in
McCloud. Top right:
Richard Boone in
Hec Ramsey. Bottom left:
Peter Falk in
Columbo. Bottom right:
Rock Hudson (photo minus his new hep trademark mustache) in
McMillan & Wife.
Inaugural programs The three original series from the 1971–1972 season of
The NBC Mystery Movie were: •
McCloud, starring
Dennis Weaver as a rural lawman from
Taos, New Mexico temporarily assigned to the
New York City Police Department (NYPD). Inspired by the
Clint Eastwood 1968 film ''
Coogan's Bluff, the show debuted the previous season as part of the hour-long NBC wheel show Four in One''. •
Columbo, starring
Peter Falk as a deceptively inept
Los Angeles homicide detective. The series was derived from a 1968 made-for-television movie,
Prescription: Murder, which starred Falk in the same role. •
McMillan & Wife, starring
Rock Hudson and
Susan Saint James as a husband-and-wife crime-fighting duo. Hudson's character was a hip, sophisticated
San Francisco city police commissioner. After Saint James departure in 1976, the series was renamed
McMillan. The umbrella series was counted a great success in its first season and finished at number 14 in the
Nielsen ratings for the 1971–1972 season.
Columbo was nominated for eight
Emmy Awards and won four categories. This prompted
NBC to move the series to the competitive 8:30-10:00 Sunday evening time period for the second season as
The NBC Sunday Mystery Movie. In addition, a fourth show was added to the rotation, lasting two seasons (1972–1974): •
Hec Ramsey, starring
Richard Boone as a gunfighter turned frontier
forensic science detective in the Old West. This series was produced by
Jack Webb.
The NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie programs Inaugural NBC also launched a clone of the umbrella series,
The NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie, which debuted in the original time period and featured three new programs: •
Banacek, starring
George Peppard as Thomas Banacek, a free-lance
Polish-American insurance investigator in
Boston. Like
Hec Ramsey, it lasted two seasons (1972–1974). •
Cool Million, starring
James Farentino as a former CIA agent turned private investigator and security/retrieval expert whose fee per case was one million
dollars. •
Madigan had
Richard Widmark reprising his
1968 film role as a streetwise veteran detective of the New York City Police Department.
Subsequent During the 1973–1974 season, the programs rotating on Sunday remained the same, while on Wednesday,
Cool Million and
Madigan were canceled and
Banacek rotated with three new series: •
Faraday & Company, starring
Dan Dailey as a private detective who returns to Los Angeles after a quarter century in a South American jail. •
Tenafly, starring
James McEachin as an African-American private detective. •
The Snoop Sisters, starring
Helen Hayes and
Mildred Natwick as two elderly sisters who routinely found mysteries which they solved. Rescheduling to Tuesday nights as
The NBC Tuesday Mystery Movie during January 1974 was not enough to help boost ratings, and the midweek series was canceled. The Sunday series continued, anchored by the popular trio of
Columbo,
McCloud, and
McMillan and Wife.
Later changes During subsequent years, these rotated with a fourth series, which changed each year (1974–1977), including: •
Amy Prentiss, starring
Jessica Walter as the fictional first female chief of detectives for the San Francisco Police Department. This series was a spinoff of
Ironside. •
McCoy, starring
Tony Curtis as a professional con-man/thief. •
Quincy, M.E., starring
Jack Klugman as a medical examiner in the L.A. County Coroner's office. • ''
Lanigan's Rabbi'', about a small town police chief (
Art Carney) and his best friend, a rabbi and amateur sleuth (
Bruce Solomon), based on
Harry Kemelman's popular Rabbi Small mysteries. Additionally, the two-hour pilot of another Universal mystery series,
Ellery Queen: Too Many Suspects, aired in the usual Sunday timeslot of the
Mystery Movie on March 23, 1975; it was promoted as an
NBC Mystery Movie Special. (The resulting series began airing that September, but in a Thursday night timeslot, and not under the
NBC Mystery Movie umbrella.) Of all the wheel series, only the original three —
Columbo,
McCloud and
McMillan & Wife — survived for the entire run of the
Mystery Movie. Most of the others were short-lived, and, with the exception of
Hec Ramsey and
Banacek, were all only on the air for one season.
Quincy, M.E., which was the next to last new
Mystery Movie series to premiere, outlasted the parent series itself; midway through the final
Mystery Movie season,
Quincy was retooled into a one-hour weekly series that ran for six more seasons, until 1983. Although the
Mystery Movie series was cancelled at the end of the 1976–1977 season, NBC kept
Columbo in production and a seventh season consisting of five films premiered on November 21, 1977. NBC cancelled
Columbo in 1978. == Presentation ==