
Cagney and Lacey
Photo courtesy of Orion Pictures
CAST
Detective
Mary Beth Lacey..........................Tyne Daly Detective
Chris Cagney (1982)...................Meg Foster Detective
Chris Cagney (1982-88)............Sharon Gless Lieutenant
Bert Samuels.......................... Al Waxman Detective
Mark Petrie............................... Carl Lumbly Detective
Victor Isbecki ...........................Martin Kove Detective
Paul La Guardia (1982-85)........ Sidney Clute Deputy Inspector
Marquette (1982-83)... Jason Benhard Desk Sergeant Ronald
Coleman.............. Harvey Atkin Harvey Lacey ............................................John
Karlin Harvey Lacey, Jr...................................
Tony La Torre Michael Lacey ..........................................Troy
Slaten Sergeant Dory McKenna (1984-85)........... Barry Primus
Inspector Knelman (1984-88)............. Michael Fairman
Detective Jonah Newman (1985-86)............... Dan Shor
David Keeler (1985-88)........................ Stephen Macht
Alice Lacey (1985-87).............. Dana & Paige Bardolph
Alice Lacey (1987-88)............................ Michele
Sepe Detective Manny Esposito (1986-88)...... Robert Hegyes
Detective al Corassa (1986-88)................ Paul Mantee
Josie (1986-88)..........................................
Jo Corday Kazak (1986-87)....................................
Stewart Coss Beverley Faverty (1986-87).................
Beverley Faverty Tom Basil (1986-88)..................................
Barry Laws Verna Dee Jordan (1987-88).................. Merry
Clayton
PRODUCERS
Barney
Rosenzweig, Barbara Corday, Barbara Avedon, Richard Rosenbloom,
Peter Lefcourt, Liz Coe, Ralph Singleton, Patricia Green, P.K. Knelman,
April Smith, Joseph Stern, Steve Brown, Terry Louise Fisher, Georgia
Jeffries, Jonathan Estrin, Shelly List.
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 125 Episodes
CBS
March 1982-April 1982................. Thursday 9:00-10:00 October
1982-September 1983..... Monday 10:00-11:00 March 1984-December
1987......... Monday 10:00-11:00 January 1988-April 1988..............
Tuesday 10:00-11:00 April 1988-June 1988................... Monday
10:00-11:00 June 1988-August 1988.............. Thursday 10:00-11:00
Cagney and
Lacey, a U.S. police procedural with pervasive melodramatic
overtones is, deservedly, one of the most widely discussed programs
in television history. The series aired on the CBS television network
from 1982-88 and presented a set of bold dramatic combinations,
blending and bending genre, character, and narrative strategies.
Though rated in the list of "top 25" programs only once during those
years, the show drew critical acclaim--and controversy--and established
a substantial audience of fiercely loyal viewers who, on at least
one occasion, helped save the program from cancellation by the network.
As demonstrated by television scholar Julie D'Acci's outstanding
study Defining Women: Television and the Case of Cagney and Lacey,
the history of Cagney and Lacey provides a textbook case illustrating
many issues pervasive in the U.S. television industry as well as
that industry's complicated relationship to social and cultural
issues.
Created in its
earliest version by writer-producers Barbara Corday and Barbara
Avedon in 1974, Cagney and Lacey was first designed as a
feature film. Unable to sell the project, the women presented it
to television networks as a potential series. Rebuffed again, they
finally brought Cagney and Lacey to the screen as a 1981
made-for-television movie, co-produced by Barney Rosenzweig, then
Corday's husband. The movie drew high ratings and led to the series,
which premiered in 1982. The difficulties involved in the production
history to this point indicate struggles encountered by women writers
and producers in the film and television industries--especially
when their work focuses on women. Those difficulties, however, were
merely the beginning of continuing contests.
As put by D'Acci,
"the negotiation of meanings of women, woman, and femininity
took place among a variety of vested interests and with considerable
conflict." Throughout the run of the series the "negotiations" continued,
and the interests included the creative team for the series--producers,
writers, actors, directors. They also included network executives
and officials at every level, television critics, special interest
groups, and the unusually involved audience that actively participated
in ongoing discussions of the series' meanings and directions.
While many of
these controversies took place on sets, in writer's meetings, and
in board rooms, one of the earliest spilled over into public discussion
in newspapers, magazines, and letters. In the made-for-television
movie, the character of Christine Cagney was played by Loretta Swit,
that of Mary Beth Lacey by Tyne Daly. Unavailable to take on the
Cagney role in the series because of her continuing work in M*A*S*H,
Swit was replaced by Meg Foster. Almost immediately discussion at
CBS and in some public venues focused on potential homosexual overtones
in the relationship between the two women. Foster, who had played
a lesbian in an earlier television role, was cited as "masculine"
and "aggressive," and after considerable argument CBS threatened
to cancel the series, made Foster's removal and replacement a condition
of continuing the show, and the fall 1982 season began with Sharon
Gless, presumably more conventionally feminine and heterosexual,
portraying Cagney.
Similar, though
not so visible, conflicts and adjustments continued throughout the
history of the series. Questions of appearance--dress, body weight,
hair styles--were constantly under consideration and negotiation.
Story material, particularly when focused on issues of vital concern
to women--rape, incest, abortion, breast cancer--often proved controversial
and led to continuing battles with the network standards and practices
offices. Daly reported that even in the matter of sexual relations
with her fictional husband, Harvey (John Karlin), differences of
opinion flared into argument over how to present domestic sexual
behavior.
In the spring
of 1983 CBS executives had more straightforward matters to present
to the producers of Cagney and Lacey--pointing to low audience
ratings and canceled the program. By this time, however, the producers
and the production company for the series had mounted an impressive
public relations campaign and letter-writers from across the country
mailed their protests to the company, the network, the producers--to
anyone who would read and make use of them. The National Organization
of Women took a lead role in the publicity campaigns. Newspaper
critics called attention to the campaign. The series won numerous
awards, Daly's Emmys for Best Actress in 1982-83 and 1983-84 among
them. In the fall of 1983 CBS announced it would program seven "trial
episodes" beginning in March 1984. Cagney and Lacey was back
and remained on the air four more seasons.
All of these
difficulties were played out as the series developed narrative strategies
that took best advantage of U.S. commercial television's abilities
to present serious social and personal issues in the context of
genre fiction. Two factors stand out among the techniques that distinguish
Cagney and Lacey. One strategy, evidenced in many of the
conflicts described above, is the series' ability to blend three
areas of concern into single dramatic productions. First, most episodes
of Cagney and Lacey dealt with the on-going difficulties
encountered by two women in a male dominant profession. This entailed
far more than simply presenting gender conflicts in the workplace,
though certainly there were many of those. Rather, this dramatic
structure required a reconsideration of the entire generic structure
of the "cop show." As the two women dealt with issues such as "violence,"
"guns," "male criminals," or "the streets"--all elements of police
fiction--writer-producers as well as audiences were required to
reflect on new resonances within the genre.
Second, each
narrative usually focused on a particular crime and criminal investigation.
The generic modifications were intertwined with rather conventional
police matters, and the sense of strangeness caused by the gender
shift was combined with the familiarity of crime drama.
Third, each
story usually linked the crime drama to a social problem, the kinds
of issues often explored in television drama throughout the history
of the medium. Thus, the issues cited above, often, though not always
definable as "women's issues," formed a third aspect of the narrative
triad structuring individual episodes.
The series was
at its best when these elements were "balanced," that is, when it
was neither overly didactic regarding the social issue, nor utterly
conventional as a police drama, nor submerged in the exploration
of gender inflected genre. If, as sometimes happened, one of these
aspects did "take over" the story, the result was often a very thin
examination of the element.
The second major
narrative strategy of the series militated against this imbalance.
This was the establishment of Cagney and Lacey as a "cumulative
narrative." Unlike serial dramas such as Hill Street Blues,
or, in the more strictly melodramatic vein, Dallas, Cagney and
Lacey did usually bring each episode to closure. Criminals were
caught. Cases were solved. Sometimes, even the particular gender-related
workplace issue was brought to a satisfactory solution.
But beneath
these short term narrative aspects of the series, the long term
narrative stakes were continually explored. More important, each
of the closed episodes shed light on those ongoing matters. Thus,
as viewers watched the Lacey children move from childhood into adolescence,
they also saw strains appear in the Lacey marriage, and the toll
that strain took on professional commitments, and the conflicts
the strain caused in the interpersonal relationship of the two women,
and so on. Similarly, each small development could lead to new story
possibilities, new inflections of character. Elements from past
episodes could be brought into play. Features of character biographies
could be revealed to explain events in a particular episode, then
used to develop further characteristics in future episodes.
The
cumulative narrative, one of television's strongest forms, was put
to near perfect use in Cagney and Lacey. Evidence of the
utility of this strategy, and the ways in which its methods of story
elaboration can appeal to viewers, came in the latter years of the
series. Though some critics see the series as diminishing its stronger
feminist tonality in this period, it is also possible to see the
growing emphasis on the "personal" and "the domestic" as a fuller
union of public and private.
One
of the most significant developments in the series in this period
was the exploration of Christine Cagney's alcoholism. In addition
to their own focus on this topic, producer-writers have cited viewer
letters calling attention to the fact that Cagney often turned to
alcohol in times of stress. In a harrowing, two-part, award winning
performance, Sharon Gless portrayed Cagney's descent into "rock
bottom" alcoholic behavior. What is significant about the development
is that it altered not only the series present and future, but its
history as well, and simultaneously altered the "triadic" structure
of social issue, personal problem, and police drama.
Cagney
and Lacey left network program schedules in 1988. But it continued
for some time as a staple for the Lifetime network's programming
aimed at female audiences. Critical and viewer responses to the
series continue to be mixed even now. Most recently the series characters
have been resurrected in the form of several made-for-television
movies. Older, physically changed, perhaps "wiser," these fictional
characters and the narratives in which they appear continue to explore
complex issues and themes, and to experiment with narrative forms.
-Horace
Newcomb
Brower,
Susan. "TV 'Trash and Treasure': Marketing Dallas and Cagney
and Lacey." Wide Angle (Athens, Ohio), 1989.
Clark,
Danae. "Cagney and Lacey: Feminist Strategies of Detection."
In, Brown, Mary Ellen, editor. Television and Women's Culture:
The Politics of the Popular. Newbury Park, California: Sage,
1990.
D'Acci,
Julie. Defining Women: Television and the Case of Cagney and
Lacey. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press,
1994.
Fiske, John. Television Culture. London: Methuen, 1987.
Mayerle,
Judine. "Character Shaping Genre in Cagney and Lacey." Journal
of Broadcasting and Electronic Media (Washington, D.C.), Spring
1987.
McHenry,
Susan. "The Rise and Fall--and Rise of TV's Cagney and Lacey."
Ms. (New York), April 1984.
Montgomery,
Kathryn C. Target Prime Time: Advocacy Groups and the Struggle
over Entertainment Television. New York: Oxford University Press,
1989.
Rosen, Marjorie. "Cagney and Lacey." Ms. (New York), October
1981.