 Magnum P.I.
1 9 8 0 - 1 9 8 8 (USA)
162 x 60 minute episodes
When CBS replaced Hawaii Five-O after a 12 year run,
they kept the Hawaiian production facilities and simply exchanged
the skinny ties, blue suits and shoulder holsters for Hawaiian
shirts, mixed drinks and a borrowed Ferrari.
Magnum P.I. had the same beautiful backdrop, it was
about the same time period, had a lot of action and let CBS
continue to use the expensive facilities it had constructed in the
1970's for Hawaii Five-O. Characters on Magnum P.I.
even referred to Steve McGarrett and his team on occasion.
Former Naval intelligence officer Thomas Sullivan Magnum took
up a security position at Robin's Nest - the estate of
wealthy mystery novelist Robin Masters (who was never seen but
heard as the voice of Orson Welles) - in return for free luxurious
living quarters at the sprawling beachfront mansion on Oahu's
north shore.
Masters was always away, leaving his uptight British butler, Jonathan Quayle
Higgins, to run the estate. Magnum's laid-back lifestyle was
nothing like the military discipline of Higgins. Magnum's
presence rankled Higgins (John Hillerman), the
very British former military commando, to no end.
Higgins, forever
writing his memoirs of years in military service in Africa and
Asia, regarded Magnum as a nuisance. They were constantly at each
other's throats - although, deep-down, they really did care
greatly for each other.
When Magnum was not driving around the island in Master's
$50,000 Ferrari or chasing a pretty lady, he was a traditional
detective. When he was in need of assistance, he used two of his
war-time buddies.
Theodore "T.C." Calvin (Roger E. Mosley) was the
owner and pilot of Island Hoppers, a helicopter charter service.
Rick Wright (who hated his real name Orville), ran a
Honolulu nightclub patterned after the club in the movie Casablanca
run by Humphrey Bogart - hence, the name Rick.
Early in the series, he sold the club and became the managing
partner, with Robin Masters, of the exclusive King Kamehameha
Beach Club.
Both T.C. and Rick did the legwork for Magnum, with Rick's
underworld connections, including his relationship with the
semi-legal businessman Ice Pick. Other cast members included
Assistant D.A. Carol Baldwin, a friend of Magnum's, who talked him
into taking cases that never seemed to pay any fees and Agatha,
Higgin's English friend.
The most unusual semi-regular cast member was Mac Reynolds,
Tom's navy buddy. Early on in the series, Mac was a Lieutenant
stationed at a local navy installation. He provided Tom with
information until he was killed in a 1982 episode.
Buck Greene also showed up here-and-there to provide extra
challenges for Magnum. Zeus and Apollo were the two Doberman
Pinschers who helped Higgins provide security for the palatial
estate - often taking bites out of Magnum!
While Magnum was not the first series
to feature Vietnam vets, it was the first to have Vietnam as a
subtext, and the show set off a mid-1980s trend of heroes with
Vietnam backgrounds, including The A-Team, Riptide, Stingray and
Miami Vice. Previously portrayed mostly as
victims of post-traumatic stress, the success of these series
changed the way Vietnam was viewed, at least in popular
culture.
Magnum became much more than a standard-issue action drama due
to co-creator Donald Bellisario, himself a former Marine (who
would later create Quantum Leap and JAG). Bellisario turned the series into a
meditation on Vietnam and friendship.
Glen
Larson had created Magnum as an ex-CIA agent, a playboy
freeloading on the estate, much in the mould of his other
successful action series, Knight Rider.
Bellisario was brought in when Selleck objected. Bellisario
changed Magnum into the Vietnam veteran of Naval intelligence and
added Rick and T.C.
Once Bellisario
left during the sixth season and Selleck and other producers took
over, Magnum became a more traditional detective show.
Anticipating that the series was going to be cancelled in the
spring of 1987, the producers filmed a dramatic and surrealistic
two-part finale, using almost all of the occasional characters, in
which Magnum was shot and killed and went to heaven.
When the series was unexpectedly renewed for a last season, it
was explained that he had not died but had instead dreamed of
going to heaven in his confusion. The series' real finale aired as
a two-hour movie on 1 May 1988 and was one of the season's highest
rated programs - but it still left a lot of loose ends.
Magnum was reunited with his long-lost young daughter, Lily,
and quit the private eye business and rejoined the navy, while
Rick was married (or was he?) and Higgins was finally revealed to
be Robin Masters (or was he?).
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