalist's beautiful Laura Holt.
25** Pierce's Bond is revealed to be an orphan, just like Remington Steele. The climbing accident death of James' parents that is mentioned in Film/GoldenEye could simply be a cover story created by British Intelligence, with the real history of James' parents being revealed in the final episodes of the show instead. Or, it could all [[AmbiguousEnding be an elaborate ruse, with Remington Steele working as a double agent for British Intelligence the entire time.]]
26** "Before he was James Bond, he was Remington Steele" was the actual tagline when the series was released on DVD...
27* ADayInTheLimelight: Season 2's "Hounded Steele" focuses on Mildred and her life outside of the office.
28* AllForNothing: All of the madcap antics in "Steele in the Chips" end up for naught, [[spoiler:as a goat eats the last cookie and the recipe died with the creator]].
29* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: Butch Bemis in "Let's Steele a Plot".
30* AlwaysMurder: Averted at least once, in a season 1 episode where the death turns out to have been a suicide carefully staged to look like a murder, turning the entire plot into an elaborate in-universe MurderMystery DinnerTheatre, albeit one with an actual corpse. It qualifies as a FairPlayWhodunnit, to boot.
31* BadBadActing: Bernard in "Steele in the Family".
32* BaseballEpisode: "Second Base Steele".
33* BecomingTheMask: TheMole impersonates the fictitious Steele as a place to hide, but eventually settles into the role.
34* BelligerentSexualTension: The relationship between Steele and Laura.
35* TheBoxingEpisode: "Steele Knuckles And Glass Jaws," in which a baby is found in a boxer's locker and he asks the Steele agency for help. Hijinx ensue as the boxer readies for a match and Remington is revealed to be a very competent boxer.
36* CaliforniaDoubling: Inverted in "Puzzled Steele", which was filmed in Malta. A Maltese village [[spoiler:that turns out to be an in-universe prop]] looks a lot like old American Southwest towns.
37** Just plain averted in the season 2 premiere "Steele Away With Me," almost entirely set and shot in Mexico. [[SceneryPorn And they don't try to hide it]].
38* CallBack: Shortly before the events of "Puzzled Steele", Steele, Holt and Krebs visited a bar in Mykonos, where Steele had been before as referenced to in "Elegy in Steele".
39* ChainedHeat: Holt and Steele in "Steele Your Heart Away".
40* CharacterDevelopment: As the series goes on, Steele learns from Laura and becomes a better detective. He even uses his film knowledge to better use, often using films that better fit the situation.
41* CharacterNameAlias: Steele, a movie buff, has multiple passports, each bearing the name of a character Humphrey Bogart played in the movies. In a later episode, Laura catches him in a lie because a woman calling him uses the alias of an Creator/IngridBergman character.
42* CircusEpisode: In "High Flying Steele", Laura and Remington go undercover as aerialist trainees at a circus to investigate an old "accident" that left another performer paralysed.
43* CombatStilettos: Laura Holt. In the episode "Steele in the Chips," a guest star played by Geena Davis asks how Laura can run in high heels, to which she replies, "Practice." This happens after Laura has chased her several blocks, while Stephanie Zimbalist (who was very adept at running in heels) keeps up easily, all on camera.
44* TheCon: The episode "Sting of Steele", inspired by the movie ''The Sting'', plays a trick with betting on overseas sports results.
45* CousinOliver: rare adult version (in terms of audience reaction) with the addition of Tony Roselli in the abbreviated final season.
46* CrazyPrepared: Major Descoine, so ''very'' much, but especially in "Elegy in Steele." His crowning achievement of a long list of being waaaaay ahead of Steele & Holt involves having stolen [[spoiler:a diary from her childhood]] and using it to set them up for the final play: driving [[spoiler:Steele mad enough to threaten his life in front of a police officer, whom Descoine had previously arranged to be at that spot at that time just to hear Steele threaten him]].
47* DenserAndWackier: Season 3's "Steele in the Chips" is one of the very few episodes to be an outright farce, being a WholePlotReference to ''Film/ItsAMadMadMadMadWorld'' with [[ItMakesSenseInContext a tin of cookies]]. [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools This is not a bad thing]], as it's often considered the series' funniest episode.
48%%* DetectiveDrama
49* DistractedByTheSexy: Done by Laura in "Red Holt Steele" when Steele suggests she ShowSomeLeg à la Creator/ClaudetteColbert in ''Film/ItHappenedOneNight'' to throw security guards off while our heroes are on a corporate sabotage/murder case. Needless to say, it works.
50* {{Dramedy}}: The series generally balances both comedic and dramatic moments equally, though some episodes tip the balance one way or another.
51* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: For some reason, Steele fails to recognize the name [[Film/NorthByNorthwest George Kaplan]] in the second episode.
52* EngineeredPublicConfession: In the pilot, the heroes move a body from one room to another in a hotel. When the villain exclaims, "We left him in ''his'' room!" a door is opened to reveal a roomful of cops next door.
53* EpisodeOnAPlane: "Coffee, Tea or Steele".
54* EpunymousTitle: See IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming below.
55* EurekaMoment: Used regularly, with Steele being reminded of a plot point from a movie at a critical point in the case. Sometimes used as a RedHerring when Steele's movie references end up providing a plausible but entirely incorrect solution.
56-->'''Steele''': I think we're in the wrong movie.
57* EveryoneCanSeeIt: Steele and Laura, of course. The sexual tension is made very clear early on in the series.
58* {{Expy}}: ''Series/{{Moonlighting}}'' (created by an ex-''Series/RemingtonSteele'' writer). Pierce Brosnan even makes a rare non-NBC crossover appearance as Steele in one episode. (Also, the ''Magazine/{{MAD}}'' parody "Moon-fighting" is filed under "A Remington Steal Department.")
59* FakeUltimateHero: Everyone thinks Remington Steele is one of the great detectives, when it's usually Laura doing the work. This gets downplayed as the series goes on, as Steele [[CharacterDevelopment becomes a better detective]].
60* FingerGun: In one episode Laura holds an empty bottle to someones back to make them think she has a gun.
61* FingerLickingPoison: In one episode, the poison was in the glue on some envelopes Steele and Laura were expected to lick.
62* FugitiveArc: Major Descoine ''twice'' engineers this for the title character:
63** Once, Descoine frames Steele for a hit-and-run death. Steele and Laura have to try to solve the case while avoiding a plainclothes cop named Jarvis.
64** In a later episode, Descoine calls the police claiming that Steele and Laura threatened to kill him at a particular place at noon; he himself promises them they will be dead by noon that same day, then leads them on a merry chase. The trio arrive at the designated spot, where the cop tries to arrest Laura and Steele; Laura and Steele disarm the cop and steal his police cruiser to get away and resume their pursuit of Descoine.
65* {{Gangsterland}}: Seems to invoke this trope in having Steele obsessed with hard-boiled detective stories. He seemingly believed that they presented as accurate a picture of contemporary America and its slang as they did in the 1920s–1940s, when most of them were written.
66* GentlemanThief: Steele was this kind of character before assuming his role as private investigator.
67* GenreMashup: The series blended romantic comedy, drama, detective procedural and (towards the end of the series) international political intrigue and espionage.
68* GirlOfTheWeek:
69** Both Remington and Laura have episode specific love interests, often being old flames or rivals to the others affection. None of these last till the end of an episode, with the exception of [[RecurringCharacter Felicia]] Remington's OldFlame.
70** Mildred also has multiple love interests throughout the series. These usually last longer than the other two, though the men inevitably never appear again after their sole episodes.
71* HeroicBSOD: Steele undergoes a bit of one when he [[spoiler:mistakenly]] thinks he's run someone over with a car.
72* HisNameIs: In the series finale, Steele discovers that [[spoiler:his longtime mentor, Daniel Chalmers, is also his father. Chalmers dies just as Steele is asking him, "What is my real name?"]] See TheUnreveal.
73* HyperCompetentSidekick: The apparent "boss" (Steele) is explicitly a figurehead for PR purposes and Laura is the one who is, in fact, in charge. This is played for humour when Mildred is introduced, as she initially didn't know that Steele was a figurehead and thus treats him like the real boss.
74-->'''Mildred''': Wait, so Mr. Steele's the boss but Ms. Holt is the one in charge?
75-->'''Steele''': Surely, Mildred, having worked for the federal government, that shouldn't be too hard a concept to understand.
76* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: Each episode title has "Steele" somewhere in it, usually as a pun for "steal," "steel," or "still."
77** Nicely played with in "You're Steele the One for Me," where the expectation of a punny title (and the broken English in which the phrase is said in the episode) make the audience believe it's a pun for "you're still the one for me," but it's actually meant literally, as in, "you're Remington Steele, the person I'm trying to reach."
78* IfYoureSoEvilEatThisKitten: posing as a hitman, Steele is recruited by a terrorist group. But before revealing whom they have hired him to assassinate they want him to prove his mettle by killing one of their errant members:
79-->'''Steele''': (thinking quickly) For FREE? In front of WITNESSES?
80--> Terrorist leader: (with grudging admiration) Spoken like a true professional.
81* TheImmodestOrgasm: A plot point of sorts in "Steele Trap."
82* ImpossiblyDeliciousFood: The cookies in "Steele in the Chips", with the added kick that they are literally only one calorie.
83* InterpolSpecialAgent: One episode guest-starred Tom Baker (of ''Series/DoctorWho'' fame) as a Former Interpol agent whose investigations intersected Remington Steele's Case of the Week.
84* InterruptedSuicide: In the episode "Steele in Circulation", Steele starts the episode pulling a guy down off a bridge... and then has to spend most of the rest of it averting his attempts to walk into traffic and fling himself off roofs, until an attempt on the man's life gets him indignant enough to stop.
85* InventedIndividual:
86** One episode finds the detectives searching for a video game exec named George Kaplan. They find that Kaplan does not exist, and was part of the company's scheme to avoid a takeover.
87** Remington Steele himself, until the role is filled.
88* LineOfSightAlias: Laura Holt combined a Remington typewriter and the Pittsburgh Steelers to name her "fictitious" boss ''Series/RemingtonSteele''.
89* LogoJoke: The MTM kitten sports a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWQ7kJogTuM pipe and deerstalker cap a la Sherlock Holmes]].
90* LoveTriangle: In the first season, Steele and Laura's BelligerentSexualTension is accompaned by the agency's junior detective Murphy flirting with Laura and being happy whenever Steele looks bad.
91* LoveableRogue: Steele.
92* LukeIAmYourFather: Steele finds out in the last episode that [[spoiler:Daniel Chalmers, his mentor and fellow con-man,]] is actually his long-lost father.
93* MarriedAtSea: The producers royally pissed off many {{Shipp|ing}}ers when they had Remington attempting to enter into a CitizenshipMarriage with a random hooker, then had him and Laura wed at the end of the episode by a sea captain in a surly ceremony that wasn't anything near the consummation that many fans of the show were hoping for. This trend carried on to the ending, with the result being that Creator/PierceBrosnan publicly stated that the ending of the series in many ways was a [[{{FanDisservice}} disservice]] to the fans and the characters.
94* MasqueradingAsTheUnseen: The premise of the show. Brosnan's character adopts the identity of the unseen head of the detective agency, knowing that only Laura will know he's not the real deal and she can't expose him without exposing herself.
95* MistakenForGay: Steele is searching a missing man's hotel room when the man's ex-girlfriend happens to come in. Since the boyfriend had mentioned he was dating someone new, she assumes he meant Steele, and laments, "Why is it always the good-looking ones?"
96* MomentKiller: According to Steele, the ''entire universe'' was involved in a vast conspiracy to prevent him from getting chummy with Laura Holt.
97-->'''Laura''': Why are they shooting at us?\
98'''Steele''': Because we were kissing. Somebody ''always'' shoots at us when we're kissing!
99* TheMovieBuff: Steele is one, and the cases frequently remind him of movie references. [[RunningGag Often the wrong ones]].
100* MysteriousPast: Steele.
101* NastyParty: One early case started when a plastic surgeon shot himself to death while holding an invitation to an island resort's exclusive grand opening weekend. Laura and Steele pose as the physician and his nurse to attend the party, and soon the rest of the guests start dying off one by one.
102* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Conrad Janis's character in "Stronger than Steele" is ''totally not'' Clayton Moore.
103* NoNameGiven: We never learn Remington Steele's true name; even though we know the name of his supposed father (as revealed late in the series) is [[spoiler:Chalmers]], there's no guarantee Dad is using a real name, either. Based on the circumstances of Steele's birth [[spoiler:mother died in childbirth, father was in prison]], he may not even have a real name.
104** It could be supposed that since Chalmers always called him "Harry", that is at least the name his father chose for him. Whether it's his on a birth certificate anywhere is unknown.
105* NoOneSeesTheBoss: Finding people reluctant to hire a detective agency run by a woman, Laura instead poses as an employee of a never-seen fictitious male boss. This straight use of the trope gets turned on its ear once an actual person co-opts the role.
106%%* OddCouple
107* OohMeAccentsSlipping: a bizarre example. Both Steele and Pierce Brosnan are of Irish origin but both affect upper class English accents. In some episodes Steele employs a working class London accent for undercover work but Pierce Brosnan had been raised a working class boy in the London borough of Putney so it is likely this is more like his natural way of speaking.
108* OpeningNarration: In Season 1, Laura explained how her fake detective came to be played by a real person.
109* OpeningShoutOut: The first episode repeats the entire OpeningNarration describing the premise of the show. There's something of a reprise in the Fourth Season premiere.
110* OrMyNameIsnt: In "Steele Belted":
111-->'''Remington Steele:''' I guarantee your exoneration on all charges, Buddy, or my name isn't Remington Steele.
112-->'''Laura Holt:''' Your name isn't Remington Steele.
113-->'''Remington:''' A mere technicality.
114* ParentsForADay: Laura and Steele take care of her nieces and nephew in "Suburban Steele".
115-->'''Laura Holt:''' Hold on, kids. We're going to the movies!
116* PostScriptSeason: The Season 4 finale married off Laura and Steele, as the show's cancellation looked certain ''and'' Creator/PierceBrosnan had been offered the role of Film/JamesBond. However, ''because'' Brosnan got the Bond role, NBC decided to renew the show, bringing it back for a very lame half-season which lacked all of the charm of the preceding seasons ''and'' effectively scuttling Brosnan's big movie break. Brosnan didn't end up playing Bond for over a decade.
117* PreludeToSuicide: One of the biggest clues that the case in "[[spoiler:In the Steele of the Night]]" is SuicideNotMurder is that the victim has lots of dog food but no dog. Laura realizes he must have recently given away the dog he would no longer be able to care for.
118* PrematurelyMarkedGrave: In "Elegy in Steele", Laura and Steel are in pursuit of Major Descoine (after he threatened to kill them in the next hour) when they come across a selection of tombstones. Two of them have their names and that day's date carved on them (the date was that of the original broadcast of the episode).
119* PursuedProtagonist:
120** "Steele Crazy After All These Years" begins with intercuts between a man running across a campus and looking over his shoulder and a woman lounging around her house. The man reaches the house and pounds on the door, begging to be let in, but when the woman responds to the cries, he is gone and his body is found a few scenes later.
121** "Altared Steele" begins with an amnesiac man with a head wound trying to calm down a woman who finds him in her house, then running outside, driving off, and being followed first on foot, and then in a car, by a woman who tries to shoot him.
122** In "Elementary Steele", two costumed men break into a woman's apartment, causing her to flee into the street wearing a ModestyTowel and ride off on a motorcycle as they follow. However, it turns out that her pursuers were being manipulated into thinking it was [[AllPartOfTheShow part of a novelty company's mystery scenario]] and aren't malicious.
123* PutOnABus: Murphy Michaels and Bernice Fox depart the agency after season 1. It is explained that Fox has run off with a saxophone player in true 'Some Like It Hot' fashion whilst Michaels has moved back to his native Colorado to open his own detective agency (James Read actually being cast as the co-lead in mini-series 'North and South').
124* RealLifeWritesThePlot: Steele was originally meant to be played by an American and some early episodes seem to reflect this, in one he makes an analogy about Babe Ruth and George Washington which seems out of place. The pilot itself was the second episode to be shot and presumably the last episode of the first bunch to be written, the pilot reflects that Steele is a foreigner. From the episode "Steele Trap," Steele is specifically stated to be Irish, like Brosnan.
125* RelativeError: Steele once saw Laura talking with her brother-in-law and thought she was having an affair. It didn't really help that the brother-in-law kept kissing her on the cheek...
126* ReplacedTheThemeTune: The first season featured the tune "Laura's Theme" as Stephanie Zimbalist explained the series premise. The second season introduced a theme based on a small bit of incidental music that played as Remington would say something like "God I'm good!" after Laura explained how the case was solved. They had a more upbeat variant for the third season opening and an even more upbeat version for the fourth, but the latter didn't take. "Laura's Theme" played during the final credits through all the seasons.
127** Incidentally, both themes were composed by Music/HenryMancini.
128* RetiredMonster: A downplayed example with Kevin Masters [[spoiler:AKA Le Renard]]. By his own admission, he has no regrets [[spoiler:being a former master thief]] and occasionally likes to imagine up new [[spoiler:heists]] in the present. However, he's also a NiceGuy who prefers a quite life who genuinely has a thing for Mildred. In some ways, he's kind of an older version of Steele.
129%%* {{Retool}}
130* RunningGag:
131** There are several moments showing that no one's quite sure what the relationship between Steele and Holt is. Mildred even bluntly tells them in "Hounded Steele" that she can't begin to comprehend what's going on between the two of them.
132** Steele, being TheMovieBuff that he is, often brings up movies related to the case hat hand. Often it's [[WrongGenreSavvy the wrong one]].
133* SequelHook: "Elegy in Steele" [[spoiler:(Major Descoine is caught, but his daughter "Minor" escapes at the end)]].
134* SesquipedalianSmith: Remington Steele.
135* SharpDressedMan: Steele. The producers felt nothing less than fine suits would be good enough for Pierce Brosnan and referred to him as a clothes horse. Evidently the Bond producers felt the same way.
136* SignificantReferenceDate: The date on the headstones in "Elegy in Steele", was the original broadcast date.
137* SpottingTheThread:
138** Kevin Masters giving his dog a collar with diamonds automatically [[spoiler:outs him as Le Renard,]] when Laura finds the news article about the Kronesbourgh Necklace, [[spoiler:which she recognizes as the dog's collar]].
139** Laura slowly realizes that a supposed millionaire actually doesn't exist and created as a false identity for a scam. As she relates, it was a good act to fool almost anyone...except someone who just happened to know ''exactly'' what it took to create and maintain a nonexistent boss.
140* StrictlyProfessionalRelationship: The cool-to-warm variant occurs with Remington Steele, private investigator. When Laura Holt put her detective skills on the market, she got no takers. Laura then created the fictional Remington Steele as her "boss". Soon a handsome fellow came by, and announced that he was, in fact, Remington Steele. Laura bristled at idea at first. However, Steele soon proved intuitive and useful as a partner. A slow thaw pervaded subsequent episodes.
141* SuspectExistenceFailure: Used in an ''[[Creator/AgathaChristie And Then There Were None]]'' reference plot.
142* SweetieGraffiti: Laura escapes police observation by hiding near a wall with a large graffiti heart and the initials MK and LH. As she emerges, she comments, "You may not have been much of a kisser, Marty Klopman, but you sure knew where to do it."
143* TakeThat: There was an episode with an elderly British spy who said "We in [=MI5=] thought James Bond was a sissy." Creator/PierceBrosnan was in the running to play James Bond when Creator/RogerMoore left the role, but had to back out due to commitments to ''Remington Steele''. [[Film/{{Goldeneye}} It all worked out in the end...]]
144* TallDarkAndHandsome: Steele again.
145* TenLittleMurderVictims: Had at least one of these, with Steele of course referencing ''Literature/AndThenThereWereNone'' and its signature plot twist: [[spoiler:the sixth person to 'die' faked his death and was actually the murderer]].
146* ThemedAliases: Remington does this in the pilot; all of his fake passports bear the name of a Creator/HumphreyBogart character.
147* ThouShaltNotKill: An episode during one of the early seasons has Steele believing he has run a man over with his car and killed him reveals that up to that point, despite his legally shady behavior and mysterious past, he'd never actually killed anyone before.
148* TownWithADarkSecret: Used this trope in "Small Town Steele," which cited the 1955 movie ''Bad Day at Black Rock''.
149* UndeadTaxExemption: The eponymous character is actually a made up persona taken over by a con man. He had no problems the first season, but the second season starts out with a visit from the IRS, curious about the lack of about twenty odd years of income tax filings.
150* UniquePilotTitleSequence: The first episode has Laura tell a slightly different story to since at this point she hasn't met the man who would take over Remington Steele's persona.
151* TheUnReveal: Steele asks his father what his real name is... only to find that his father has just died.
152** Given the circumstances surrounding Steele's birth as told to him by his father, his mother died in labour and he was in jail at the time, it's quite possible that Steele doesn't actually have a name, or that his name is Harry because that's what his dad called him.
153* TheVillainKnowsWhereYouLive: In the episode "Elegy in Steele", Major Descoine comes to the agency's office, promises Laura and Steele he'll kill them both by noon that day, and leads them on a chase around the city. One surreal stop is a richly-furnished Victorian-looking apartment in an otherwise abandoned building. On looking around, the detectives notice that the framed photographs scattered about the living room show them at work on recent cases (in clearly recognizable stills from previous episodes), and the penny drops:
154-->'''Steele:''' He's been FOLLOWING us! The bloody bugger's been SPYING on us!\
155'''Laura:''' It gives me the creeps.\
156'''The Minor:''' [''Enters carrying a loaded tea tray''] Oh, "cream," did you say?\
157[''Stops as Steele and Laura turn on her, Steele pointing his gun at her''] It's right here on the tray.
158* WillTalkForAPrice: In hot pursuit of Major Descoine in "[[Series/RemingtonSteele Elegy in Steele]]", Laura and Remington meet a deaf carver of tombstones (including one for each of them, listing that day's date—the RealLife original air date of the episode). He only plugs in his hearing aids and tells them which way Descoine went when presented with a $50 bill.
159* WillTheyOrWontThey: Laura and Steele's relationship is this, even when they get married.
160* WholePlotReference: Given the gimmick of Steele's identifying cases with old movies, this happens rather a lot.
161** Steele and Laura are investigating the attempts on the life of a horrible singer who, to their surprise, is headlining a sold-out concert tour. They go over the books to find the tour runners have been selling shares of it to dozens of people for 50% ''each''. They realize the guys were planning to [[SpringtimeForHitler have the tour close after a few bad shows and then take the money and run.]] But they never counted on [[SpannerInTheWorks a millionaire becoming so infatuated with the singer that he bought up every one of her shows]]. Steele sums it up all as "''Film/TheProducers''. Zero Mostel, Gene Wilder, United Artists, 1967."
162** An episode involving a cartoonist's murder has Steele and Laura realize the killer was {{Gaslighting}} the victim. They thus turn it around with their own scheme to break the guy into confessing.
163** Sometimes, a twist will have Steele cite a movie only for the case to take a turn and Steele realizes he was thinking of the wrong film.
164* WouldHitAGirl: Steele, amazingly, at least once. Although he did say "Forgive me" before doing so.
165* WrongGenreSavvy: Steele is a classic movie buff, and every case he and Laura Holt solve together reminds him of a classic movie. Often the wrong one....
166* YouAreBetterThanYouThinkYouAre: Mildred admits in "Hounded Steele" that she feels unimportant as merely the secretary, which is why she exaggerates what she does to her bowling group. Both Remington and Laura immediately assure her that they think she's a very important part of the agency.

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