The Bold Ones: The New Doctors
Television series | |
---|---|
Original title | The Bold Ones: The New Doctors |
Country of production | United States |
original language | English |
Year (s) | 1969-1973 |
Production company |
Universal Television |
length | 45 minutes |
Episodes | 45 in 4 seasons ( list ) |
genre | Hospital series |
idea | Steven Bochco , Richard H. Landau , Paul Mason |
music | Dave Grusin |
First broadcast | September 14, 1969 (USA) on NBC |
occupation |
The Bold Ones: The New Doctors is an American hospital series that ran from 1969 to 1973. It was developed by Steven Bochco , Richard H. Landau and Paul Mason . The main roles were played by EG Marshall , David Hartman and John Saxon , who was replaced by Robert Walden after the third season . The series is part of the wheel series The Bold Ones .
content
Dr. David Craig is an extremely successful neurosurgeon who has opened his own state-of-the-art clinic in Los Angeles , the David Craig Institute for New Medicine. This clinic has its own research center run by Dr. Paul Hunter is headed. Together with the chief surgeon Dr. Theodore Stuart, they help their patients with state-of-the-art, sometimes experimental methods. In doing so, however, they are also repeatedly confronted with their ethical consequences. They also treat people in the spotlight like an adviser to the President of the United States or an astronaut on the way to the moon.
background
The Bold Ones: The New Doctors was the most successful series in The Bold Ones from the start . This ran the series with which the Wheel series was started on September 14, 1969, as the only one over all four seasons. In season four, she ran alone as the last remaining series, an experiment that was abandoned in January 1973. After a break of nearly four months, the last episode aired on May 4, 1973 - it was the last episode of The Bold Ones ever.
After the third season, John Saxon left the series and was replaced by Robert Walden . However, neither was mentioned in the cast of the first episode of season four, which was the second part of a double episode, the first part of which was shown as part of the series The Boss .
occupation
actor | Role name | consequences | Years |
---|---|---|---|
David Hartman | Dr. Paul Hunter | 1-45 | 1969-1973 |
EG Marshall | Dr. David Craig | 1-45 | 1969-1973 |
John Saxon | Dr. Theodore Stuart | 1-29 | 1969-1972 |
Robert Walden | Dr. Martin Cohen | 31-45 | 1972-1973 |
Episodes
Seasons
Season | Number of episodes | First broadcast in the USA | |
---|---|---|---|
Season premiere | Season finale | ||
1 | 10 | September 14, 1969 | March 1, 1970 |
2 | 8th | 20th September 1970 | February 14, 1971 |
3 | 11 | September 21, 1971 | March 5th 1972 |
4th | 16 | September 19, 1972 | May 4th 1973 |
season 1
No. ( total ) |
No. ( St. ) |
Original title | First broadcast in the United States | Director | script | Guest actor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | To Safe a Life | Sep 14 1969 | Don McDougall | Irv Pearlberg | Pat Hingle , Gene Raymond , Virginia Gregg |
2 | 2 | What's the Price of a Pair of Eyes? | Oct. 5, 1969 | Jeffrey Hayden | Sandy star | Jason Evers , Tisha Sterling , Walter Barnes |
3 | 3 | The Rebellion of the Body | Oct. 19, 1969 | Daniel Petrie | Alfred Brenner | William Smithers |
4th | 4th | Man Without a Heart | Nov 9, 1969 | Jack Starrett | Irve Tunick | Howard Duff , Paul Bryar |
5 | 5 | One Small Step for Man | Nov 23, 1969 | Jack Starrett | Robert Pirosh | Terry Carter , Yale Summers |
6th | 6th | Crisis | 7th Dec 1969 | Don McDougall | Donn Mullally | Bradford Dillman , Jeffrey Lynn , Norma Crane , Tom Helmore |
7th | 7th | And Those Unborn | Dec 21, 1969 | Robert Day | Blanche Hanalis | Lois Nettleton , Stephen McNally |
8th | 8th | If I Can't Sing, I'll Listen | Jan. 18, 1970 | Don Weis | Leonard Stadd , Blanche Hanalis | Josephine Hutchinson , Lorraine Gary |
9 | 9 | This Day's Child | Feb 8, 1970 | Jeffrey Hayden | Sandy star | Bethel Leslie , Sheila Larken |
10 | 10 | Dark Is the Rainbow, Loud Is the Silence | 1st Mar 1970 | Barry Shear | Max Hodge | Jack Klugman , Katherine Woodville |
season 2
No. ( total ) |
No. ( St. ) |
Original title | First broadcast in the United States | Director | script | Guest actor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
11 | 1 | This Will Really Kill You | Sep 20 1970 | Jeffrey Hayden | Robert White , Phyllis White | Tisha Sterling, Michael Anderson, Jr. , George Murdock |
12 | 2 | Killer on the Loose | Oct 11, 1970 | Abner Biberman | Reuben Bercovitch | Georg Stanford Brown , Robert Hooks , Julie Adams , Virginia Gregg |
13 | 3 | Giants Never Kneel | Oct 25, 1970 | Daryl Duke | Nat Tanchuck , Sy Salkovitz | Arthur Hill , DeForest Kelley , Carol Lynley |
14th | 4th | First: No Harm to the Patient | Nov 15, 1970 | Jeffrey Hayden | Howard Browne , Sy Salkowitz | James Broderick , Lonny Chapman , Richard Dreyfuss , Katherine Crawford |
15th | 5 | In Dreams They Run | Dec 13, 1970 | Jerry Lewis | Don Tait , Sandy Stern | Joanne Linville , Arch Johnson , Kathleen Freeman |
16 | 6th | A matter of priorities | Jan. 3, 1971 | Leslie H. Martinson | Irv Pearlberg | Kim Hunter , Harold J. Stone , Katherine Crawford, Pernell Roberts , James Sikking |
17th | 7th | An absence of loneliness | Jan. 24, 1971 | Joel Rogozin | Michael Blankfort | Edward Binns , Coleen Gray , Julie Adams, Ann Doran |
18th | 8th | Tender Predator | Feb 14, 1971 | Richard Benedict | Don Ingalls | Karen Valentine , Katherine Crawford, Melissa Hart |
season 3
No. ( total ) |
No. ( St. ) |
Original title | First broadcast in the United States | Director | script | Guest actor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
19th | 1 | Broken Melody | 21 Sep 1971 | ? | ? | Joyce Van Patten , Milton Selzer , Dana Elcar |
20th | 2 | Angry man | Oct 3, 1971 | Alf Kjellin | Howard Dimsdale | Dina Merrill , Dabbs Greer , Helen Kleeb |
21st | 3 | One lonely step | Oct. 24, 1971 | Leonard Horn | Edward J. Lakso | Pat Crowley , Louis Gossett Jr. |
22nd | 4th | Close up | Nov 7, 1971 | ? | ? | Joan Van Ark , Paul Gleason , Jennifer Rhodes |
23 | 5 | The convicts | Nov 21, 1971 | John Newland | George Lefferts | Don Stroud , Val Avery , Loretta Swit |
24 | 6th | Glass cage | Dec 5, 1971 | ? | ? | Dick Shawn , Brock Peters , Pat Hingle, Frank Campanella , Lynn Carlin |
25th | 7th | Dagger in the Mind | Dec. 19, 1971 | Leonard Horn | Howard Dimsdale | Robert Sterling , Mary Layne |
26th | 8th | Moment of Crisis | Jan. 2, 1972 | Michael Caffey | George Lefferts | Lloyd Bochner , Edward Andrews |
27 | 9 | Short flight to a distant star | Jan. 23, 1972 | Arnold Laven | Howard Dimsdale | Cameron Mitchell , Jess Walton |
28 | 10 | A Threatened Species | Feb 6, 1972 | John Badham | Jack Guss , Gabrielle Upton | Norma Crane, Clu Gulager |
29 | 11 | Discovery at Fourteen | 5th Mar 1972 | Don Taylor | Robert M. Young | Jane Wyman , Mike Farrell , Jim Davis , Ron Howard |
Season 4
No. ( total ) |
No. ( St. ) |
Original title | First broadcast in the United States | Director | script | Guest actor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30th | 1 | Five Days in the Death of Sgt. Brown, Part II 1 | 19 Sep 1972 | Leonard Horn | Robert Van Scoyk | Raymond Burr , Don Galloway , Don Mitchell , Vic Morrow , Ann Doran |
31 | 2 | Is This Operation Necessary? | 26 Sep 1972 | John Badham | Ken Kolb | Richard Basehart , Dorothy Malone , Vic Tayback |
32 | 3 | A Nation of Human Pincushions | Oct 3, 1972 | John Badham | Robert L. Collins | Carl Reiner , Jeff Corey , Jack Albertson , Lloyd Nolan |
33 | 4th | Time Bomb in the Chest | Oct 10, 1972 | Daryl Duke | Charles McDaniel | John Vernon , Joanne Linville, Michael C. Gwynne |
34 | 5 | A Standard of Manhood | Oct 17, 1972 | Daryl Duke | Robert L. Collins | Frank Converse , Shirley Knight , Dabney Coleman |
35 | 6th | A Substitute Womb | Oct. 24, 1972 | Richard Donner | Oliver Crawford , Lionel E. Siegel | Stefanie Powers , Sheila Larken |
36 | 7th | A Very Strange Triangle | Oct 31, 1972 | Jeremy Kagan | Peggy O'Shea | Donna Mills , Jo Ann Harris |
37 | 8th | A Quality of Fear | Nov 14, 1972 | Richard Donner | Jeff Myrow | Marlyn Mason , Richard Anderson , Herb Edelman , Celia Lovsky |
38 | 9 | An Inalienable Right to Die | Nov 28, 1972 | Walter Doniger | Gustave Field , Robert Van Scoyk | Susan Clark , Robert Foxworth , Michael Fox , Jason Wingreen |
39 | 10 | A purge of madness | Dec 5, 1972 | Marvin J. Chomsky | Lionel E. Siegel | Ross Martin , LQ Jones , Mariette Hartley , Milton Berle , Lurene Tuttle |
40 | 11 | End theme | Dec 12, 1972 | ? | ? | Clu Gulager, Don Johnson , Lane Bradbury |
41 | 12 | The Velvet Prison | Dec. 19, 1972 | Richard Donner | Ron Bishop | Diana Muldaur , Charles Cioffi , Val Bisoglio |
42 | 13 | A Terminal Career | Jan. 2, 1973 | Joel Olianski | Alvin Sapinsley | Ida Lupino , Susan Howard , Michael Constantine |
43 | 14th | Tightrope to Tomorrow | Jan. 9, 1973 | John Newland | Ken Kolb | William Shatner , Whit Bissell |
44 | 15th | The Night Crawler | Jan. 16, 1973 | ? | ? | Henry Darrow , Jess Walton |
45 | 16 | And Other Springs I May Not See | May 4th 1973 | Frank Pierson | Frank Pierson, Mark Rodgers | Leslie Nielsen , Jane Wyman, Kathleen Nolan , Pat O'Brien |
Reviews
In his review on DVDTalk.com, Stuart Galbraith IV points out that the medical methods shown may have been very modern in the 1960s and 1970s, but were standard or even outdated in 2016. The same applies to the hospital drama, so that The Bold Ones: The New Doctors now just seem old-fashioned. As an example, he cites the pilot episode, which deals with organ transplants and the associated formalities.
Awards
David Hartman was nominated for Best Actor in a Television Series - Drama at the 1973 Golden Globe Awards . However, the award went to Peter Falk for his performance in the Columbo series .
In 1972 Howard Dimsdale was nominated for the episode Angry Man in the category Best Screenplay in a Television Series (Drama) for the Writers Guild of America Award . The award went to The Psychiatrist.
DVD
The Bold Ones: The New Doctors was released on DVD on March 1, 2016.
Web links
- The Bold Ones: The New Doctors in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- The Bold Ones: The New Doctors on Fernsehserien.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ Herbie J. Pilato: Dashing, Daring, and Debonair: TV's Top Male Icons from the 50s, 60s, and 70s . Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham 2016, ISBN 978-1-63076-053-3 , The Doctors, the Defenders, and the Dependables, pp. 268 (English, limited preview in Google Book Search [accessed April 16, 2017]).
- ^ A b Stuart Galbraith IV: The Bold Ones: The New Doctors - The Complete Series. In: DVDTalk. March 19, 2016, accessed April 16, 2017 .
- ^ Writers Guild of America, USA - Awards for 1972. In: Internet Movie Database . Retrieved April 16, 2017 .