

Gathering the principal suspects in his office, Wolfe reveals the identity of the murderer - Jean Estey.


Birch, however, took orders from an unknown woman. Horan attempts to distance himself from the other men, but when they learn this, the others identify him as a key ringleader of the blackmail scheme, along with Matthew Birch. It is revealed that the charity is part of a blackmail ring targeting desperate refugees who are in America illegally. Archie begins to investigate various individuals connected to the charity: Fromm's secretary Jean Estey, director Angela White, public relations manager Paul Kuffner, and the wife of the charity's attorney Dennis Horan. Wolfe identifies a charitable organization that Mrs Fromm supported as a likely link between the deaths. Angered that two people who came to him for help are now dead, Wolfe decides to solve the murders. Wolfe begins to suspect that Fromm knows who the driver is, but she refuses to reveal it the next day, Fromm is also murdered in an apparent hit-and-run. Wealthy widow Laura Fromm arrives at Wolfe's office wearing the golden spider earrings and asking to hire his services. Angered by Wolfe's reluctance to get involved, Archie uses the money to place an advert in the newspapers asking for the woman driving the car to contact Wolfe. Soon after, Pete's mother brings Wolfe $4.30 that Pete has saved and asks him to find Pete's killer. Purley Stebbins informs them that Pete has been killed by a hit-and-run driver, as well as INS agent Matthew Birch. The next night, the pair are shocked when NYPD Sgt. Pete claims that a woman wearing distinctive golden spider-shaped earrings asked him to get a police officer while he was cleaning the windshield of the car she was driving at a stoplight, and believes that her male passenger was holding her hostage. Its success led to the A&E original series A Nero Wolfe Mystery (2001–2002).Īfter Wolfe reacts petulantly to a change made in one of his favorite meals, his assistant Archie Goodwin decides to prank him by allowing a boy from the neighborhood, Pete Drossos, into the house to consult with Wolfe on what Pete believes is a case. When it first aired on A&E on March 5, 2000, The Golden Spiders was seen in 3.2 million homes, making it the fourth-most-watched A&E original movie ever. Veteran screenwriter Paul Monash adapted the novel, and Bill Duke directed. Set in 1950s Manhattan, it stars Maury Chaykin as the heavyweight detective genius Nero Wolfe, and Timothy Hutton as Wolfe's assistant, Archie Goodwin, narrator of the Nero Wolfe stories. The Golden Spiders: A Nero Wolfe Mystery is a 2000 American crime drama television film based on the 1953 novel by Rex Stout.
