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Autor Thema: Polizeibericht (Dragnet) (1955-1965 ; 1967-1970) - mit Jack Webb  (Gelesen 4656 mal) Durchschnittliche Bewertung: 2
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« am: 30. Januar 2010, 04:13:16 »

Sergeant Joe Friday und sein Kollege, Officer Bill Gannon, sind mit Fllen beschftigt, die aus den Akten eines realen Police Departments in Los Angeles stammen. Die beiden Polizisten legen Gangstern und Verbrechern das Handwerk und benutzen dabei immer wieder die gleichen Phrasen und Mittel. "Ich heie Joe Friday, ich bin Bulle" und "Nur Fakten, Ma'am" gehren zu Fridays Stammvokabular. Die Flle werden mit der grtmglichen Realittstreue geschildert, und am Ende jeder Episode erklrt ein Sprecher, was sich in der anschlieenden Verhandlung ereignete und wie das Urteil ausfiel.
In einigen Episoden hilft Officer Jim Reed (Kent McCord) aus der (in Deutschland nicht ausgestrahlten) ersten Serie von "Adam 12" (siehe dort) Joe Friday und Bill Gannon bei den Ermittlungen. In der Folge "Polizei unter Verdacht" ist auch Reeds Kollege Pete Malloy (Martin Milner) mit dabei.
Die Serie entstand aus einem Radio-Hrspiel, das seit 1949 in den USA lief. Im Januar 1952 schaffte der "Polizeibericht" als S/W-Serie den Sprung ins Fernsehen und wurde mit Jack Webb und Ben Alexander in den Hauptrollen zum damaligen Inbegriff des US-Krimis, wie in Deutschland "Stahlnetz" oder "Der Kommissar". So wurde "Polizeibericht" auch bei der Ausstrahlung in den ARD-Regionalprogrammen als "das amerikanische Stahlnetz" angekndigt. Die Serie lief bis 1959. 1954 wurde eine Spielfilmfassung mit dem Titel "Dragnet" produziert. 1967 wurde die Serie, erneut mit Jack Webb in der Titelrolle, fr 98 weitere Farb-Episoden wiederbelebt. Die Episode 296, "Eine Weihnachtsgeschichte", ist eine zeitlich angepate Adaption der Folge 64, "The big Little Jesus". In Deutschland liefen nur die Folgen aus den Jahren 1967-1970. Nach dem Ende der Serie entstand der Spielfilm "Fall Johnson aufgeklrt". 1989 wurde der "Polizeibericht" in einer neuen Serie mit neuen Darstellern wiederaufgenommen (siehe "Polizeibericht", Serie 2).

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« Antworten #1 am: 30. Januar 2010, 04:13:26 »

In Deutschland gibts leider derzeit noch keine Silberlinge - aber in den USA [13]

Staffel 1 der Folgen ab 265 (von 1967)




Vereinzelte Folgen der Staffeln zwischen 1953 - 1958 gibts auf diesen DVDs:

20 Folgen aus der 1. Staffel:




4 weitere Folgen:




4 weitere Folgen




8 Folgen der Staffeln von 1968
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« Antworten #2 am: 30. Januar 2010, 04:14:44 »

Original-Reihenfolge: (Folge 1-264 nie in Deutschland gezeigt)-
- 1. Big human bomb
- 2. The big actor
- 3. The big death
- 4. Big mother
- 5. The big cast
- 6. The big speech
- 7. The big parrot
- 8. The big Moody
- 9. The big blast
- 10. The big trail
- 11. The big September man
- 12. The big Casing
- 13. The big phone call
- 14. The big lamp
- 15. The big jump
- 16. The big sorrow
- 17. The big elevator
- 18. The big dance
- 19. The big seventeen
- 20. The big trio
- 21. The big imposter
- 22. 22 rifles for Christmas
- 23. The big cop
- 24. Big Grandma
- 25. The big whiff
- 26. The big show
- 27. The big safe
- 28. The big church
- 29. The big hate
- 30. The big shakedown
- 31. The big rose
- 32. The big building
- 33. The big run
- 34. The big break
- 35. The big light
- 36. The big waiter
- 37. The big test
- 38. The big layout
- 39. The big fire
- 40. The big Ray
- 41. The big Frank
- 42. The big lease
- 43. The big hands
- 44. The big 4th
- 45. The big market
- 46. The big friend
- 47. The big barret
- 48. The big white rat
- 49. The big revolt
- 50. The big bull
- 51. The big Betty
- 52. The big Sophomore
- 53. The big pill
- 54. The big lie
- 55. The big fake
- 56. The big dream
- 57. The big guilt
- 58. The big will
- 59. The big in-laws
- 60. The big Lilly
- 61. The big kill
- 62. The big lover
- 63. The big thief
- 64. The big Little Jesus
- 65. The big Eavesdrop
- 66. The big trunk
- 67. The big youngster
- 68. The big boys
- 69. The big ham
- 70. The big chance
- 71. The big children
- 72. The big poison
- 73. The big quack
- 74. The big Winchester
- 75. The big shoplift
- 76. The big hit-run killer
- 77. The big drink
- 78. The big girl
- 79. The big mattress
- 80. The big pug
- 81. The big frame
- 82. The big plant
- 83. The big check
- 84. The big threat
- 85. The big dare
- 86. The big false make
- 87. The big producer
- 88. The big fraud
- 89. The big crime
- 90. The big pair
- 91. The big escape
- 92. The big kid
- 93. The big missing
- 94. The big bar
- 95. The big present
- 96. The big gangster, Part 1
- 97. The big gangster, Part 2
- 98. The big new years
- 99. The big want ad
- 100. The big affair
- 101. The big bible
- 102. The big bundle
- 103. The big office
- 104. The big rod
- 105. The big rescue
- 106. The big family
- 107. The big shock
- 108. The big screen
- 109. The big TV
- 110. The big dog
- 111. The big underground
- 112. The big key
- 113. The big mailman
- 114. The big customer
- 115. Big Tar baby
- 116. Big number
- 117. The big mask
- 118. The big sucker
- 119. The big mustache
- 120. The big heel
- 121. Big gone
- 122. Big note
- 123. The big watch
- 124. Big student
- 125. Big mug
- 126. The big pipe
- 127. The big chet
- 128. The big no rain
- 129. The big lift
- 130. The big confession
- 131. The big gap
- 132. The big look
- 133. The big glasses
- 134. The big bird
- 135. The big laugh
- 136. The big smoke
- 137. The big bounce
- 138. The big shot
- 139. The big locker
- 140. The big dig
- 141. The big genius
- 142. The big reminisce
- 143. The big tour
- 144. The big sisters
- 145. The big ruling
- 146. The big fall guy
- 147. The big set
- 148. The big child
- 149. The big slug
- 150. The big daughter
- 151. The big no suicide
- 152. The big siege
- 153. The big Mama
- 154. The big revision
- 155. The big ex-blonde
- 156. The big Bobo
- 157. The big rush
- 158. The big set-up
- 159. The big deal
- 160. The big wish
- 161. The big hat
- 162. The big housemaid
- 163. The big gift
- 164. The big salvage
- 165. The big cat
- 166. The big missus
- 167. The big beer
- 168. The big convertible
- 169. The big lamp
- 170. The big tattoo
- 171. The big odd
- 172. The big Bill
- 173. The big search
- 174. The big talk
- 175. The big doting mother
- 176. The big handcuffs
- 177. The big father
- 178. The big switch
- 179. The big steal
- 180. The big Manikin
- 181. The big no tooth
- 182. The bigskip
- 183. The big fin
- 184. The big game
- 185. The big coins
- 186. The big close
- 187. The big tie
- 188. The big cup
- 189. The big truck
- 190. The big saint
- 191. The big match
- 192. The big help
- 193. The big celebration
- 194. The big Cry Baby
- 195. The big lesson
- 196. The big soldier
- 197. The big make
- 198. The big net
- 199. The big constitution
- 200. The big candy box
- 201. The big button
- 202. The big Yak
- 203. The big Howard
- 204. The big tomato cans
- 205. The big dip
- 206. The big license plates
- 207. The big blank
- 208. The big tease
- 209. The big love
- 210. The big red wagon
- 211. The big prescription
- 212. The big full moon
- 213. The big jade
- 214. The big tip
- 215. The big Stubby
- 216. The big baby face
- 217. The big lip
- 218. The big boot
- 219. The big rip
- 220. The big excuse
- 221. The big knot
- 222. The big organizer
- 223. The big hobby
- 224. The big gent
- 225. The big wardrobe
- 226. The big war
- 227. The big bad count
- 228. The big Evans
- 229. The big pack rat
- 230. The big honeymoon
- 231. The big eyes
- 232. The big cracker box
- 233. The big perfume bottle
- 234. The big red
- 235. The big Ruthie
- 236. The big grifter
- 237. The big irony
- 238. The big beating
- 239. The big Sweet Annie
- 240. The big star
- 241. The big Oskar
- 242. The big little boy
- 243. The big voice
- 244. The big juke box
- 245. The big doll
- 246. The big border
- 247. The big Nazi
- 248. The big hot rod
- 249. The big green monkey
- 250. The big hypo
- 251. The big Christmas
- 252. The big donation
- 253. The big Malcolm
- 254. The big smart girl
- 255. The big doctor
- 256. The big signet
- 257. The big accident
- 258. The big mail
- 259. The big sour
- 260. The big roll
- 261. The big thirteen
- 262. The big starlet
- 263. The big holdup

Ab hier beginnen die Folgen von 1967-1970

- 264. Dragnet - Spielfilm
- 265. Der Fall Benjie (The big LSD)
- 266. Der Dynamitdieb (The big explosion)
- 267. Die Bankprfer (The big bank examiners)
- 268. Das interne Verhr (The big interrogation)
- 269. Die roten Masken (The big masked bandits)
- 270. Menschenraub (The big kidnapping)
- 271. Mordfall Troy (The big hammer)
- 272. Raub mit Methode (The big candy store)
- 273. Pelz-Diebstahl (The big fur burglary)
- 274. Jaderaub in Bel Air (The big jade)
- 275. berfall auf einen Polizisten (The big shooting)
- 276. Fahrerflucht (The big hit and run driver)
- 277. Das illegale Wettbro (The big bookie)
- 278. Vertreter auf Abwegen (The subscription racket a.k.a. The big solicitor)
- 279. Mord (The big gun)
- 280. Warenhausdiebstahl (The big kids)
- 281. Der Selbstmord-Mord (The big bullet)
- 282. Die Handgranate (The grenade a.k.a. The big bang)
- 283. Notwehr (The big shooting board)
- 284. Erpresser in Uniform (The big badge racket)
- 285. Bankraub (The big bank jobs)
- 286. Nachbarn (The big neighbor)
- 287. Der Aussteiger (The big frustration a.k.a. The big blank)
- 288. Der alte Einbrecher (The big senior citizen)
- 289. Marihuana-Exzess (The big high)
- 290. Mordauftrag (The big ad)
- 291. Kreditkarten (The missing realtor a.k.a. The big listing)
- 292. Handtaschenraub (The big dog)
- 293. Die Pyramide (The big pyramid)
- 294. Betrug (The phony police racket a.k.a The big magazine)
- 295. Der Fall Waverly (The big trial)
- 296. Eine Weihnachtsgeschichte (The Christmas story)
- 297. Rauschgift (The big shipment)
- 298. Verschwundene Kinder (The big search)
- 299. Der Prophet (The big prophet)
- 300. Der falsche Polizist (The big amateur cop)
- 301. Aus der Traum (The big starlet)
- 302. Der Zigeunerclan (The big clan)
- 303. Das ungewollte Baby (The big little victim)
- 304. Erpressung (The big squeeze)
- 305. Selbstmordversuch (The suicide attempt a.k.a. The big goodbye)
- 306. Bandendiebstahl (The big departure)
- 307. Nachwuchs fr die Akademie (The big investigation)
- 308. Unterschlagung (The big gambler)
- 309. Der Kontaktbeamte (The big problem)
- 310. Autodiebsthle (The big ride)
- 311. Die Polizei, dein Freund und Helfer (Public affairs - DR-07)
- 312. Im Jugenddezernat (Juvenile - DR-05)
- 313. Die Krise (Community relations DR-10)
- 314. Alarmstufe 10 (Management services DR-11)
- 315. Der heimliche Teilhaber (Police commission DR-13)
- 316. Ein gemtlicher Abend (Homicide - DR-06)
- 317. Hrten des Alltags (Robbery - DR-15)
- 318. Hoher Besuch (Public affairs - DR-12)
- 319. Karrierekampf (Training - DR-18)
- 320. Das Verhtungsprogramm (Public affairs - DR-14)
- 321. Drogenmafia (Narcotics - DR-16)
- 322. Polizei unter Verdacht (Internal affairs - DR-20)
- 323. Konferenz am Lake Arrowhead (White community relations DR-17)
- 324. Der Fall Mary Jenkins (Homicide - DR-22)
- 325. Eine aufregende Nacht (B.O.D. - DR-27)
- 326. Sprhund Ginger (Narcotics - DR-21)
- 327. Sergeant Drucker spielt falsch (Administrative Vice - DR-29)
- 328. Der Mann mit den fnf Gesichtern (Frauds - DR-28)
- 329. Hinter verschlossenen Tren (Juvenile - DR-19)
- 330. Captain Crusader mu sterben (Burglary - DR-31)
- 331. Der Zocker (Vice - DR-30)
- 332. Knstlerpech (Forgery - DR-33)
- 333. Auf Leben und Tod (Juvenile - DR-32)
- 334. Nachtschicht (Juvenile - DR-35)
- 335. Kreditkartenschwindel (Frauds - DR-36)
- 336. Illegaler Waffenhandel (Intellgience - DR-34)
- 337. Tdlicher Einsatz (Personnel - The shooting)
- 338. Doppelmord (Homicide - The student)
- 339. Der Ring (S.L.U. - The ring)
- 340. Grenzflle (D.H.Q. - Medical)
- 341. Dr. Daniel Lumis (Burglary - Mister)
- 342. Der Schulhofdealer (Juvenile - little pusher)
- 343. Vorgetuschte Notwehr (Homicide - cigarette butt)
- 344. Geheimnis um Dorothy H. (D.H.Q. - Missing persons)
- 345. Der fehlende Zeuge (Burglary - auto courtroom)
- 346. Die Hrte des Gesetzes (Internal affairs - parolee)
- 347. Jugendlicher Bandendiebstahl (Burglary auto - juvenile genius)
- 348. Wie gewonnen, so zerronnen (Bunco $9000)
- 349. Der verlorene Sohn (Narco - missing hypo)
- 350. Die hilfsbereite Miss Davis (Burglary - helpful woman)
- 351. Vertrauenskampf (Homicide - who killed who?)
- 352. Geld fr den Dealer (Burglary - the son)
- 353. Verflixtes Wochenende (A.I.D. - The weekend)
- 354. Das Haus in der Ascot Street (Narco - pillmaker)
- 355. Hundediebe (Auto theft - dognapper)
- 356. Abschied fr immer (Missing persons - the body)
- 357. Im Dienste der Natur (Forgery - the rangers)
- 358. Der Amoklauf (D.H.Q. - Night school)
- 359. Mrs. Emerson klagt an (I.A.D. - The receipt)
- 360. Die Rache einer Frau (Robbery - the harassing wife)
- 361. Der Safeknacker (Burglary - baseball)
- 362. Der 90-Dollar-Mord (D.H.Q. - The victims)
- 363. Fall Johnson aufgeklrt (Dragnet) - Spielfilm
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« Antworten #3 am: 30. Januar 2010, 04:15:16 »

John Randolph "Jack" Webb (April 2, 1920  December 23, 1982) was an American actor, television producer, director, and writer who is most famous for his role as Sergeant Joe Friday in the radio and television series Dragnet. He was also the founder of his own production company, Mark VII Productions

Biography

 Early life and career
Born in Santa Monica, California, Webb grew up poor in the Bunker Hill slum section of Los Angeles to a Jewish father and a Catholic mother; he was raised Catholic. He was a sickly child and studied art as a young man. One of the tenants in the rooming house run by his mother was an ex-jazzman who imbued Webb with a lifelong interest in jazz when he gave him a recording of Bix Beiderbecke's "At the Jazz Band Ball."


Acting career
After serving as a crewmember of a B-26 Marauder in World War II he starred in a radio show about a waterfront character who operated as an unlicensed private detective, Pat Novak for Hire. Webb's other radio shows include Johnny Modero, Pier 23, Jeff Regan, Investigator, Murder and Mr. Malone and One Out of Seven.

Probably his most famous motion picture role was as the combat-hardened drill instructor on Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island in the film The D.I.. Webb's characterization in this role would color most of his later acting.


Dragnet and stardom
Webb had a featured role as a crime lab technician in the 1948 film He Walked by Night based on the real-life murder of a California Highway Patrolman. The film was made in semidocumentary style with technical advice/assistance provided by Detective Sergeant Marty Wynn of the Los Angeles Police Department. It was this film that gave Webb the idea for Dragnet.

After getting much assistance from Sgt. Wynn and legendary LAPD chief William Parker, Dragnet hit radio airwaves in 1949 (running until 1954) and then television in 1951 on the NBC network. Webb starred as Sgt. Joe Friday and Barton Yarborough co-starred as Sgt. Ben Romero.

Webb was a stickler for attention to detail. He believed that viewers wanted "realism" and strove to give it to them. Jack Webb had tremendous respect for the people in law enforcement. He often mentioned in interviews that he was angry about the "ridiculous" amount of abuse that police were often subjected to by the press and the public. He said that he wanted to perform a service for the police by showing them as low-key working class heroes.

Despite his reputation for accuracy, he wasn't above bending the rules. According to one "Dragnet" technical advisor, he (the advisor) pointed out that several circumstances in one episode were extremely unlikely in real life. "You know that, and now I know that. But that little old lady in Kansas will never know the difference," Webb said in response.

In 1950, Webb appeared alongside future Dragnet partner Harry Morgan in the film noir Dark City.

The year 1952 saw Dragnet become a successful television show. Unfortunately Barton Yarborough died suddenly of a heart attack, and Barney Phillips (Sgt. Ed Jacobs) and Herbert Ellis (Officer Frank Smith) temporarily stepped in as partners. In 1952, veteran radio and film actor Ben Alexander would debut as the second incarnation of jovial, burly Officer Frank Smith. Alexander proved to be a popular addition to the series as Webb's detective partner and remained a cast member until the cancellation in 1959.

Dragnet began with "The story you are about to see is true. Only the names have been changed to protect the innocent." At the end of each show, the results of the trial of the suspect and severity of sentence were announced by Hal Gibney. Webb frequently re-created entire floors of buildings on soundstages, such as the police headquarters at Los Angeles City Hall for Dragnet and a floor of the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner Building for the 1959 film -30-.

During the early days of Dragnet, he continued to appear in other movies, notably the 1950 Billy Wilder film Sunset Boulevard.

Webb's personal life was better defined by his love of jazz than his interest in police work. His life-long interest in the cornet and racially tolerant attitude allowed him to move easily in the jazz culture, where Webb met singer and actress Julie London. They married in 1947 and raised two children. They later divorced and Webb married three more times.

In 1951, Webb introduced a short-lived radio series, Pete Kelly's Blues, in an attempt to bring the music he loved to a broader audience. That radio series became the basis for a 1955 movie of the same name. However, neither the radio series nor the movie resonated with the audiences of the time.

In early 1967 Webb produced and starred in a new color version of Dragnet for NBC. This version co-starred Harry Morgan as Officer Bill Gannon. (Ben Alexander was unavailable as he was co-starring in Felony Squad on ABC.) The show's pilot, originally produced as a made-for-TV movie in 1966, did not air until 1969. The series itself ran through 1970.

Beginning in 1968, in concert with Robert A. Cinader, Webb produced NBC's popular Adam-12, which focused on LAPD uniform officers Pete Malloy (Martin Milner) and Jim Reed (Kent McCord), which ran until 1975.

In 1968 Webb performed, in Joe Friday character, the classic "Copper Clappers" sketch during an appearance on The Tonight Show where a pokerfaced Webb echoed Johnny Carson's equally-deadpan robbery report where all the details started with "Cl" or least the letter C.

In the early 70s Webb produced The DA with Robert Conrad and O'Hara: US Treasury with David Janssen. These were short-lived, but another show, Emergency!, proved to be a success, running from 1972 to 1977, with ratings occasionally even topping its timeslot competitor, All in the Family. Webb cast his ex-wife, Julie London, as well as her second husband and Dragnet ensemble player Bobby Troup, as nurse Dixie McCall and Dr. Joe Early.


Late life
Project UFO was another Webb production and depicted Project Blue Book, a U.S. Air Force investigation into unidentified flying objects. This was the last major product of his Mark VII production company. The end credits for the Mark VII productions famously showed a man's hands using a sledge hammer to stamp "VII" into a metal plate. It was later revealed that the hands belonged to Webb himself.

He was working on scripts for another revival of Dragnet in 1983 with Kent McCord as his partner, when he died of a heart attack in 1982 at the age of 62.

He was interred in the Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles. Webb was given a funeral with full police honors (including the chief of police announcing that the badge number 714 that Webb used in Dragnet would be retired) although he had never actually served on the force.

Not only did the LAPD use Dragnet episodes as training films for a time, they also named a police academy auditorium after Webb.

Universal has released several of Webb's series on DVD, including Dragnet 1967, Emergency! and Adam-12. In addition a number of episodes of the 1950s Dragnet series are now in the public domain and as such are widely available on non-Universal DVD releases. The Dragnet 1967 and Adam-12 theme songs are available on iTunes for downloading to iPod.


Trivia
In homage to Webb, a photo of him can be seen in the Tom Hanks-Dan Aykroyd film Dragnet (1987), co-starring Harry Morgan.
The hands swinging the hammer at the end of Webb's produced shows (Mark VII Productions) are his own.
His rendition of the song "Try a Little Tenderness" was included in the first of Rhino Records' Golden Throats albums.

Filmography
Features:

Three on a Match (1932)
Hollow Triumph (1948)
He Walked by Night (1948)
Sword in the Desert (1949)
The Men (1950)
Sunset Boulevard (1950)
Dark City (1950)
Halls of Montezuma (1950)
You're in the Navy Now (1951)
Appointment with Danger (1951)
Dragnet (1954)
Pete Kelly's Blues (1955)
The D.I. (1957)
-30- (1959)
The Last Time I Saw Archie (1961)
MCRD, San Diego (1973) (documentary) (narrator)
Short Subjects:

Army Information Film No. 7: Code of Conduct - To Resist (1950)
The Challenge of Ideas (1961) (narrator)
A Force in Readiness (1961)
The Commies are Coming, the Commies are Coming (1962)
Patrol Dogs of the United States Air Force (1968) (narrator)
Star Spangled Salesman (1968)

Television Work
Dragnet (1951-1959)
Dragnet 1967 (1967-1970)
O'Hara, U.S. Treasury (1971) (narrator) (pilot for series)
Escape (1973) (canceled after 4 episodes)
Project UFO (1978-1979) (narrator)

Books
The Badge Prentice-Hall, (hardback, 1958).

References
Hugh W. Binyon: Reflections in a Pig's Eye Babcock Publishing; (paperback, 2002)
Michael J. Hayde: My Name's Friday: The Unauthorized but True Story of Dragnet and the Films of Jack Webb; Cumberland House Publishing; ISBN 1-58182-190-5 (paperback, 2001)
Jack Webb: The Badge: The Inside Story of One of America's Great Police Departments ; Prentice-Hall; (hardback, 1958)
Maurice Zolotow: The True Story of Jack Webb The American Weekly, Sept. 12, 19, 26, Oct. 3, 1954.
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« Antworten #4 am: 30. Januar 2010, 04:15:55 »

Harry Morgan
 
 
Birth name Henry Bratsburg
Born April 10, 1915 (1915-04-10) (age 92)
 Detroit, Michigan
Harry Morgan (born Henry Bratsburg on April 10, 1915 in Detroit, Michigan) is an American television actor of Norwegian extraction. He graduated from Muskegon High School in Muskegon, Michigan [1].

He is perhaps best known as Colonel Sherman T. Potter on M*A*S*H, "Pete" on Pete and Gladys and December Bride, and Detective Bill Gannon on Dragnet.


Family
Morgan has been married twice, first to Eileen Detchon from 1940 until her death in 1985, and then to Barbara Bushman Quine (granddaughter of silent film star Francis X. Bushman) from 1988 to the present. He had four sons with his first wife, Christopher, Charles, Paul and Daniel (who died in 1982). His grandson Spencer Morgan is a columnist at the New York Observer.[2]


Career
Morgan made his debut, originally using the name Henry Morgan, in the 1942 movie To the Shores of Tripoli. His screen name later would become Henry "Harry" Morgan and eventually Harry Morgan, to avoid confusion with the then-popular comedian of the same name on radio and TV.

Morgan continued to play a number of significant roles on the big screen in such films as The Ox-Bow Incident (1943), Dragonwyck (1946), The Glenn Miller Story (1953), Inherit the Wind (1960), How The West Was Won (1962), Frankie and Johnny (1966), Support Your Local Sheriff! (1969); Support Your Local Gunfighter! (1971); The Shootist (1976), and The Wild Wild West Revisted (1979).

Morgan hosted the NBC radio series Mystery in the Air in 1947. On television, he played Pete in Pete and Gladys (1960-1962), a spin-off of his character in December Bride starring Spring Byington. He is even more widely recognized as Officer Bill Gannon, Joe Friday's partner in the revived version of Dragnet (1967-1970). Morgan had also appeared with Dragnet star Jack Webb in two film noir movies, Dark City (1950) and Appointment with Danger (1951), and was an early regular member of Jack Webb's stock company of actors on the original Dragnet radio show.

Then came M*A*S*H. Morgan played crazed Major General Bartford Hamilton Steele in the third season opener "The General Flipped At Dawn" (9/10/74). Steele is convinced that the 4077th needs to move closer to the front line, to be near the action.

Morgan's memorable performance as the nutso Steele impressed the producers of the show. The following season, Morgan joined the cast of M*A*S*H as the beloved Colonel Sherman T. Potter. Morgan replaced McLean Stevenson, who had left the show at the end of the previous season. Colonel Potter was a career Army officer who was tough yet caring. He was a father figure to the people under his command.

In 1980, Morgan won an Emmy award for his performance on M*A*S*H. Morgan reprised the Potter role in a shortlived spin-off series, AfterMASH.

In 1987, Morgan also reprised his Bill Gannon character for a supporting role in the film version of Dragnet, a comedy starring and written by Dan Aykroyd, and co-starring Tom Hanks and Christopher Plummer. On the TV show, Morgan had usually played Gannon fairly light and comedic, in keeping with his general acting style in those days, and contrasting well with Jack Webb's no-nonsense portrayal of Joe Friday. Curiously, or perhaps purposely, in the film version, he played Gannon as a brusque, authoritarian captain of police, quite different from his Detective Gannon in the 1967 TV show, and rather closer to his characterization of Colonel Potter.

In the 1990s, Morgan played the role of "Judge Stoddard Bell" on the series of The Incident TV movies. He was also on an episode of The Simpsons as Officer Bill Gannon from Dragnet in the 7th season, and made an appearance on 3rd Rock from the Sun as a university professor. Morgan also directed episodes for several TV series, including 2 episodes of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour and 8 episodes of M*A*S*H. Harry Morgan also had a guest role on The Jeff Foxworthy Show as Raymond.

In 2006, Harry Morgan was inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.
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« Antworten #5 am: 30. Januar 2010, 04:19:49 »

#Ungültiger YouTube Link#

#Ungültiger YouTube Link#

Mit Sicherheit einer der realistischten Polizeiserien aller Zeiten. Eine Serie, die nahezu ohne Action auskommt und die ganz normale Polizeiarbeit zeiugt - jede Folge beruht auf wahren Tatsachen

Jack Webb, mit der Rolle des Joe Friday unsterblich geworden, war nicht nur der Hauptdarsteller der Serie, sondern auch Creator und Produzent. Webb hatte für die Serie lange recherchiert und selbst längere Zeit Streife mitgefahren

Bis vor kurzem zeigte Pay TV Sender 13th. Street die Serie 3 Jahre in Dauerschleife.

Von den 363 Folgen wurden in Deutschland nur 99 Folgen ausgestrahlt, und zwar nur die Folgen zwischen Staffel 17-20
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« Antworten #6 am: 24. April 2010, 01:19:45 »

Der ganz große Krimiklassiker schlechthin - alleine das Theme kent jeder Mensch. Jack webb schuf damit eine der besten, realistischsten und bekanntesten Serien aller Zeiten!
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« Antworten #7 am: 22. Januar 2012, 01:17:42 »

Bei thomasfilmclassics (sehr gute Seite für alte Serien und Serials) gibt es ein Set mit 57 Episoden der 50er-Fassung. Das dürfte wohl die umfangreichste Box sein, die man davon bekommt.

Ich persönlich muss sagen, dass ich Ed O'Neill als Joe Friday vorziehe. Der war einfach gigantisch in dem Remake. Einer von ganz wenigen Fällen, wo das Original wirklich getoppt wurde, wobei Webb mit seinem authentischen Anspruch durchaus gute Kost abgeliefert hat.

Sehr cool ist übrigens auch der 50er-Farbfilm, ebenfalls von und mit Webb, der bei uns als "Großrazzia" lief. Der schaut remastered wirklich gut aus.
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« Antworten #8 am: 22. Januar 2012, 03:16:34 »

Finde ich auch. Obwohl ich Ed O'Neill sonst nicht mag - aber als Joe Friday war er einfach genial. In meinen Augen seine beste Rolle in seiner Karriere. Wobei Jack Webb natürlich auch klasse war, aber vom Charakter her doch anders, während Webb eher der besonnene, ruhige Cop war, spielte O'Neill ihn eher zynischer...aber OK, es war mehr an die Neuzeit angepasst.
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« Antworten #9 am: 21. Juni 2019, 10:27:06 »

Scheint auch ein sehr umfangreiches Franchise zu sein. Neben den o.g. beiden Serien (wobei laut imdb die erste von 1951-1959 gedreht wurde), gibt es noch folgende weitere Versionen:

1954: Kinofilm (in Dtl. unter dem Titel "Großrazzia" ins Kino gekommen)
1966: TV-Film (in Dtl. unter dem Titel "Fall Johnson aufgeklärt" gesendet worden)
1987: Kinofilm (auf DVD/BD erschienen)
1989: Serie (in Dtl. unter dem Titel "Polizeibericht" gesendet)
2003: Serie (in Dtl. unter dem Titel "Polizeibericht Los Angeles" gesendet)
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« Antworten #10 am: 21. Juni 2019, 12:03:32 »

...von den ganzen Radiosendungen, die vor der TV-Serie spielten, mal ganz abgesehen Grinsen Die wurden meine ich uch von Jack Webb gesprochen.
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« Antworten #11 am: 21. Juli 2022, 23:40:24 »

Meine Autogrammsammlung:

Bisher "nur" Harry Morgan:

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