1970s Mystery Detective TV Shows
The 70s: Jimbo, Columbo, Barney, and the Babes
The 70s gave birth to two of the most enduring and endearing
mystery characters of all time. It was also the decade when many
policemen said that the best and most realistic depiction of what it was
really like in their world was being done on a weekly sitcom. And it was
the era which eventually proffered the intriguing argument that bikinis
and lack of underwear are an ideal crime-fighting wardrobe.
It's probably fair to say that, in the end, the 70s belonged
to Columbo or Rockford. Columbo (1971-1978) had three great elements: challenging
stories with masterful villains played by name actors, a twist on the
traditional whodunnit to how's-he-gonna-catch-him and, most importantly,
a tour de force performance by star Peter Falk. The Rockford
Files (1974-1980) enjoyed the same
performance advantage--James Garner is James Rockford-- and enhanced its
appeal with a memorable cast of supporting and recurring characters such
as the hero's father and a troublesome pal, Angel. The policeman hid his
competence behind a bumbling facade; the PI obscured his own with
wisecracks and a constant air of exasperation. Both were brilliant.
But Rockford was not the only non standard-issue PI on the scene.
Cannon (1971-1976) gave us the "fat
guy" as PI and Barnaby Jones (1973-1980) gave us the "old guy." Harry O
(1974-1976) allowed David Jansen to perfect
the quintessential world-weary and disillusioned modern knight in the
Chandler mold. And the short-lived and usually overlooked City of
Angels (February-August 1976) was a
marvelous period piece set in 1930s LA. The show, and its
not-quite-shady PI hero Jake Axminster, deserved a better fate.
Kojak (1973-1978) challenged
Columbo for the quirkiest professional crime-fighter of the era. He
would easily wear the mantle of most unconventional TV cop ever were it
not for Columbo. Kojak was definitely tougher, though. McCloud
(1970-1977) told and retold its amusing
fish-out-of-water tale with deft humor until the joke ran thin, and
McMillan and Wife (1971-1977) gave
viewers an ersatz Nick and Nora team in official garb. Baretta
(1975-1978) did the best ever, and probably
only, undercover "cop-with-cockatoo" schtick. And Quincy M.E. (1976-1983) provided a sometimes preachy but
generally interesting look at crime from a different angle, the city
morgue.
When it came to a different viewpoint, though, the champion was
Barney Miller (1975-1982), a weekly
visit to a Greenwich Village station house where crimes and crooks were
often secondary to the daily drama of human existence. With a marvelous
cast and an incredible sense of humanity, this remains TV's classic
comedy crime show and, some would argue, the truest cop show ever.
Somewhere along the line, TV execs noticed that all those women
clamoring for equality weren't about to go away. So Police Woman
(1974-1978) brought Sgt. Pepper Anderson, a
leggy beauty with a liberated attitude toward sex that reflected the
shifting mores of the times, to the tube. At the same time, Get
Christie Love! (1974-1975) featured
TV's first African-American policewoman, breaking two taboos at once. As
if to ward off this heresy, traditional sex and titillation ran amuck on
Charlie's Angels (1976-1981). Crimes
were solved amidst a splendid display of hair, teeth and flesh. And
Farrah Fawcett sold a zillion posters.