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77 Sunset Strip

77 Sunset Strip is an American television private detective drama series created by Roy Huggins and starring Efrem Zimbalist Jr., Roger Smith, Richard Long (from 1960 to 1961) and Edd Byrnes (billed as Edward Byrnes). Each episode was one hour long when aired with commercials. The show ran from 1958 to 1964. The character of detective Stuart Bailey was first used by writer Huggins in his 1946 novel The Double Take, later adapted into the 1948 film I Love Trouble.

77 Sunset Strip
Louis Quinn and Efrem Zimbalist Jr., 1962.
GenreCrime drama
Created byRoy Huggins
Directed byIrving J. Moore et al
Starring
Theme music composer
Composers
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons6
No. of episodes206 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Producers
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time48–50 minutes
Production companyWarner Bros. Television
Release
Original networkABC
Picture formatBlack-and-white
Audio formatMonaural
Original releaseOctober 10, 1958 (1958-10-10) –
February 7, 1964 (1964-02-07)
Related

Description

Initial setup and characters

 
Roger Smith with guest stars Biff Elliot and Maureen Leeds, 1961

Private detective and former World War II Office of Strategic Services secret agent and foreign languages professor Stuart ("Stu") Bailey (Zimbalist) and former government agent and nonpracticing attorney Jeff Spencer (Smith) form a duo who work from stylish offices at 77 Sunset Boulevard in Suites 101 and 102. Tab Hunter claimed he was the first choice for the lead of the series, but turned it down.[1]

The street address was colloquially known as the Sunset Strip and was between La Cienega Boulevard and Alta Loma Road on the south side of the strip, next door to Dean Martin's real-life lounge, Dino's Lodge. Typically the two detectives would alternate as leads, with a Stuart Bailey case being featured one week and a Jeff Spencer case the next—although depending on the nature of the case, sometimes the two would team up.[2]

Suzanne Fabry, the beautiful French switchboard operator played by Jacqueline Beer, handles the phones for Sunset Answering Service, in Suite 103. The firm of Bailey & Spencer employs her answering service, as do other clients. Although not technically an employee of the firm, Suzanne is involved in casework from time to time, especially in Season 2.

Comic relief is provided by Roscoe the racetrack tout (played by Louis Quinn), who frequently hangs around the offices giving horse-racing tips. However he is sometimes used as an operative and is an ever-informed source for the word on the street.

The firm's most frequently seen police contact is Lt. Roy Gilmore (Byron Keith), who is almost never called by his first name.

The show's breakout character, who had not been included in the pilot film, was Gerald Lloyd "Kookie" Kookson III (Edd Byrnes), the rock and roll-loving, wisecracking, hair-combing hipster and aspiring PI who initially works as the valet parking attendant at Dino's, the club next to the detectives' office. Kookie often becomes involved in the firm's cases and is eventually made a full partner in the firm, with his own office.

Also seen relatively frequently are the Frank Ortega Trio, playing themselves as the jazzy house band at Dino's Lodge.

Tone and cultural impact

Huggins intended the show to be a hard-edged drama, but beginning with the 23rd episode, ‘The Pasadena Caper’, the tone started to become much lighter, with a strong element of self-deprecating humor and the word "caper" frequently used in episode titles. The catchy theme song, written by Mack David and Jerry Livingston, typified the show's breezy, jazzed atmosphere. The song became the centerpiece of an album of the show's music in Warren Barker orchestrations, which was released in 1959, a top-10 hit in the Billboard LP charts.

 
Sue Randall and "Kookie", 1964

The Kookie character became a cultural phenomenon, with his slang expressions such as "ginchy" (cool) and "piling up Zs" (sleeping). When Kookie helped the detectives on a case by singing a song, Edd Byrnes began a singing career with the novelty single "Kookie, Kookie (Lend Me Your Comb)", based on his frequent combing of his hair; this featured Connie Stevens on vocals in the chorus and the song, with words and music by Irving Taylor, became the first hit single for the recently established Warner Bros. Records. Kookie was also used to provide product placement for Harley-Davidson, appearing on their Topper motor scooter in the show and in Harley-Davidson advertisements.[3][4]

The show became the first "franchise" in television, spawning no less than three spinoffs recreating the "77" format, a team of private detectives, their secretary and sidekick, solving cases, in picturesque cities. Surfside Six was set in Miami Beach; Hawaiian Eye's home base was Honolulu. Bourbon Street Beat saw a similar detective agency located in New Orleans. In some cases, "77" scripts were recycled and rewritten to fit the characters of each series. It was the genesis of the same concepts that drive Law & Order, NCIS, CSI and the Chicago PD/Chicago Med/Chicago Fire series as well as 9-1-1.

Cast changes during Seasons 1–5

When Byrnes' demands for more money and an expanded role were not met, he left the show for a period in Season 2. After an absence of 16 episodes beginning in January 1960, Byrnes and Warner Bros. settled their differences, and Kookie came back beginning in May. (During his absence, Roscoe's and Suzanne's roles were beefed up to handle the work normally assigned to Kookie.)

For the 1960–61 season, Richard Long (who appeared in different roles in two Season 1 episodes) moved over from the recently canceled detective series Bourbon Street Beat. His character of Rex Randolph from Bourbon Street Beat was said to have left New Orleans and relocated to North Hollywood, joining Bailey and Spencer's firm and taking Office 104. The character was dropped after one season, but Long (once again playing different one-shot guest characters) was seen again on 77 Sunset Strip in Seasons 5 and 6.

Kookie became a full-fledged detective and partner in the firm as of Season 4, taking over Rex Randolph's office in 104. At the same time, Robert Logan became the new parking-lot attendant, J.R. Hale, who usually speaks in abbreviations. Hale is seen throughout Seasons 4 and 5.

Episode and guest cast highlights

One of the series' more unusual episodes was 1960's "The Silent Caper," written by Smith. As the title suggests, the episode presented its story completely without dialogue. Another offbeat entry was 1961's "Reserved for Mr. Bailey," which finds Zimbalist alone in a ghost town. He is the only main actor on screen for the entire hour. (This episode was not included in the syndication package, and many fans had expressed their frustration at being unable to see it again. After 56 years out of circulation, it finally resurfaced on MeTV on June 17, 2017.)

The show was so popular that rising young actors clamored for guest spots. Up-and-comers who made guest appearances include: Ellen Burstyn, Roger Moore, DeForest Kelley, William Shatner, Mary Tyler Moore, Shirley MacLaine look-alike Gigi Verone, Robert Conrad, Dyan Cannon, Janet De Gore, Jay North, Connie Stevens, Irish McCalla, Adam West, Tuesday Weld, Sherry Jackson, Marlo Thomas, Max Baer Jr., Carole Mathews, Elizabeth Montgomery, Karen Steele, Randy Stuart, Susan Oliver, Robert Vaughn, Suzanne Storrs, Peter Breck, Donna Douglas, Troy Donahue, Chad Everett, Gena Rowlands, Cloris Leachman, Eve McVeagh, and Diane Ladd.

Established film and TV actors and older stars who guest-starred include Fay Wray, Francis X. Bushman, Rodolfo Hoyos Jr., Ida Lupino, Liliane Montevecchi, Keenan Wynn, Rolfe Sedan, Jim Backus, Billie Burke, Buddy Ebsen, George Jessel, Peter Lorre, Boris Karloff, Burgess Meredith, Nick Adams, Gerald Mohr and Roy Roberts, among others. The show occasionally featured sports stars such as Sandy Koufax in guest roles.

The controversial sixth season, 1963–1964

 
Efrem Zimbalist Jr., 1963

In 1963, as the show's popularity waned, the entire cast was dismissed except for Zimbalist. Jack Webb was brought in as executive producer and William Conrad as a producer/director. The character of Stuart Bailey was presented as a solo private investigator, with no continuity or reference to his past years with Jeff Spencer, Suzanne, Kookie and Roscoe or to his military OSS background. It was an abrupt, unexplained disconnect. The series and Bailey's personality took on a darker tone, and the familiar office, parking lot and Dino's Lodge were gone. A new musical theme was written by Bob Thompson.

The Season 6 show title was not changed; it still was an address, but Bailey's new office is dramatically different from that which he shared with Spencer for the previous five years. The interior of Bailey's new office building is shown behind the show's opening and closing credits, forcing viewers to ponder how the same address could look so very different (it was actually the historic Bradbury building in downtown Los Angeles). There seemed to be no spoken mention of his office address in the Season 6 shows, although in the episode "Bonus Baby" when a police officer inspects Bailey's private investigator license, a close-up shows the address "77 Sunset Strip."

As the season progressed, there were some shifts in tone. Several episodes into the season, Bailey's stern personality became lighter, though still different from that of prior seasons. His secretary Hannah, previously known to Season 6 viewers only because Bailey addressed her in his recorded dictations, was seen on screen beginning with the season's 11th episode. Played by Joan Staley, Hannah worked in Bailey's office, where he developed a romantic interest in her—but she continually stymied and frustrated him by playing hard-to-get.

As of episode "Alimony League" (the 16th of the season's 20 episodes), the opening and closing background of Bradbury building was gone, replaced by Bailey in silhouette walking past lighted store windows. This was actually a scene from "5" (the sixth-season opener) and it was supposedly located in New York City where Bailey arrived to work for a client to "pay his dead brother's way into heaven."

The episode "The Target" was unusual because key roles were played by the show's primary behind-the-scenes crew, who happened to also be experienced actors. Show producer William Conrad played Maestrian, associate producer James Lydon played Charlie, writer Tony Barrett played Carnovan and director Lawrence Dobkin played Landers.

Viewers did not appreciate the numerous changes to the show, and it was canceled halfway through its sixth season in February 1964.[5] In the 1964 summer reruns period, shows from the Bailey and Spencer years were shown, and the Season 6 episodes were abandoned, rarely seen until September 2017 on MeTV.

Broadcast history

NOTE: The most frequent time slot for the series is in bold text.

  • Friday at 9:30–10:30 pm on ABC: October 10, 1958 – May 29, 1959; October 12, 1962 – June 14, 1963
  • Friday at 9:00–10:00 pm on ABC: October 2, 1959 – June 29, 1962
  • Friday at 7:30–8:30 pm on ABC: September 20, 1963 – February 7, 1964

Related shows

The success of 77 Sunset Strip led to the creation of several other detective shows in exotic locales, all produced by the Warner Bros. studio, which created StripBourbon Street Beat in New Orleans with Richard Long and Andrew Duggan, Hawaiian Eye in Honolulu with Robert Conrad and Connie Stevens, and Surfside 6 in Miami Beach with Troy Donahue and Van Williams. The casts and scripts of these various shows sometimes crossed over, which was logistically easy, since they were all shot in Burbank on the Warner Bros. lot.[citation needed] Some of the detectives, played by the same actors, became regulars in other series after their original series had been cancelled.

The office and bar/nightclub sets of 77 Sunset Strip and Hawaiian Eye were on the same WB soundstage, intertwined to save space, with shared room walls and some doors actually going between the sets (not obvious to viewers).

Legacy

 
Andra Martin as a guest star on 77 Sunset Strip with Efrem Zimbalist Jr., 1960

An engraving in the Sunset Boulevard sidewalk (address number 8524) between La Cienega Boulevard and Alta Loma Road commemorated 77 Sunset Strip, but the area was slated for redevelopment as part of the Sunset Millennium project.[6] In a twist of fate, the opposition to the redevelopment of the area was known as "Save Our Strip" or "SOS" and was spearheaded by former 77 Sunset Strip semiregular Gigi Verone. No number 77 exists on the Strip, as all Sunset Boulevard addresses in the area have four digits. When looked for[by whom?] in January 2023, no trace of the sidewalk engraving remained.[citation needed]

The show was referenced in an episode of Jay Ward's Fractured Flickers, showing a satirical depiction of Ward looking at a lineup of fictional shows, one of them being "77 Gaza Strip."

Episodes of the television series can be seen in reruns through syndication packages offered by Warner Bros. Studios. At one time, 43 episodes had been removed from syndication for various legal reasons, but 13 of these can now be seen as reruns. As of 2017, the syndication package aired on Me-TV contained every original episode.

Thirty-one years after the series left the air, Warner Bros. proposed a modern revival of 77 Sunset Strip, which was to be the first hour-long drama series to air on the new WB Television Network. It was to be produced by Clint Eastwood and starred Jim Caviezel, Timothy Olyphant and Maria Bello.[7] A 25-minute pilot presentation was shot for upfronts in the spring of 1995, but despite a few attempts to modify and finalize it for broadcast in 1995–1996, the project never made it past the testing stage. Early mentions of the show were made in the network's fall affiliate presentation promotion, with the 77 Sunset Strip logo visible in the movie backlot motif.

Episode list

References

  1. ^ p.214 Hunter, Tab & Muller, Eddie Tab Hunter Confidential: The Making of a Movie Star Algonquin Books September 8, 2006
  2. ^ Laurence, Marcus (January 26, 2019). "77 SUNSET STRIP 1958 UNITED STATES". Television Heaven. Retrieved October 20, 2020.
  3. ^ Dregni, Eric; Pete, Pixel (2005). "Chapter 1: Scooter History". Scooters: Everything You Need to Know. MBI Publishing. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-7603-2217-8. Retrieved August 24, 2013. Being the little brother to world famous motorcycles, the Harley Topper could never live up to that rebel image, even with Kookie from 77 Sunset Strip pushing the putt-putts with ad copy like "Kookie, where's your Topper?"
  4. ^ Grant, Roderick M., ed. (December 1959). "Harley-Davidson advertisement". Popular Mechanics. Chicago, IL USA. 112 (6): 211. Retrieved August 24, 2013.
  5. ^ Adams, Val (January 1, 1964). "A.B.C.-TV TO DROP '77 SUNSET STRIP' / Also Discontinuing 3 Other Series Before April". The New York Times, p.41. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on February 19, 2006. Retrieved February 9, 2006.
  7. ^ "Timothy Olyphant: 'Justified' In Laying Down The Law". NPR.org. March 28, 2011. Retrieved April 3, 2013.

External links

  • 77 Sunset Strip at IMDb
  • 77 Sunset Strip at Thrilling Detective
  • 77 Sunset Strip at TVparty.com
  • Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. interview in 1997 by Sylvia Stoddard

sunset, strip, kookie, redirects, here, newspaper, column, character, kookie, mike, royko, czech, comedy, film, kooky, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsour. Kookie redirects here For the newspaper column character Dr I M Kookie see Mike Royko For the Czech comedy film see Kooky This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 77 Sunset Strip news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message 77 Sunset Strip is an American television private detective drama series created by Roy Huggins and starring Efrem Zimbalist Jr Roger Smith Richard Long from 1960 to 1961 and Edd Byrnes billed as Edward Byrnes Each episode was one hour long when aired with commercials The show ran from 1958 to 1964 The character of detective Stuart Bailey was first used by writer Huggins in his 1946 novel The Double Take later adapted into the 1948 film I Love Trouble 77 Sunset StripLouis Quinn and Efrem Zimbalist Jr 1962 GenreCrime dramaCreated byRoy HugginsDirected byIrving J Moore et alStarringEfrem Zimbalist Jr Roger Smith Edward Byrnes Richard Long Louis Quinn Jacqueline Beer Robert Logan Joan Staley season 6 Theme music composerMack David Jerry Livingston original Bob ThompsonComposersMax Steiner Jack HalloranCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons6No of episodes206 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersWilliam T Orr Jack WebbProducersHowie Horwitz Harry Tatelman William Conrad Jerry Davis Fenton Earnshaw Joel Rogosin Roy Huggins Oren W Haglund production manager Gordon Bau make up Camera setupSingle cameraRunning time48 50 minutesProduction companyWarner Bros TelevisionReleaseOriginal networkABCPicture formatBlack and whiteAudio formatMonauralOriginal releaseOctober 10 1958 1958 10 10 February 7 1964 1964 02 07 RelatedI Love Trouble Conflict episode Anything for Money Surfside 6 Bourbon Street Beat Hawaiian Eye Contents 1 Description 1 1 Initial setup and characters 1 2 Tone and cultural impact 1 3 Cast changes during Seasons 1 5 1 4 Episode and guest cast highlights 2 The controversial sixth season 1963 1964 3 Broadcast history 4 Related shows 5 Legacy 6 Episode list 7 References 8 External linksDescription EditInitial setup and characters Edit Roger Smith with guest stars Biff Elliot and Maureen Leeds 1961 Private detective and former World War II Office of Strategic Services secret agent and foreign languages professor Stuart Stu Bailey Zimbalist and former government agent and nonpracticing attorney Jeff Spencer Smith form a duo who work from stylish offices at 77 Sunset Boulevard in Suites 101 and 102 Tab Hunter claimed he was the first choice for the lead of the series but turned it down 1 The street address was colloquially known as the Sunset Strip and was between La Cienega Boulevard and Alta Loma Road on the south side of the strip next door to Dean Martin s real life lounge Dino s Lodge Typically the two detectives would alternate as leads with a Stuart Bailey case being featured one week and a Jeff Spencer case the next although depending on the nature of the case sometimes the two would team up 2 Suzanne Fabry the beautiful French switchboard operator played by Jacqueline Beer handles the phones for Sunset Answering Service in Suite 103 The firm of Bailey amp Spencer employs her answering service as do other clients Although not technically an employee of the firm Suzanne is involved in casework from time to time especially in Season 2 Comic relief is provided by Roscoe the racetrack tout played by Louis Quinn who frequently hangs around the offices giving horse racing tips However he is sometimes used as an operative and is an ever informed source for the word on the street The firm s most frequently seen police contact is Lt Roy Gilmore Byron Keith who is almost never called by his first name The show s breakout character who had not been included in the pilot film was Gerald Lloyd Kookie Kookson III Edd Byrnes the rock and roll loving wisecracking hair combing hipster and aspiring PI who initially works as the valet parking attendant at Dino s the club next to the detectives office Kookie often becomes involved in the firm s cases and is eventually made a full partner in the firm with his own office Also seen relatively frequently are the Frank Ortega Trio playing themselves as the jazzy house band at Dino s Lodge Tone and cultural impact Edit Huggins intended the show to be a hard edged drama but beginning with the 23rd episode The Pasadena Caper the tone started to become much lighter with a strong element of self deprecating humor and the word caper frequently used in episode titles The catchy theme song written by Mack David and Jerry Livingston typified the show s breezy jazzed atmosphere The song became the centerpiece of an album of the show s music in Warren Barker orchestrations which was released in 1959 a top 10 hit in the Billboard LP charts Sue Randall and Kookie 1964 The Kookie character became a cultural phenomenon with his slang expressions such as ginchy cool and piling up Zs sleeping When Kookie helped the detectives on a case by singing a song Edd Byrnes began a singing career with the novelty single Kookie Kookie Lend Me Your Comb based on his frequent combing of his hair this featured Connie Stevens on vocals in the chorus and the song with words and music by Irving Taylor became the first hit single for the recently established Warner Bros Records Kookie was also used to provide product placement for Harley Davidson appearing on their Topper motor scooter in the show and in Harley Davidson advertisements 3 4 The show became the first franchise in television spawning no less than three spinoffs recreating the 77 format a team of private detectives their secretary and sidekick solving cases in picturesque cities Surfside Six was set in Miami Beach Hawaiian Eye s home base was Honolulu Bourbon Street Beat saw a similar detective agency located in New Orleans In some cases 77 scripts were recycled and rewritten to fit the characters of each series It was the genesis of the same concepts that drive Law amp Order NCIS CSI and the Chicago PD Chicago Med Chicago Fire series as well as 9 1 1 Cast changes during Seasons 1 5 Edit When Byrnes demands for more money and an expanded role were not met he left the show for a period in Season 2 After an absence of 16 episodes beginning in January 1960 Byrnes and Warner Bros settled their differences and Kookie came back beginning in May During his absence Roscoe s and Suzanne s roles were beefed up to handle the work normally assigned to Kookie For the 1960 61 season Richard Long who appeared in different roles in two Season 1 episodes moved over from the recently canceled detective series Bourbon Street Beat His character of Rex Randolph from Bourbon Street Beat was said to have left New Orleans and relocated to North Hollywood joining Bailey and Spencer s firm and taking Office 104 The character was dropped after one season but Long once again playing different one shot guest characters was seen again on 77 Sunset Strip in Seasons 5 and 6 Kookie became a full fledged detective and partner in the firm as of Season 4 taking over Rex Randolph s office in 104 At the same time Robert Logan became the new parking lot attendant J R Hale who usually speaks in abbreviations Hale is seen throughout Seasons 4 and 5 Episode and guest cast highlights Edit One of the series more unusual episodes was 1960 s The Silent Caper written by Smith As the title suggests the episode presented its story completely without dialogue Another offbeat entry was 1961 s Reserved for Mr Bailey which finds Zimbalist alone in a ghost town He is the only main actor on screen for the entire hour This episode was not included in the syndication package and many fans had expressed their frustration at being unable to see it again After 56 years out of circulation it finally resurfaced on MeTV on June 17 2017 The show was so popular that rising young actors clamored for guest spots Up and comers who made guest appearances include Ellen Burstyn Roger Moore DeForest Kelley William Shatner Mary Tyler Moore Shirley MacLaine look alike Gigi Verone Robert Conrad Dyan Cannon Janet De Gore Jay North Connie Stevens Irish McCalla Adam West Tuesday Weld Sherry Jackson Marlo Thomas Max Baer Jr Carole Mathews Elizabeth Montgomery Karen Steele Randy Stuart Susan Oliver Robert Vaughn Suzanne Storrs Peter Breck Donna Douglas Troy Donahue Chad Everett Gena Rowlands Cloris Leachman Eve McVeagh and Diane Ladd Established film and TV actors and older stars who guest starred include Fay Wray Francis X Bushman Rodolfo Hoyos Jr Ida Lupino Liliane Montevecchi Keenan Wynn Rolfe Sedan Jim Backus Billie Burke Buddy Ebsen George Jessel Peter Lorre Boris Karloff Burgess Meredith Nick Adams Gerald Mohr and Roy Roberts among others The show occasionally featured sports stars such as Sandy Koufax in guest roles The controversial sixth season 1963 1964 Edit Efrem Zimbalist Jr 1963 In 1963 as the show s popularity waned the entire cast was dismissed except for Zimbalist Jack Webb was brought in as executive producer and William Conrad as a producer director The character of Stuart Bailey was presented as a solo private investigator with no continuity or reference to his past years with Jeff Spencer Suzanne Kookie and Roscoe or to his military OSS background It was an abrupt unexplained disconnect The series and Bailey s personality took on a darker tone and the familiar office parking lot and Dino s Lodge were gone A new musical theme was written by Bob Thompson The Season 6 show title was not changed it still was an address but Bailey s new office is dramatically different from that which he shared with Spencer for the previous five years The interior of Bailey s new office building is shown behind the show s opening and closing credits forcing viewers to ponder how the same address could look so very different it was actually the historic Bradbury building in downtown Los Angeles There seemed to be no spoken mention of his office address in the Season 6 shows although in the episode Bonus Baby when a police officer inspects Bailey s private investigator license a close up shows the address 77 Sunset Strip As the season progressed there were some shifts in tone Several episodes into the season Bailey s stern personality became lighter though still different from that of prior seasons His secretary Hannah previously known to Season 6 viewers only because Bailey addressed her in his recorded dictations was seen on screen beginning with the season s 11th episode Played by Joan Staley Hannah worked in Bailey s office where he developed a romantic interest in her but she continually stymied and frustrated him by playing hard to get As of episode Alimony League the 16th of the season s 20 episodes the opening and closing background of Bradbury building was gone replaced by Bailey in silhouette walking past lighted store windows This was actually a scene from 5 the sixth season opener and it was supposedly located in New York City where Bailey arrived to work for a client to pay his dead brother s way into heaven The episode The Target was unusual because key roles were played by the show s primary behind the scenes crew who happened to also be experienced actors Show producer William Conrad played Maestrian associate producer James Lydon played Charlie writer Tony Barrett played Carnovan and director Lawrence Dobkin played Landers Viewers did not appreciate the numerous changes to the show and it was canceled halfway through its sixth season in February 1964 5 In the 1964 summer reruns period shows from the Bailey and Spencer years were shown and the Season 6 episodes were abandoned rarely seen until September 2017 on MeTV Broadcast history EditNOTE The most frequent time slot for the series is in bold text Friday at 9 30 10 30 pm on ABC October 10 1958 May 29 1959 October 12 1962 June 14 1963 Friday at 9 00 10 00 pm on ABC October 2 1959 June 29 1962 Friday at 7 30 8 30 pm on ABC September 20 1963 February 7 1964Related shows EditThe success of 77 Sunset Strip led to the creation of several other detective shows in exotic locales all produced by the Warner Bros studio which created Strip Bourbon Street Beat in New Orleans with Richard Long and Andrew Duggan Hawaiian Eye in Honolulu with Robert Conrad and Connie Stevens and Surfside 6 in Miami Beach with Troy Donahue and Van Williams The casts and scripts of these various shows sometimes crossed over which was logistically easy since they were all shot in Burbank on the Warner Bros lot citation needed Some of the detectives played by the same actors became regulars in other series after their original series had been cancelled The office and bar nightclub sets of 77 Sunset Strip and Hawaiian Eye were on the same WB soundstage intertwined to save space with shared room walls and some doors actually going between the sets not obvious to viewers Legacy Edit Andra Martin as a guest star on 77 Sunset Strip with Efrem Zimbalist Jr 1960 An engraving in the Sunset Boulevard sidewalk address number 8524 between La Cienega Boulevard and Alta Loma Road commemorated 77 Sunset Strip but the area was slated for redevelopment as part of the Sunset Millennium project 6 In a twist of fate the opposition to the redevelopment of the area was known as Save Our Strip or SOS and was spearheaded by former 77 Sunset Strip semiregular Gigi Verone No number 77 exists on the Strip as all Sunset Boulevard addresses in the area have four digits When looked for by whom in January 2023 no trace of the sidewalk engraving remained citation needed The show was referenced in an episode of Jay Ward s Fractured Flickers showing a satirical depiction of Ward looking at a lineup of fictional shows one of them being 77 Gaza Strip Episodes of the television series can be seen in reruns through syndication packages offered by Warner Bros Studios At one time 43 episodes had been removed from syndication for various legal reasons but 13 of these can now be seen as reruns As of 2017 the syndication package aired on Me TV contained every original episode Thirty one years after the series left the air Warner Bros proposed a modern revival of 77 Sunset Strip which was to be the first hour long drama series to air on the new WB Television Network It was to be produced by Clint Eastwood and starred Jim Caviezel Timothy Olyphant and Maria Bello 7 A 25 minute pilot presentation was shot for upfronts in the spring of 1995 but despite a few attempts to modify and finalize it for broadcast in 1995 1996 the project never made it past the testing stage Early mentions of the show were made in the network s fall affiliate presentation promotion with the 77 Sunset Strip logo visible in the movie backlot motif Episode list EditMain article List of 77 Sunset Strip episodesReferences Edit p 214 Hunter Tab amp Muller Eddie Tab Hunter Confidential The Making of a Movie Star Algonquin Books September 8 2006 Laurence Marcus January 26 2019 77 SUNSET STRIP 1958 UNITED STATES Television Heaven Retrieved October 20 2020 Dregni Eric Pete Pixel 2005 Chapter 1 Scooter History Scooters Everything You Need to Know MBI Publishing p 13 ISBN 978 0 7603 2217 8 Retrieved August 24 2013 Being the little brother to world famous motorcycles the Harley Topper could never live up to that rebel image even with Kookie from 77 Sunset Strip pushing the putt putts with ad copy like Kookie where s your Topper Grant Roderick M ed December 1959 Harley Davidson advertisement Popular Mechanics Chicago IL USA 112 6 211 Retrieved August 24 2013 Adams Val January 1 1964 A B C TV TO DROP 77 SUNSET STRIP Also Discontinuing 3 Other Series Before April The New York Times p 41 Retrieved November 18 2018 The Sunset Millennium Project Archived from the original on February 19 2006 Retrieved February 9 2006 Timothy Olyphant Justified In Laying Down The Law NPR org March 28 2011 Retrieved April 3 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 77 Sunset Strip 77 Sunset Strip at IMDb 77 Sunset Strip at Thrilling Detective 77 Sunset Strip at TVparty com Efrem Zimbalist Jr interview in 1997 by Sylvia Stoddard Portals Television United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 77 Sunset Strip amp oldid 1154658809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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