Gus-41
Joined Apr 1999
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Reviews5
Gus-41's rating
Sheila James played Zelda - the smart girl viewers hoped Dobie would fall far - she would straighten him out. Zelda, maybe, Sheila James, no.
If you read her biography in the IMDb you will find she quit acting, got a law degree, declared herself a lesbian and now holds political office with an eye towards feminist issue.
Makes one long for the days when the smartest thing a bright girl did was marry well, as viewers hoped Zelda would.
To find the names of other cast members read the comments - they are embedded there.
If you read her biography in the IMDb you will find she quit acting, got a law degree, declared herself a lesbian and now holds political office with an eye towards feminist issue.
Makes one long for the days when the smartest thing a bright girl did was marry well, as viewers hoped Zelda would.
To find the names of other cast members read the comments - they are embedded there.
The transition for large screen to small was still unlearned when "77" was released. Playhouse 90, Live From Carnegie Hall and network sponsored orchestras were still in vogue - serious TV with a performing arts feel. Note the cinema feel to this series. It was filmed, not video taped.
I enjoyed this show as a child as it was intelligent mystery/drama. It was done before secret agents. It required the private investigators to be resourceful. They were alway honest. Just the stuff a boy scout like me needed to round out his masculinity. Stuart Bailey was the smart guy. Older and no-nonsense. Jeff Spencer was the cute guy. And Kookie, well, the only thing good about Kookie were the cars he drove.
Good stuff.
I enjoyed this show as a child as it was intelligent mystery/drama. It was done before secret agents. It required the private investigators to be resourceful. They were alway honest. Just the stuff a boy scout like me needed to round out his masculinity. Stuart Bailey was the smart guy. Older and no-nonsense. Jeff Spencer was the cute guy. And Kookie, well, the only thing good about Kookie were the cars he drove.
Good stuff.
What a remarkable half hour of allegory and metaphor. Starting with the premise that our protagonist is a fellow who others don't like - he's a gunfighter. And that he charges a lot - $1,000 - and that he is cool - wears black and uses a business card - and he does good deeds for others.
And he doesn't like to use his gun to solve problems.
This vehicle is used over and over again to good effect. He solves interesting problems that span a large part of the country and a large array of people - blacks, chinese, mexicans, bums, crooks and good guys.
Writers include Roddenberry.
Good stuff, mostly.
And he doesn't like to use his gun to solve problems.
This vehicle is used over and over again to good effect. He solves interesting problems that span a large part of the country and a large array of people - blacks, chinese, mexicans, bums, crooks and good guys.
Writers include Roddenberry.
Good stuff, mostly.