Signed, Sealed, Delivered (TV series)

Signed, Sealed, Delivered (original title: Dead Letters ), also known as Lost Letter Mysteries, is a drama/romantic comedy television series that aired on the Hallmark Channel in 2014 from April 20 through June 22. Created by Touched by an Angel's Martha Williamson, Signed, Sealed, Delivered focuses on four dedicated United States Postal Service employees who work in the Dead Letter Office. They take it upon themselves to track down intended recipients of undeliverable mail. Similarly to her previous program, the show promotes Williamson's Christian beliefs as the characters struggle with their faith, or lack of it, as one character is agnostic, while relying on divine intervention to accomplish their task. It is set in Denver, Colorado but filmed mostly in the Vancouver area. On October 12, 2013, a two-hour pilot movie aired on Hallmark and was a ratings success. It was the number-one television movie on its airdate and the number-two movie for that week. The movie was watched by 1.72 million viewers. Following one season of the TV series, Hallmark announced Signed, Sealed, Delivered would transition to a series of television films on its Hallmark Movies & Mysteries channel.

Main

 * Eric Mabius as Oliver O'Toole
 * Kristin Booth as Shane McInerney
 * Crystal Lowe as Rita Haywith-Dorman
 * Geoff Gustafson as Norman Xavier Dorman

Recurring

 * Zak Santiago as Ramon Rodriguez, a man of many talents who became a friend of the Postables. (2 episodes & 7 films)
 * Jill Morrison as colleague Hazel. (5 movies)
 * Gregory Harrison as Joe O'Toole, Oliver's step-father who raised him. (7 films)
 * Emilie Ullerup as Dale Travers, a police officer friend of Oliver's. (4 films)

Guest stars

 * Valerie Bertinelli as Rebecca Starkwell
 * Carol Burnett as Ardis Paine, Norman's grandmother
 * Valerie Harper as Theresa Capodiamonte
 * Marilu Henner as Glynis Rucker
 * Della Reese as Cora Brandt

Critical reception
Variety's Brian Lowry commented that it was "so old fashioned and hokey that it just might work." David Hinckley of New York Daily News gave it 3 stars out of 5 in 2014 and said that while all the characters were terribly likable, they spoke as if they were reading from Hallmark greeting cards.

Signed, Sealed, Delivered scored 58 out of 100 on Metacritic based on five "mixed or average" reviews.

Characters

 * A dark grey cell indicates the character was not in the film.