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"Harry O - the pilot episodes (1973 and 1974)" Topic


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651 hits since 29 Jun 2020
©1994-2024 Bill Armintrout
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Tango0129 Jun 2020 3:15 p.m. PST

"The Fugitive made David Janssen a very big star. His career was a bit up-and-down after that. In 1973 he starred in a feature-length pilot for a proposed private eye series called Harry O. The pilot was Such Dust As Dreams Are Made On and it failed and the series was not picked up. A year later a second pilot, Smile Jenny, You're Dead, was made and this time Harry O was picked up by ABC.

The series was however destined to have a troubled history. The first 13 episodes were set in San Diego. Ratings were not all that great and the network decided the series was too unconventional. They demanded that it be transformed into a much more orthodox private eye series, to be set in Los Angeles. So the second half of the first season was almost a different series. It was renewed for a second season, ratings were reasonable but ABC felt the series was still too intelligent and had worrying traces of originality. Harry O was cancelled in favour of Charlie's Angels, a series dumb enough that even TV network executives could understand it.

It's not difficult to see why Such Dust As Dreams Are Made On did not please the networks. It's not so much that it's rather dark. It's more the character of Harry O (he's actually Harry Orwell). He's about as cheerful as you would expect a guy to be with a bullet lodged in his spine because when he was a cop some punk shot him during a robbery and now he's in constant pain. And he's a very fallible private detective. He makes mistakes that put people in danger and he makes one really big, and costly, mistake. He chases women but most of the time he's barely civil with his girlfriends. His sense of humour, such as it is, is pretty bleak. Harry Orwell isn't loveable. He's cynical. He doesn't lack guts but he has no great interest in being a conventional hero. He's not a white knight who rescues damsels in distress or helps out widows and orphans. He isn't overly fond of people. He's the sort of lead character who would make a network executive very nervous…."

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Old Wolfman06 Aug 2020 10:06 a.m. PST

And the character in those early episodes had a bullet still lodged in his back ,which slowed him up when chasing a suspect;removed in the course of Season 2.

Tumbleweed Supporting Member of TMP07 Aug 2020 10:51 a.m. PST

I have every single episode of "The Fugitive" but never got into "Harry O."

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