I'm rather partial to the two-part 1991 filming of Dominick Dunne's AN INCONVENIENT WOMAN. Filmed at DYNASTY's Filoli mansion (and gives us a sense of what DYNASTY could have felt like if they'd done even just a little location shooting after the pilot), the estate named "Clouds" here, a wealthy L.A. oil tycoon, Jules Mendelson (Jason Robards) develops a relationship with a "very young, very pretty, very common" waitress named Flo (Rebecca De Mornay) which doesn't much please his brittle society wife (Jill Eikenberry) whose gay best friend is shot to death several times by a mysterious assailant yet his demise is "incontrovertibly" ruled "a suicide," and handsome Hollywood screenwriter (Peter Gallagher) figures out something's amiss.
Co-starring Chelsea Field, Roddy McDowall as a bitchy tabloid reporter, Alex Rocco, Chad Lowe, Roy Thinnes, Grant Cramer, Joseph Bologna. Elaine Stritch got an Emmy nomination for playing Elaine Stritch.
The NYT said about the book and its author:
"This is a smart novel because Dominick Dunne understands the distance between Los Angeles society and the spicy bazaars of Hollywood. And what makes Mr. Dunne not only first-rate, but also different from other writers who write about the very rich in late 20th-century America, is his knowledge that there's more to it than getting the labels and the street names right. He shows he knows by the way he tells you how his people feel, the way they listen, the things they cover up and the things they don't. He's lived in L.A. and gets it right, but he has the perspective you only get when you leave. He knows every story there is to tell, precisely how it happened and why it happened. He also knows there's nothing up there in society to envy."
That said, the cleverer Gore Vidal thought Dunne ridiculous.