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The undercover nature of Jones's work had her impersonating women in a variety of roles, including gangster's molls, prostitutes, nurses, and singers. [1] Jones did not have a partner for her police work, and episodes revealed little about her personal life, with occasional exceptions of references to a love affair with a police officer who ...
This is a list of police television programs. (CBDC noted, cancellations) (CBDC noted, cancellations) Dramas involving police procedural work, and private detectives, secret agents, and the justice system have been a mainstay of broadcast television since the early days of broadcasting .
Filmed on location in New York City, the series concerned the detectives of NYPD's 65th Precinct (changed from the film's 10th Precinct). Episode plots usually focused more on the criminals and victims portrayed by guest actors, characteristic of the "semi-anthology" narrative format common in early 1960s television (so called by the trade paper Variety). [3]
The company then enlisted 20 women to travel to department stores and women's conventions—all using the name "Kaye King"—to teach the techniques featured in the film.
She'd later become the first-ever female TV cop in her own show "Police Woman." Through the 1960s and '70s, she was as popular for her on-screen work as she was for her personal life.
Get Christie Love, starring Teresa Graves, the pilot for which preceded Police Woman by about two months, the pilot for Police Woman airing in March 1974 as an episode of Police Story entitled "The Gamble". The syndicated 1957 series Decoy, starring Beverly Garland, was the first series, a 30-minute drama, to focus on a female police officer.
One year after a Los Angeles police officer was charged with six misdemeanor counts for allegedly sending sexually explicit photos and videos of his wife to LAPD colleagues and other men, the ...
Fred Gwynne and Joe E. Ross. Car 54, Where Are You? is an American sitcom that aired on NBC from September 1961 to April 1963. Filmed in black and white, the series starred Joe E. Ross as Gunther Toody and Fred Gwynne as Francis Muldoon, two mismatched New York City police officers who patrol the fictional 53rd precinct in The Bronx.