Product Description
-------------------
Revisit TV's favorite husband-wife detective duo as they take on
crooks, murderers and the windy streets of San Francisco in the
captivating complete first season of McMillan & Wife. Written by
TV legend Steven Bochco (NYPD Blue), this classic mystery series
stars the dashing Rock Hudson as San Francisco's newest
commissioner and Susan Saint James as his loyal and inquisitive
wife, Sally. He may be a top-ranking official in charge of the
safety of one of America's largest cities, but she's the
housewife with more than a few case-solving tricks up her sleeve!
One of the original shows in the NBC Mystery Movie lineup,
McMillan & Wife proves that when it comes to solving crime, two
clueseekers are always better than one.
.com
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They were the happening '70s answer to Nick and Nora Charles
from the Thin Man movies ( /exec/obidos/ASIN/B0009GX1C4/${0} ),
and when McMillan & Wife premiered as part of the "NBC Mystery
Movie" lineup (in three-way rotation with McCloud (
/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005JNHU/${0} ) and Columbo (
/exec/obidos/tg/browse/-/13745141/${0} )) on September 17, 1971,
they were an instant hit with both critics and viewers. The
two-hour pilot "Once Upon a Dead Man" set the serio-comic tone
for the series: San Francisco commissioner Stewart
McMillan (Rock Hudson, his film career in decline) and the goofy
doofus Sgt. Enright (John Schuck) frequently found themselves in
the midst of a mystery, typically beginning when McMillan's cute
and kooky wife Sally (Susan Saint James) stumbled onto telltale
evidence or a murder scene. The McMillans were the perfect image
of '70s California cool, attending trendy parties and charity
benefits while solving robberies, murders, and other malicious
goings-on, sporting the latest fashions (Hudson's handlebar
moustache and longish hair perfectly complementing Saint James's
bellbottoms and shag hairdo) and verbally sparring with some of
the goofiest dialogue this side of Hope & Crosby's Road movies.
Schuck provided additional comic while Nancy Walker, as
the McMillans' nosy maid Mildred, made brief but memorable
appearances before her role was expanded in subsequent seasons.
By latter-day standards the plots are simplistic but cleverly
engaging, especially given that the entire series was something
of a lark. The first regular series episode "Murder by the
Barrel" (9/29/71) is indicative of the series' entertainment
value, and "Death is a Seven Point Favorite" (12/8/71) was a
season highlight, with '70s stalwart Don Stroud as a pro football
quarterback targeted for murder in a bookie scheme gone awry. And
while Hudson's macho image was certainly appealing to viewers
unaware of his off-screen sexuality (several episodes end
with Stewart and Sally under the sheets), there's no denying that
Saint James (whose irresistible charm was previously established
on Robert Wagner's caper series It Takes a Thief) was the ideal
costar, a perfect Nixon-era combination of looks, humor, and
flighty, non-threatening intelligence, adorable to men and
acceptable to women's-lib activists. Drawing upon Universal's
reliable stable of TV directors including Hy Averback and Addams
Family alumnus John Astin, writers including future TV mogul
Steven Bochco, and a bevy of guest stars including Andrew Duggan,
Jackie Coogan, Wally Cox, Edelman, Peter rz, June Havoc,
Rene Auberjonois, Tyne Daly and many others, the debut season of
McMillan & Wife (totaling 10 hours and 25 minutes of viewing
time) provided a strong start for the series, which lasted
(ultimately without Saint James) until 1977. --Jeff Shannon