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Quincy, M.E. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Quincy, M.E.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Quincy, M.E.

Klugman as Dr. Quincy.
Genre Drama
Running time 60 to 90 minutes
Creator(s) Glen A. Larson
Starring Jack Klugman
Robert Ito
Country of origin Flag of United States United States
Original channel NBC
Original run October 3, 1976May 11, 1983
No. of episodes 148

Quincy, M.E. (or simply Quincy) is the name of a United States television series that aired from October 3, 1976, to May 11, 1983, on NBC (and can be seen in the UK on ITV3 and intermittently on ITV1, as well as on the Canadian station, OMNI One) as well as in syndication in Australia on cable channel TV1. It starred Jack Klugman as Dr. Quincy, a strong-willed Medical Examiner (forensic coroner) in Los Angeles working to ascertain facts about suspicious deaths. In the process, he frequently comes into conflict with his boss and the police, each of whom have their own (often flawed) ideas about what's going on.

Many of the episodes follow this formula:

  • Somebody dies, seemingly by natural causes.
  • Quincy notices something that causes him to suspect foul play.
  • He then changes roles from medical examiner to detective
  • Quincy's boss gets upset, believing that Quincy is seeing evidence that doesn't exist and that Quincy should work on routine cases. The police get their feathers ruffled as he "shoulders-in" on their territory as well.
  • Quincy solves the murder.

A quote from one episode gives a snapshot of a typical conflict. When Quincy is hospitalized, Sam Fujiyama (Robert Ito), Quincy's faithful co-worker, takes the reins and finds something fishy about Quincy's condition when everyone else sees no need for suspicion. Hearing this, homicide detective Lt. Frank Monahan (Garry Walberg) says, "You're pullin' a Quincy on me and you ain't Quincy!"

Early season episodes focused on criminal investigation; a typical episode would find Quincy determining the real murderer in a crime or the real cause of an unusual poisoning case. Later seasons' episodes began to introduce themes of social responsibility; Quincy would find himself involved with a police investigation that reveals situations such as a disreputable plastic surgeon and the reasons his poor surgeries are not stopped, flaws in drunk driving laws, problems caused by punk music, airline safety issues, dumping of hazardous waste, the proliferation of handguns and anorexia among others. Quincy, M.E. was one of the earlier dramatic series to use a format like this to further a social agenda.

Although Quincy studies bodies in-depth at his laboratory, he also does plenty of police investigation work technically outside the role of a coroner for the purposes of the show. He could be considered a workaholic. In every episode where he goes on vacation, it is always interrupted by an intrigue that requires his skills. He then provides copious hours of free work to solve the case. He insists on being intensely thorough in all his work.

A well-liked man, Quincy lives on a houseboat, frequents "Danny's" pub, and is popular with the ladies. He was married once before but lost his wife to cancer.

The show was based on a Canadian television series, Wojeck, broadcast by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in the 1960s, but had more immediate local inspiration in the person of Thomas Noguchi, Los Angeles's "coroner to the stars". [[1]]

The first season of Quincy was broadcast as 90-minute telefilms as part of the NBC Sunday Mystery Movie rotation in the fall of 1976 alongside Columbo, McCloud and McMillan (formerly McMillan and Wife). The series proved popular enough that midway through the 1976–77 season, Quincy was spun-off into its own weekly one-hour series. The Mystery Movie format was discontinued in the spring of 1977; Quincy was the only one of the rotating series to continue. In 1978, writers Tony Lawrence and Lou Shaw received an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for the second-season episode "...The Thighbone's Connected to the Knee Bone..." (originally aired February 11, 1977).

[edit] Trivia

  • Quincy's first name was never verbally mentioned during the entire Quincy, M.E. TV show run. The only clue to what it was appeared in Episode #33, "Accomplice To Murder", where his business card is seen with his name written as "Doctor R. Quincy". Jack Klugman says that the question he's most often asked by fans is, "What is Quincy's first name?". He answers, "Doctor!".
  • Quincy had a highly successful surgical practice of his own before joining the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office after the death of his wife from a brain tumour.
  • Quincy was a captain in the United States Navy Reserve.
  • There are various references to Quincy and Jack Klugman by Zorak in the cult cartoon talk show Space Ghost Coast to Coast.
  • The phone number for "Danny's", the favorite hangout for the show's characters, was 213-555-3923.
  • Robert Ito's role as "Sam" is paid homage to in a song by the Arrogant Worms called "Sam, The Guy from 'Quincy'".
  • The pilot episode of The A-Team contains a car chase around the Universal Studios backlot. During this chase one of the cars crashes into a set which is supposed to be part of Quincy's house, the scene is repeated in the show's title sequence.
  • The series featured many actors who went on to find fame elsewhere, such as Jonathan Frakes, who appeared as a brash young doctor in the episode "Ghost of a Chance"; a young Jamie Lee Curtis in "Visitors in Paradise"; and Fred Ward, later of Southern Comfort and Tremors fame.
  • A number of Jack Klugman's co-stars in the highly regarded Sidney Lumet movie 12 Angry Men guest starred in the show. These included: Martin Balsam (Juror #1), Jack Warden (Juror #7 with the baseball tickets) and John Fiedler (the squeaky voiced Juror #2) and of course Robert Webber (salesman Juror #12)

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