NBC Mystery Movie
|
The NBC Mystery Movie was an American television series that aired on NBC from 1971 to 1977. At times throughout its run, it split into several versions that ran concurrently on different nights of the week and were entitled The NBC Sunday Mystery Movie and The NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie.
Mystery Movie was a "wheel show", or "umbrella program." That is, it rotated several shows within the same time slot throughout the season. In its initial 1971-1972 season, it premiered with a rotation of three detective dramas that ran on Wednesday night from 8:30-10:00 in the Eastern Time Zone.
The three original 1971-72 shows were:
- McCloud, which starred Dennis Weaver as a New Mexico lawman reassigned to the New York Police Department, had debuted the previous season as part of the hour-long NBC wheel show Four in One.
- Columbo, which starred Peter Falk as a bumbling but deceptively clever Los Angeles police detective, was a new series created from a 1968 made-for-television movie, Prescription for Murder, which starred Falk in the same role.
- McMillan and Wife was a new show that starred Rock Hudson and Susan St. James as a husband-and-wife crime-fighting duo. Hudson's character was the San Francisco police commissioner.
The umbrella series was counted a great success in its first season and finished at number 14 in the Nielsen ratings for the 1971-72 season. Columbo was nominated for eight Emmy Awards and won in four categories.
The success of Mystery Movie prompted NBC to move the original three shows to the competitive 8:30-10:00 Sunday evening for the second season as The NBC Sunday Mystery Movie. A fourth series, Hec Ramsey, starring Richard Boone as a crime-fighter in the Old West, was added to the rotation.
In addition, a clone of the umbrella series, The NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie debuted in the original time slot and featured three new shows:
- Banacek, starred George Peppard as a free-lance insurance investigator in Boston.
- Cool Million
- Madigan
The Mystery Movie theme music was composed by Henry Mancini.
External link
- TV Archives: NBC Mystery Movie (http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/N/htmlN/nbcmysterym/nbcmysterym.htm)