B004YENES8 EBOK (56 page)

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Authors: Barney Rosenzweig

76
Reference is to the true story portrayed in the film
Stand and Deliver.

77
Joel was finally given the opportunity to make his film directorial debut, over the objections of Dick Rosenbloom, who by that time probably felt one Rosenzweig in this business was more than sufficient. I put up a financial bond to assuage Orion’s concerns by paying director Reza Badiyi to stand by if Joel faltered. My brother, I am pleased to note, came through, with flying colors. Episodes were “Ahead of the Game” (actually made for the 1986–87 season and written by Allison Hock) and “You’ve Come a Long Way, Baby” (written by Fred Rappaport).

78
For insertion in yet-to-be made episodes in an effort to minimize the absence of such a key character.

79
Al Waxman did return and, thirty-five pounds lighter, completed the season, but died several years later after completing yet another series I would supervise,
Twice in a Lifetime
, for the Pax network. There Al played Othneil, a character I created for him.

80
Written by Kathryn Ford, directed by Sharron Miller. An
Emmy
nomination for Ms. Gless.

81
Written by Shelley List & Jonathan Estrin, directed by Reza Badiyi. An
Emmy
nomination and win for Ms. Daly.

82
Lee Grant’s line is the same, only Communist and Fascist replace chauvinist and feminist. The line was made famous by her during a guest appearance on
The Tonight Show
with Johnny Carson.

83
Won by Tyne Daly for “Friendly Smoke.” No one is a bigger fan of Ms. Daly’s than this author, but this particular entry was not Tyne’s best work, whereas Sharon’s performance in our episode “Don’t I Know You” was among her very best. The reference to the Academy’s blue ribbon panel is pure speculation on my part. The
Emmys
were, at that time, in my judgment, the fairest of all the major awards, in that once nominated, all the contenders were screened by a panel of judges on the same television monitor, in the same room, at the same time. Each of the performances was therefore guaranteed to be seen by the judges. That is not necessarily true for the
Oscars
or the
Tonys
. At any rate, feelings in our community against Sharon and myself were running so high that it is not a stretch to imagine that one or two members of that finite panel found themselves influenced. One or two votes would, in this setting, most definitely affect the outcome. For the record, the TV Academy no longer uses this blue ribbon panel system.

84
In 2007.

85
Reference is to the heavily romantic MGM fantasy film of the 1940s, starring Robert Young and Dorothy McGuire.

86
Alone by virtue of my marriage being over and my “thing” with Gless then very much in abeyance. The locale was the Villa Vera, made famous in the days of Errol Flynn’s stardom in Hollywood.

87
And he wrote one. In 2010
When I Stop Talking You'll Know I'm Dead
was published to generally favorable reviews. I read it and you should too. Good stuff.

88
Run more than 24 frames per second through a motion picture projector or camera and a slow motion effect is produced. The more frames, the slower the images appear to move. Run less than 24, and the images seem faster. That herky-jerky movement you see today in the old-time silent films is because in those days the standard was to film and project at 18 frames per second. If one projects, at 24fps, a film shot at 18fps, you get those funny-looking movements,which we have come to accept as natural for that kind of movie from those early days.

89
At California’s Malibu Beach: May 1 and/or May 4, 1991, depending on whom you talk to.

90
The previous year, Sharon had made her London stage debut at the Criterion Theatre opposite Bill Paterson in Stephen King’s thriller
Misery
, creating the role on stage made famous by Kathy Bates on film. For artistic reasons, Ms. Gless decided to bulk up for the role, gaining sixty pounds, and was now finding it difficult to shed same. I am not married to Ms. Daly, so I haven’t heard her reasons, but it never seemed to matter as much to Tyne as it did to Sharon.

91
Slightly shorter version of on-air promotions or point of sale advertising, which is what an ad for a TV show, seen on TV, is—an ad for people who are watchers of that network (they are at the “point of sale”).

92
Years later on a NY publicity tour for this tome, Les Moonves got the last and best dig in of all. When asked about some of the comments published in this book, Moonves, through the CBS publicity department, simply retorted "Who's Barney Rosenzweig?"

93
Sony, of course, is a Japanese company. Rupert Murdoch is a transplant from Australia, and General Electric is about as multinational as any company can get.

Table of Contents

Title Page

Dedication

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1

OUT OF THE DARKNESS ...

Chapter 2

FUNNIER THAN CALIFORNIA? WHAT ISN’T?

Chapter 3

LIMBO WITH GRANDMA FANNY

Chapter 4

CHARLIE’S ANGELS

Chapter 5

“WE HAVE FOUND
CHRISTINE CAGNEY …”

Chapter 6

THE MAELSTROM

Chapter 7

A PRODUCER’S MEDIUM

Chapter 8

SERENDIPITY IN CHINATOWN

Chapter 9

THE MOVIE DOCTOR

Chapter 10

OF THE ESSENCE

Chapter 11

DO YOU WANT IT GOOD OR DO YOU WANT IT TUESDAY?

Chapter 12

BREAKING THE RULES

Chapter 13

SCHEDULING HITS/ SCHEDULING FAILURES

Chapter 14

CPR AND HOT FUDGE SUNDAES

Chapter 15

FINDING A WAY TO DELIVER THE GOODS

Chapter 16

LETTING GO … AND OTHER FAILURES

Chapter 17

COMINGS AND GOINGS

Chapter 18

DEEPER, RICHER, FULLER, BETTER

Chapter 19

WHAT CAGNEY REALLY WANTS …

Chapter 20

FILM NOIR, MARY POPPINS, AND THE U.S. POSTAL OFFICE

Chapter 21

WHO WOULDA THUNK IT?

Chapter 22

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND

Chapter 23

COME TO ME/GO FROM ME

Chapter 24

THE AUDITION

Chapter 25

AGAIN WITH THE LIGHTS AND SIRENS

Chapter 26

CHOCOLATE AND VANILLA

Chapter 27

FORGET IT, JAKE, IT’S LACY STREET

Chapter 28

NO ONE CAN WRITE THIS SHOW BUT ME

Chapter 29

HIGH-CLASS PROBLEMS

Chapter 30

THE SUBJECT IS MONEY

Chapter 31

MONEY AND GLORY

Chapter 32

SURPRISE AT THE GOLDEN GLOBES

Chapter 33

MILLION DOLLAR BABY

Chapter 34

BUSINESS AND JUSTICE

Chapter 35

BATTLES ON THE HOME FRONT

Chapter 36

JUST LIKE BEFORE … ONLY DIFFERENT

Chapter 37

HERMAN, THE REACHER

Chapter 38

NO GOOD DEED GOES UNPUNISHED

Chapter 39

LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL!

Chapter 40

IF YOU CAN PAINT, I CAN WALK

Chapter 41

QUALITY CONTROL

Chapter 42

CHANGE EQUALS PSYCHOLOGICAL LOSS

Chapter 43

TRIAL BY JURY

Chapter 44

THE BEGINNING OF THE END

Chapter 45

ON THE ROAD AGAIN

Chapter 46

“KID” ROSENZWEIG

Chapter 47

MIAMI NICE

End Credits

Barney Rosenzweig - biography
Barney Rosenzweig - filmography
Cagney & Lacey Emmy Awards
Series guest stars
Series award-winning actors
Series directors (# of episodes)
Series scriptwriters
The 14th precinct and key law enforcement
Family

Character and episode guide

Characters
SEASON 2 (1982-3)
SEASON 3 (spring 1984)
SEASON 4 (1984-5)
SEASON 5 (1985-6)
SEASON 6 (1986-7)
SEASON 7 (1987-8)
Cagney & Lacey: The Menopause Years (1994-5)

Footnotes

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