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HILL STREET BLUES
 Hill Street Blues CAST
Capt. Frank Furillo ..........................Daniel J. Travanti
Sgt. Phil Esterhaus (1981-84)............ Michael Conrad
Officer Bobby Hill .............................Michael Warren
Officer Andy Renko ..............................Charles
Haid Joyce Davenport.............................. Veronica
Hamel Det. Mick Belker...................................
Bruce Weitz Lt. Ray Calletano...............................
Rene Enriquez Det. Johnny (J.D.) LaRue.........................
Kiel Martin Det. Neal Washington....................... Taurean
Blaque Lt. Howard Hunter.............................. James
Sikking Sgt./Lt. Henry Goldblume.........................
Joe Spano Officer/Sgt. Lucille Bates.....................
Betty Thomas Grace Gardner (1981-85)................. Barbara
Babcock Fay Furillo (1981-86) .........................Barbara
Bosson Capt. Jerry Fuchs (1981-84)............ Vincent Lucchesi
Det./Lt. Alf Chesley (1981-82) .................Gerry Black
Officer Leo Schnitz (1981-85)......... Robert Hirschfield
Officer Joe Coffey (1981-86)................... Ed Marinaro
Chief Fletcher P. Daniels......................... Jon Cypher
Officer Robin Tataglia (1983-87)............... Lisa Sutton
Asst. D.A. Irwin Bernstein (1982-87).... George Wyner Jesus
Martinez ....................................Trinidad Silva
Judge Alan Wachtel ...........................Jeffrey Tambor
Det. Harry Garibaldi (1984-85)...................... Ken
Olin Det. Patricia Mayo (1984-85) ...................Mimi
Kuzyk Mayor Ozzie Cleveland (1982-85) ............J.A. Preston
Sgt. Stanislaus Jablonski (1984-87)..... Robert Prosky Lt.
Norman Buntz (1985-87).................. Dennis Franz Celeste
Patterson (1985-86) ................Judith Hansen Sidney
(The Snitch) Thurston (1985-87) ..Peter Jurasik Officer Pagtrick
Flaherty (1986-87)... Robert Clohessy Officer Tina Russo
(1986-87)........... Megan Gallagher Officer Raymond (1987).......................
David Selburg
PRODUCERS
Steven
Bochco, Michael Kozoll, Gregory Hoblit, David Anspaugh, Anthony
Yerkovich, Scott Brazil, Jeffrey Lewis, Sascha Schneider, David
Latt, David Milch, Michael Vittes, Walon Green, Penny Adams
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
NBC
January
1981 Thursday/Saturday
10:00-11:00 January 1981-April 1981
Saturday 10:00-11:00 April 1981-August 1981 Tuesday
9:00-10:00 October 1981-November 1986 Thursday
10:00-11:00 December 1986-February 1987 Tuesday
9;00-10:00 March 1987-May 1987 Tuesday
10:00-11:00
U.S. Police Procedural/Melodrama
Hill
Street Blues, one of the most innovative and critically acclaimed
series in recent television history, aired on NBC from 1981 to 1987.
Although never highly rated, NBC continued to renew Hill Street
for its "prestige value" as well as the demographic profile of its
fiercely loyal audience. Indeed, Hill Street is perhaps the
consummate example of the complex equation in U.S. network television
between "quality programming" and "quality demographics." Hill
Street Blues revolutionized the TV "cop show," combining with
it elements from the sitcom, soap opera, and cinema verite-style
documentary. In the process, it established the paradigm for the
hour-long ensemble drama: intense, fast-paced, and hyper-realistic,
set in a densely populated urban workplace, and distinctly "Dickensian"
in terms of character and plot development.
Hill
Street's key antecedents actually were sitcoms, and particularly
the half-hour ensemble workplace comedies of the 1970s such as M*A*S*H,
The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and Barney Miller. M*A*S*H
was influential not only as a medical series set in a literal "war
zone" (versus the urban war zone of Hill Street), but also
for the aggressive cinematic style adapted from Robert Altman's
original movie version. The Mary Tyler Moore Show's influence
had to do primarily with its "domesticated workplace," a function
of Mary's role as nurturer as well as the focus on the personal
as well as the professional lives of the principals. The influence
of Barney Miller, an ensemble sitcom set in a police precinct,
was more direct. In fact the genesis of Hill Street resulted
from NBC's Fred Silverman suggesting that the network develop an
hour-long drama blending Barney Miller and the documentary-style
anthology drama, Police Story.
To
develop the series, NBC turned to Grant Tinker's MTM Enterprises,
which in the early 1970s had specialized in ensemble sitcoms (The
Mary Tyler Moore Show, Bob Newhart, and others) before turning
to the hour-long ensemble drama in 1977 with Lou Grant. Hill
Street was created by Steven Bochco and Michael Kozoll, two
veteran TV series writers with extensive experience on various crime
series. The two had collaborated on the short-lived police drama
Delvecchio in 1976-77 before joining MTM, and they had little
interest in doing another cop show without considerable leeway to
vary the form. NBC agreed, and Hill Street debuted as a mid-season
replacement in January 1981.
The
basic Hill Street Blues formula was simple enough. The series
was set in the Hill Street station, a haven of controlled
chaos in a crime-infested, racially torn ghetto within an unnamed
industrial metropolis. Each episode invariably charted a "day in
the life" on the Hill, from the early-morning "roll call" to a late-night
rehash of the day's events.
In
the hands of Bochco and Kozoll, who teamed for much of the writing
in the first two seasons, this formula provided the framework for
a remarkably complex and innovative series--qualities which were
evident from the opening roll call. This daybreak ritual was conducted
"below decks" in the precinct house by the desk sergeant--most memorably
Sgt. Phil Esterhaus (Michael Conrad from 1981 until his death in
1984), who always closed with the trademark line: "Let's be careful
out there."
A deft expositional stroke, the roll call served a range of narrative
functions. It initiated the day-long trajectory; it provided an
inventory not only of the current precinct "case load" but also
the potential plot lines for the episode; it reintroduced most of
the principal characters, whose commentary on the cases reestablished
their individual personalities and professional attitudes. And technically,
it set Hill Street's distinctive verite tone with its hand-held
camera, continual reframing instead of cutting, multi-track sound
recording, and edgy, improvisational feel.
After
the roll call the cops filed upstairs to begin their assignments,
which set the episode's multiple crime-related plot lines in motion.
Most of the series regulars who worked "out there" on the streets
were partners: Hill and Renko (Michael Warren and Charles Haid),
Coffee and Bates (Ed Marinaro and Betty Thomas), LaRue and Washington
(Kiel Martin and Taurean Blacque). Other notable street cops were
Lt. Howard Hunter (James Sikking), the precinct's SWAT team leader;
Mick Belker (Bruce Weitz), a gnarling, perpetually unkempt undercover
detective; and Norm Buntz (Dennis Franz), an experienced, cynical,
street-wise detective prone to head-strong, rule-bending tactics.
With
the episode thus set in motion, the focus shifted to Captain Frank
Furillo (Daniel Travanti), the professional touchstone and indisputable
patriarch of the precinct work-family, and the moral center of Hill
Street's narrative universe. Furillo adroitly orchestrated his
precinct's ceaseless battle with the criminal element. He also did
battle with bureaucrats and self-serving superiors, principally
in the character of Chief Fletcher Daniels (Jon Cypher). And on
a more personal level, he battled his own demons (alcoholism, a
failed marriage) and the human limitations of his officers, ever
vigilant of the day-to-day toll of police work in a cesspool of
urban blight whose citizenry, for the most part, was actively hostile
toward the "police presence."
Furillo
also battled Joyce Davenport (Veronica Hamel), a capable, contentious
lawyer from the Public Defender's office. Their professional antagonism
was countered, however, by an intimate personal relationship--the
two were lovers. Their affair remained clandestine until the third
season, when they went public and were wed. And through all this,
Furillo also maintained a troubled but affectionate rapport with
his ex-wife, Fay (Barbara Bosson).
The
Furillo-Davenport relationship was Hill Street's most obvious
and effective serial plot, while also giving a dramatic focus to
individual episodes. As professional adversaries, they endlessly
wrangled over the process of law and order; as lovers they examined
these same conflicts--and their own lives--in a very different light.
Most episodes ended, in fact, with the two of them together late
at night, away from the precinct, mulling over the day's events.
This interplay of professional and personal conflicts--and of episodic
and serial plot lines--was crucial to Hill Street's basic
narrative strategy. Ever aware of its "franchise" as a cop show,
the series relied on a crime-solution formula to structure and dramatize
individual episodes, while the long-term personal conflicts and
stakes fueled the serial dimension of the series.
Hill
Street's narrative complexity was reinforced by its distinctive
cinematic technique. As Todd Gitlin suggests, "Hill Street's
achievement was, first of all, a matter of style." Essential to
that style was the "density of look and sound" as well as its interwoven
("knitted") plot lines, which created Hill Street's distinctive
ambience: "Quick cuts, a furious pace, a nervous camera made for
complexity and congestion, a sense of entanglement and continuous
crisis that matched the actual density and convolution of city life."
Hill Street's realism also extended to controversial social
issues and a range of television taboos, particularly in terms of
language and sexuality.
This
realism was offset, however, by the idealized portrayal of the principal
characters and the professional work-family. Whatever their failings
and vulnerabilities, Furillo and his charges were heroic--even tragic,
given their fierce commitment to a personal and professional "code"
in the face of an insensitive bureaucracy, an uncaring public, and
an unrelenting criminal assault on their community. But the Hill
Street cops found solace in their work and in one another--which,
in a sense, was all they had, since the nature of their work precluded
anything resembling a "real life."
Not
surprisingly, considering its narrative complexity, uncompromising
realism, and relatively downbeat worldview, Hill Street fared
better with critics than with mainstream viewers. In fact, it was
among TV's lowest-rated series during its first season but was renewed
due to its tremendous critical impact and its six Emmy awards, including
Outstanding Drama Series. Hill Street went on to win four
straight Emmy's in that category, while establishing a strong constituency
among upscale urban viewers. It also climbed to a respectable rating,
peaking in its third season at number 21; but its strength was always
the demographic profile rather than the sheer size of its audience.
Thus Hill Street paid off handsomely for NBC, and its long-term
impact on TV programming has been equally impressive. In a 1985
TV Guide piece, novelist Joyce Carol Oates stated that the series
was as "intellectually and emotionally provocative as a good book,"
and was positively "Dickensian in its superb character studies,
its energy, its variety; above all, its audacity." Critics a decade
later would be praising series like NYPD Blue, Homicide, ER,
Chicago Hope, and Law and Order in precisely the same
terms, heralding a "new golden age" of television drama--a golden
age whose roots are planted firmly in Hill Street Blues.
-Thomas Schatz
FURTHER
READING
Bedell,
Sally. Up the Tube: Prime-Time TV and the Silverman Years.
New York: Viking, 1983.
Deming,
Caren J. "Hill Street Blues as Narrative." Critical Studies in
Mass Communication (Annandale, Virginia), March 1985.
Feuer,
Jane, Paul Kerr, and Tise Vahimagi, editors. MTM: 'Quality Television.'
London: British Film Institute, 1984.
Gitlin,
Todd. Inside Prime Time. New York: Pantheon, 1983.
Marc,
David. "MTM's Past and Future." Atlantic Monthly (New York),
November 1984.
Newcomb,
Horace, and Robert S. Alley. The Producer's Medium. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1983.
Oates,
Joyce Carol. "For Its Audacity, Its Defiantly Bad Taste and Its
Superb Character Studies." TV Guide (Radnor, Pennsylvania),
1 June 1985.
See
also Bochco,
Steven; Police
Programs
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