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 DRAGNET
1 9 5 1 - 1 9 5 9 (USA)
361 x 30 minute episodes
1 9 6 7 - 1 9 7 0 (USA)
98 x 30 minute episodes
"Just the facts, Ma'am"
The NBC series Dragnet featured the cases of Sergeant
Joe Friday, an old-fashioned by-the-book cop in the Los Angeles
Police Department. This show made Joe Friday to television what
Sherlock Holmes was to literature (and The Shadow to radio), and
Jack Webb - creator, producer, writer and star - fashioned the
police-procedural series into a television classic.
Fans appreciated its unglamorous, realistic depiction of
routine police work, while detractors criticized the wooden
acting. Actually, Webb sought a documentary mood and even used
amateurs - occasionally the people involved in the actual cases
upon which an episode was based - resulting in less-than-flashy
performances.
Sgt Joe Friday would talk viewers through the dates, times and
places of the investigation, straight from the police blotter.
"The story you are about to see is true," ran the
opening. "The names have been changed to protect the
innocent." The pervasive monosyllables and monotones would
have been inappropriate in any medium but half-hour television: on
the small screen it translated into intimate, compact slices of
life.
Friday's work with the LAPD ran from 1951 to 1959, although the
series was successfully revived from 1967 to 1970 (this time in colour).
Friday's sidekicks through the years were Barton Yarborough as Sgt
Ben Romero; Barney Philips as Sgt Jacobs; Ben Alexander as Officer
Frank Smith; and, in the 60s version, Harry Morgan as Detective
Bill Gannon.
This was the first American drama series to be screened on
British television.
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Sgt Joe Friday
Jack Webb
Sgt Ben Romero
Barton Yarborough
Sgt Ed Jacobs
Barney Philips
Frank Smith
Herb Ellis (1)
Ben Alexander (2)
Officer Bill Gannon
Harry Morgan |
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