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Kojak

 
TV Series:

Kojak

  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Detective Show, Police Detective Film
  • Main Cast: Telly Savalas, Dan Frazer, Kevin Dobson, George Savalas, Vince Conti
  • Release Year: 1973
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 60 minutes

Plot

The character of tough, sarcastic, lollipop-sucking New York City police detective Theo Kojak was introduced in The Marcus-Nelson Murders, a 1973 TV movie based on the novel by Selwyn Raab, which in turn was inspired by the real-life Wylie-Hoffert murder case of 1963 that ultimately led to the Supreme Court's Miranda decision in 1966. Telly Savalas, a busy, baldheaded character actor who had only occasionally received above-the-title billing in his long career, became an international superstar in the role of Kojak, which he carried over into a long-running CBS cop show. Debuting October 24, 1973, Kojak was set in Manhattan (though not filmed there until its fourth season), where hard-boiled, thoroughly incorruptible Lt. Theo Kojak took his marching orders from his former partner and longtime friend, 13th precinct Captain Frank McNeill (Dan Frazer). Although Kojak had a habit of bending the rules to suit his needs, he was much valued by McNeill and the force because he invariably got results. Kojak's associates and assistants included plainclothes detective Lt. Bobby Crocker (Kevin Dobson), Detective Stavros (played by the star's brother George Savalas, who during the series' first two seasons billed himself as "Demosthenes"), and detectives Rizzo and Saperstein (Vince Conti, Mark Russell).

Extremely popular with both civilians and law enforcement personnel -- and a veritable cornucopia of such quotable lines as "Who loves ya, baby?" -- Kojak lasted five seasons and 118 hour-long episodes before it was canceled by CBS and ended its run on April 15, 1978. Seven years later, Telly Savalas revived the character for the TV movie Kojak: The Belarus File, which was followed two years later by another feature-length endeavor, Kojak: The Price of Justice. And from November 4, 1989, through June 30, 1990, five two-hour Kojak episodes -- in which the title character had been promoted to inspector -- were telecast as part of the crime-anthology series The ABC Mystery Movie. This time around, Telly Savalas' co-stars included Andre Braugher as Detective Winston Blake, Charles Cioffi as Chief George "Fitz" Morris, Kario Salem as Detective Paco Montana, and the star's daughter Candace Savalas as Kojak's secretary Pamela. Kojak was revived for a third weekly series run in 2005, with Ving Rhames starring in the title role created by the late Telly Savalas. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Mark Russell - Detective Saperstein; Andre Braugher - Detective Winston Blake; Charles Cioffi - Chief George "Fitz" Morris; Kario Salem - Detective Paco Montana; Candace Savalas - Pamela

Credit

Matthew Rapf - Executive Producer, Abby Mann - Show Creator, Jack Laird - Supervising Producer, Stuart Cohen - Supervising Producer

Episodes

Kojak: 60 Miles to Hell
Kojak: A Grave Too Soon
Kojak: A Hair-Trigger Away
Kojak: A House of Prayer, a Den of Thieves
Kojak: A Killing in the Second House
Kojak: A Long Way from Times Square
Kojak: A Need to Know
Kojak: A Question of Answers, Part 1
Kojak: A Question of Answers, Part 2
Kojak: A Shield for Murder, Part 1
Kojak: A Shield for Murder, Part 2
Kojak: A Souvenir from Atlantic City
Kojak: A Strange Kind of Love
Kojak: A Summer Madness
Kojak: A Very Deadly Game
Kojak: A Wind from Corsica
Kojak: Acts of Desperate Men
Kojak: An Unfair Trade
Kojak: Another Gypsy Queen
Kojak: Bad Dude
Kojak: Be Careful What You Pray For
Kojak: Before the Devil Knows
Kojak: Birthday Party
Kojak: Black Thorn
Kojak: Both Sides of the Law
Kojak: By Silence Betrayed
Kojak: Caper on a Quiet Street
Kojak: Case Without a File
Kojak: Chain of Custody
Kojak: Close Cover Before Killing
Kojak: Conspiracy of Fear
Kojak: Cop in a Cage
Kojak: Cross Your Heart and Hope to Die
Kojak: Cry for the Kids
Kojak: Dark Sunday
Kojak: Dead Again
Kojak: Dead on His Feet
Kojak: Deadly Innocence
Kojak: Death is Not a Passing Grade
Kojak: Deliver Us Some Evil
Kojak: Die Before They Wake
Kojak: Down a Long and Lonely River
Kojak: Eighteen Hours of Fear
Kojak: Elegy in an Asphalt Graveyard
Kojak: Girl in the River
Kojak: How Cruel the Frost, How Bright the Stars
Kojak: Hush Now, or You'll Die
Kojak: I Could Kill My Wife's Lawyer
Kojak: I Want to Report a Dream
Kojak: I Was Happy Where I Was
Kojak: In Full Command
Kojak: Justice Deferred
Kojak: Justice for All
Kojak: Kiss It All Goodbye
Kojak: Knockover
Kojak: Kojak's Days, Part 1
Kojak: Kojak's Days, Part 2
Kojak: Lady in the Squad Room
Kojak: Laid Off
Kojak: Last Rites for a Dead Priest
Kojak: Law Dance
Kojak: Letters of Death
Kojak: Life, Liberation, and the Pursuit of Death
Kojak: Loser Takes All
Kojak: Market to a Dead Bookie
Kojak: May the Horse Be With You
Kojak: Mojo
Kojak: Money Back Guarantee
Kojak: Monkey on a String
Kojak: Mouse
Kojak: My Brother, My Enemy
Kojak: Night of the Piraeus
Kojak: No Immunity for Murder
Kojak: No License to Kill
Kojak: Nursemaid
Kojak: On the Edge
Kojak: Once More from Birdland
Kojak: One for the Morgue
Kojak: Out of the Frying Pan ...
Kojak: Out of the Shadows
Kojak: Over the Water
Kojak: Photos Must Credit Joe Paxton
Kojak: Queen of the Gypsies
Kojak: Requiem for a Cop
Kojak: Season 01
Kojak: Season 02
Kojak: Season 03
Kojak: Season 04
Kojak: Season 05
Kojak: Siege of Terror
Kojak: Silent Snow, Deadly Snow
Kojak: Sister Maria
Kojak: Slay Ride
Kojak: Sweeter Than Life
Kojak: Tears for All Who Loved Her
Kojak: The Best Judge Money Can Buy
Kojak: The Best War in Town
Kojak: The Betrayal
Kojak: The Captain's Brother's Wife
Kojak: The Chinatown Murders, Part 1
Kojak: The Chinatown Murders, Part 2
Kojak: The Condemned
Kojak: The Corrupter
Kojak: The Forgotten Room
Kojak: The Frame
Kojak: The Godson
Kojak: The Good Luck Bomber
Kojak: The Halls of Terror
Kojak: The Nicest Guys on the Block
Kojak: The Only Way Out
Kojak: The Pride and the Princess
Kojak: The Queen of Hearts Is Wild
Kojak: The Summer of '69, Part 1
Kojak: The Summer of '69, Part 2
Kojak: The Trade-Off
Kojak: Therapy in Dynamite
Kojak: Two-Four-Six for Two Hundred
Kojak: Unwanted Partners
Kojak: Wall Street Gunslinger
Kojak: Web of Death
Kojak: When You Hear the Beep, Drop Dead
Kojak: Where Do You Go When You Have No Place to Go?
Kojak: You Can't Tell a Hurt Man How to Holler
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Kojak
Kojak title screen.jpg
Kojak title screen, from the first season
Format Crime drama
Created by Abby Mann
Starring Telly Savalas
Dan Frazer
Kevin Dobson
George Savalas
Mark Russell
Vince Conti
Andre Braugher
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 6
No. of episodes 125 (List of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Abby Mann
James Duff McAdams
Running time 60 minutes (per episode)
Broadcast
Original channel CBS
Original run October 24, 1973 – March 18, 1978

Kojak is an American television series starring Telly Savalas as the title character, bald New York City Police Department Detective Lieutenant Theo Kojak. It aired from October 24, 1973 to March 18, 1978 on CBS. It took the time slot of the popular Cannon series, which was moved one hour earlier. Kojak's Greek heritage, shared by actor Savalas, was prominently featured in the series.

Contents

Production

The show was created by Abby Mann, an Academy Award-winning film writer best known for his work on drama anthologies such as Robert Montgomery Presents and Playhouse 90. Universal Television approached him to do a story based on the 1963 Wylie-Hoffert "Career Girls Murders". The crime involved the brutal rape and murder of two young professional women in Manhattan. Due to poor police work and the prevailing casual attitude toward suspects' civil rights, the crime was pinned on a young African-American male, George Whitmore, Jr, who had been arrested on a separate assault charge. After illegally obtaining a confession, the police had the suspect all but convicted until a second investigation by a different team of detectives exonerated the suspect and identified the real killer, a white junkie. Kojak himself was a composite, based on a number of detectives, lawyers and reporters who were involved in the 1963 Wylie-Hoffert murder case, which included police detective Thomas J. Cavanagh Jr., known to his colleagues as "the velvet whip", and who had been part of the team that cleared Whitmore of the double-murder.[1]

Mann developed the project as a gritty police procedural, but with a subtext focusing on institutionalized prejudice and the civil rights of suspects and witnesses. The result, The Marcus-Nelson Murders, in which the character's last name was spelled "Kojack", prompted the commission of the series.

The opening and closing titles of the pilot emphasized the point that it was a fictional account of the events that led to the passing of the Miranda rights by the US Supreme Court in 1966.

Plot

The series is set in New York City's Thirteenth Precinct. It revolves around the efforts of the incorruptible Lt. Theo Kojak (Telly Savalas), a tough, bald New York City policeman who was fond of lollipops and for using the catchphrase, "Who loves ya, baby?" Lt. Kojak displayed a dark, cynical wit and a tendency to bend the rules in order to bring a criminal to justice. In the early episodes of the series, Kojak smoked heavily; in order to reflect the anti-smoking sentiment gaining momentum on American TV, the writers decided that Kojak had quit smoking. He began sucking on lollipops as a substitute, which became a trademark of the character (although Kojak is frequently seen smoking a cigarillo when he winds up a case by interrogation of the main suspect(s)).

Telly Savalas as Lt. Theo Kojak

His longtime supervisor was Capt. Frank McNeil (Dan Frazer). Later in the series, McNeil was promoted to Chief of Detectives in Manhattan. Kojak is the commander of the Manhattan South Precinct's detective squad. His squad includes one of his favorite employees: young plainclothes officer, Det. Bobby Crocker (Kevin Dobson). Detectives Stavros (played by Telly's real-life brother George Savalas, who originally used the name "Demosthenes" as his screen credit), Saperstein (Mark Russell), and Rizzo (Vince Conti), all gave Kojak support.

In 1976, acclaimed crime writer Joe Gores received an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best Episode in a TV Series Teleplay for the third-season episode "No Immunity for Murder" (first aired November 23, 1975).

The show ended in 1978, after five seasons, due to low ratings. Reruns of Kojak became successful in syndication and TV Land. Years after the series ended, Savalas reprised the role in two TV movies, The Belarus File (1985), an adaptation of the John Loftus book The Belarus Secret, and The Price of Justice (1987), based on Dorothy Uhnak's novel, The Investigation. Kojak is not a character in either book.

In 19891990 Kojak returned to television in five two-hour episodes that aired on ABC, rotating with three other series as part of the ABC Mystery Movie. No longer a lieutenant commanding a precinct detective squad, Kojak had been promoted to inspector and put in charge of the NYPD's city-wide Major Crimes Squad. Andre Braugher was cast as a young detective assigned to Kojak's command.

Series stars The Savalas Brothers (Telly & George), Frazer and Dobson are the only cast members to appear in every episode of the series, and stayed throughout the entire run.

Characters

  • Telly Savalas - Lieutenant Theo Kojak - A bald detective sucking lollipops
  • Dan Frazer - Capt. Frank McNeil - Kojak's boss
  • Kevin Dobson - Det. Bobby Crocker - Kojak's partner
  • George Savalas (Demosthenes) - Det. Stavros - Kojak's supporting co-worker
  • Mark Russell - Det. Saperstein
  • Vince Conti - Det. Rizzo
  • Andre Braugher - Det. Winston Blake (1989-90 ABC revival)

A roster of guest stars

During its five season run, many unfamiliar and/or familiar actors who guest-starred on the show went on to greater fame; among those appearing in Kojak episodes are: John Ritter, Bernie Kopell, Kathleen Quinlan, Sharon Gless, Swoosie Kurtz, Stacy Keach, Sr., Sylvester Stallone, Thayer David, Lenny Montana, Jayne Kennedy, David White, Harvey Keitel, Charles Siebert, Joan Van Ark, John Pleshette, Pamela Hensley, Yvonne Craig, Mary Beth Hurt, Roosevelt Grier, Lynn Redgrave, Kene Holliday, John Larroquette, Lonny Chapman, Judith Chapman, Richard Eastham, Erik Estrada, Robert Ito, Richard Herd, Robert Webber, Sally Kirkland, Richard Gere, Paul Benedict, James Luisi, Roger E. Mosley, Stephen Macht, Nicholas Colasanto, Dabney Coleman, James Sloyan, Michael Ansara, Paul Michael Glaser, Marco St. John, Ken Kercheval, Judith Light, John M. Pickard, Eileen Brennan, Al Franken, Irene Cara, Hector Elizondo, Jackie Cooper, William Katt, Jerry Orbach, Danny Thomas, Allan Miller, Danny Aiello and James Woods, among many others.

Future Hill Street Blues stars, Daniel J. Travanti and Veronica Hamel would make guest appearances on the show, along with future Falcon Crest stars David Selby and Susan Sullivan, future The Young and The Restless stars Eric Braeden and Jess Walton, and Len Lesser, who portrayed Uncle Leo on Seinfeld, made appearances on the show, as well.

Music

The somewhat more well-known first Kojak theme, in two distinct arrangements is the work of Billy Goldenberg, who scored the early episodes. John Cacavas composed the second main title theme used throughout the show's 5th and final season.[2]

Episodes

Kojak aired for 5 seasons on CBS, from 1973-1978. In the mid-eighties Kojak returned in two made-for-TV movies. In 1989, eleven years after the series ended, Telly Savalas returned to play Kojak in 5 TV movies that aired on ABC as part of their ABC Mystery Movie theme block which aired on Saturday nights.

Revival

In March 2005, a new Kojak series debuted on the USA Network cable channel and on ITV4 in the UK. In this re-imagined version, African-American actor Ving Rhames portrays the character. The series only lasted one season.

Cultural Impact

In Brazil the show was so successful that in the 1970s and 80s the term "Kojak" became Brazilian slang for "bald man". Telly Savalas visited the country to do promotional work.

In Rio de Janeiro, the expression: "I won't give a chance to Kojak" became popular among criminals — as in, the speaker would avoid leaving any clue that would lead the police to him or her. Later, this expression became popular among lay people. Nowadays, it means "I won't let anyone see my mistakes".

On French television, actor Henry Djanik dubbed Kojak. He also dubbed "Dog Savalas", who was modelled on Telly Savalas, and was a character from the manga and anime versions of the popular Japanese series Space Adventure Cobra.[3]

In Chile, a "kojak" is a slang to refer to any kind of lollipop.

DVD releases

Universal Studios Home Entertainment released Season One of Kojak on DVD in Region 1 on March 22, 2005. Season 1 was also released in Region 2 on July 18, 2005 and in Region 4 on July 13, 2005. It is not known if the remaining seasons will be released.

DVD Name Episodes Release dates
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
Season One 22 March 22, 2005 July 18, 2005 July 13, 2005
Season Two 25 N/A N/A N/A
Season Three 24 N/A N/A N/A
Season Four 25 N/A N/A N/A
Season Five 22 N/A N/A N/A

References

The NY Times article contains a correction that notes that Kojak is a composite and not based on any one person.

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

TV Series. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kojak" Read more