Cagney & Lacey premiered in March 1982 with high hopes from the industry, in the wake of the TV movie. Reviews of the series, however, with Meg Foster in place of Loretta Swit, were mixed. Critics praised the level of storytelling, but put emphasis on the aggressiveness that both Daly and Foster expressed with their characters. As soon as the six-episode order was finished in late April, CBS canceled the program due to poor ratings. Executive producer
Barney Rosenzweig was determined to reverse the network's decision. Sharon Gless had been initially unavailable for the movie and series, which were produced by
Orion, because of her long-running contract to
Universal Television (she was the last actress ever to be signed to a long-term contract with a studio, in 1972). Gless was even actively utilizing her Universal contract at the time the series went into production, having taken over as female lead (from
Lynn Redgrave who left the series in a dispute with producers) on the CBS sitcom
House Calls. Rumors were also rampant that
House Calls was getting the axe that spring. Before the unveiling of that year's network upfronts, a CBS executive told the press that the network had cancelled
Cagney & Lacey because of low ratings but also the jarringly tough nature of the female leads, saying, "We've perceived them as
dykes". This remark drew wide protest, and put Rosenzweig into high gear in his dealings with CBS. The cancellation of
House Calls was announced among insider circles just before upfronts, and Rosenzweig pressured CBS executives to relaunch
Cagney & Lacey in the fall with Gless replacing Foster. Gless met with
Cagney & Lacey producers again to consider the role, but while always having taken to the character, had doubts about joining for the fall of 1982 because, after
House Calls, she "didn't want to make a career of replacing actresses". Ratings were still low during the first year Daly and Gless co-starred on the series.
Cagney & Lacey was canceled by CBS a second time in May 1983, but after almost a year of decreased buzz about the show, an ever-larger public outcry exploded upon the series's axing. Fans of the show, organized by Rosenzweig, staged a letter-writing campaign. At the same time, CBS switched its time slot for what was to have been its final three months on the air during summer reruns. This relocation resulted in the ratings suddenly rising. The viewer protest, coupled with the post-cancellation improvement in the
Nielsens and the
Emmy nomination that year (which
Tyne Daly won in September), resulted in success for the public. That fall, CBS announced the return of
Cagney & Lacey as a mid-season entry. The network would have wanted to return it sooner, but not long after the second cancelation came to pass, the sets at Orion had already been destroyed, and the cast had been let out of their contracts. One cast member, Tony La Torre, had already joined another series, the ABC sitcom
9 to 5. When nearly all of the
Cagney & Lacey cast received new contracts in late 1983, La Torre returned as well after
9 to 5 was canceled by ABC just weeks into the 1983–84 season.
Cagney & Lacey went back into production in January 1984 and returned to air on March 19 of that year.
TV Guide celebrated the show's return with the cover reading "Welcome Back,
Cagney & Lacey – You want them! You've got them!". The show finished in the top 10 for the 1983–84 season, and went on to earn 36
Emmy Award nominations and 14 wins throughout its run until 1988, including six nominations each for stars Daly and Gless: four wins for Daly and two for Gless. The series itself won two consecutive Emmy Awards for Best Drama Series in 1985 and 1986. The show's ratings leveled out to where it hovered around 30th place in the Nielsens during seasons four to six, a period where many state the show to have been in its creative peak. The series continued to air Monday nights at 10:00p.m. EST/9:00p.m. CST until the middle of the 1987–88 season, holding its own against ABC's
Monday Night Football and
NBC Monday Night at the Movies. Midway through its seventh season,
Cagney & Lacey was moved to Tuesdays at 10:00p.m. EST/9:00p.m. CST, where it began to compete against
Thirtysomething (ABC) and
Crime Story (NBC).
Cagney & Lacey lost viewers to the first-year critical success of
thirtysomething, which, despite being the time slot winner, only ranked No. 45 overall. CBS' reason for relocating
Cagney & Lacey was because it was believed that its Monday slot would further build an audience for
Wiseguy, another new critical hit of the season that had average ratings at best. By the end of the season,
Cagney & Lacey was left at 53rd place, and the 20-point drop from the previous season was enough for CBS to have doubts about renewing the show. With the final episode of the seventh season ending on a cliffhanger, CBS was considering bringing the show back, but when May 1988 upfronts were released,
Cagney & Laceys cancellation was confirmed. For the summer of 1988, the series moved one last time, not back to its familiar Monday time slot, but to Thursdays at 10 pm EST/9 CST. The series garnered considerable popularity internationally. It was originally shown in the UK on
BBC1, where it regularly made the top 10. ==Theme music==