Thursday, February 8, 2024

My Journey Through 1970s TV; Thursday Nights, 1973

 

Here we go again – another look at one evening’s prime-time schedule from my favorite decade of television. The objective, beyond sharing memories about some great shows, is to discover whether there are any I missed then and still have not had a chance to enjoy.

 

Thursday, 1973

 

ABC

Toma

Kung Fu

The Streets of San Francisco

 

ABC gives us the most interesting lineup for this night, featuring two new shows – one was a hit, the other would likely have become one if its star had not quit after the first season.

 

Toma was based on the career of David Toma, a real New Jersey police detective (and relentless self-promoter), who was among the founders of that generation of cops to be celebrated on television for, as the marketing pitch goes, playing by their own rules.


Tony Musante played Toma, supported by Simon Oakland as his frequently exasperated boss, and the always-intriguing Susan Strasberg as his loving wife. Stories typically had Toma donning disguises and accents to infiltrate illegal activity and take down the bad guys. 

 

 

If you search “Toma” on YouTube you’ll find more videos of the real Toma than the series. But I do recall the show and watched the one episode available to refresh my memory. Tony Musante stuck to his vow to shoot only one season, so the series was retooled and returned with Robert Blake as Baretta. The roots of the Toma character were still recognizable after the change, but where Toma had a wife and kids, all Baretta had was a cockatoo named Fred.

 

While Kung Fu debuted strong in the top 30 and enjoyed a successful three-season run, there will always be a what-might-have-been question over how the series would have fared if it had starred Bruce Lee instead of David Carradine. Accounts vary over how involved Lee was in the concept and his casting status – and whether the studio rejected him because they didn’t think an Asian lead could carry a series. 

 

 

It still found in audience, though the action scenes were somnambulant compared to the speed and brutality of those in Bruce Lee’s Enter the Dragon, or even in the low-budget Shaw Brothers films, imported from Hong Kong and filling the urban grindhouses.

 

CBS

The Waltons

The CBS Thursday Night Movie

 

In its second season The Waltons leaped to #2 in the ratings, and stars Michael Learned and Richard Thomas both deservedly won Emmys. 

 

 

NBC

The Flip Wilson Show

Ironside

NBC Follies

 

This was the final season for Flip, whose variety show ranked among television’s most popular but like most series built around one star, couldn’t sustain that success beyond a handful of seasons. The track record for such shows makes Carol Burnett’s 11-season run even more impressive.

 

 

Ironside still had some legs (I know, poor choice of words), as Raymond Burr’s wheelchair-bound inspector rolled into its seventh season, and would return for one more before cancelation. One of the more intriguing episodes from that year was “Riddle at 24,000 Feet” a pilot for a proposed series that would have starred Desi Arnaz as a crime-solving doctor.

 


You can read more about that episode in this It’s About TV blog.

 

It was 13 episodes and out for NBC Follies, a series I presumed was so obscure I almost added it to the missed shows list before even trying to find an episode. 

 


But surprisingly, one did exist on YouTube – the first one as it happens, starring Sammy Davis Jr., Jerry Lewis, Diahann Carroll, Mickey Rooney, the Smothers Brothers, and a whole gaggle of dancers and showgirls. 

 


 

It was part Vegas, part vaudeville, part ‘60s old-school variety show, filmed before a live audience. It seemed retro for 1973 and close to Paleolithic now, but part of me wishes there was still a place on television for shows like this – and enough multitalented celebrities to give 110% on stage to help us forget our troubles for a while.

 


 

 

Shows Missed:

The Don Knotts Show (1970)

San Francisco International Airport (1970)

Nancy (1970)

The Headmaster (1970)

The Man and the City (1971)

The Chicago Teddy Bears (1971)

Search (1972)

Assignment: Vienna (1972)

The Delphi Bureau (1972)

Jigsaw (1972)

The Little People (1972)

The Sixth Sense (1972)

Tenafly (1973)

Faraday & Company (1973)

Love Story (1973)

4 comments:

  1. I thought it strange that a variety show would use that Saturday Evening Post-like font for its end credits, but then I noticed it was also employed for the Coke and Sears commercials that immediately followed! What a weird trend--even for the Seventies.

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  2. David I'm sorry for my delay in commenting as I very much enjoyed this one. Desi Arnaz in a proposed drama series like Quincy? I think that would have been out of sight! I don't know why but reading that The Waltons were so high in ratings makes me real glad. I never missed an episode, dearly loved that show. It's funny, just a couple weeks ago I was telling a friend that I've been watching the 70 series Eight is Enough that aired on Wednesday nights. Back then, I hated that show but my sisters never missed it. It turns out I still hate it, haha. But in watching these episodes I've noticed that every time the Bradford's are watching TV, The Waltons theme music is playing! I just find that ironic as The Waltons was on CBS and the Bradfords were on ABC. Okay, please forgive my ramble and great post.

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    1. Apologies for the delay in posting your always-welcome feedback! I think I recall your mentioning not being an Eight is Enough fan - I probably revisit that series more often than The Waltons, but I'll grant you that none of the Walton kids are as grating as Nicholas.

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  3. I think The Waltons theme played on Eight is Enough because they were both produced by Lorimar Productions and I’m sure they could use that music for free!!

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