My Friend Tony
My Friend Tony is an American crime drama that aired on NBC in 1969. The pilot originally aired as "My Pal Tony" on The Danny Thomas Hour on March 4, 1968.
My Friend Tony | |
---|---|
Genre | Crime drama |
Created by | Ivan Goff Ben Roberts Warren Duff |
Starring | James Whitmore Enzo Cerusico |
Theme music composer | Earle Hagen |
Composers | Earle Hagen Richard Shores Hugo Friedhofer Carl Brandt |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 16 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Sheldon Leonard |
Producers | Art Seid Ernest Frankel |
Running time | 45–48 minutes |
Production companies | Sheldon Leonard Productions, in association with NBC (filmed at Paramount Studios |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | January 5 – August 31, 1969 |
Related | |
The Danny Thomas Hour |
Synopsis
The series features Enzo Cerusico as the title character, Tony Novello, and James Whitmore as John Woodruff, a professor of criminology who served in Italy during World War II. As a child, Novello had been a street urchin who survived as a pickpocket, with Woodruff being one of his intended victims. The premise of the series was that the adult (and reformed) Novello had emigrated to the United States to join Woodruff in a private investigation team. Novello handled the legwork and physical side of the investigations while Woodruff conducted painstaking analysis of the most obscure clues.[1]
My Friend Tony debuted on January 5, 1969. NBC slotted the program in the 10 p.m. Eastern timeslot on Sundays, following Bonanza.[2] The network ended production of the series after 16 episodes[3] but continued airing reruns of the show through that summer. The program aired for the last time on August 31, 1969.[4]
Reception
Despite having the highly successful Bonanza as its lead-in, Sheldon Leonard — who developed My Friend Tony and was its executive producer — attributed the program's low ratings to its timeslot.
"First, the 10-to-11 P.M. time spot didn't take full advantage of Enzo's youthful audience, as shown by his flood of fan mail, which exceeds anything in our experience," Leonard told TV Guide. "Second, because of the one-hour length and the network's commitment to 27 new projects all demanding air time, there was no 8 or 9 o'clock spot into which to move it."[5]
Critics had savaged My Friend Tony, calling the series "hackneyed and confusing" ... "the kind of minimal fare that has been ground out ad nauseam" ... "mundane" and "bilge."[6]
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Corey Doesn't Live Here Anymore" | Arthur Marks | Jerrold L. Ludwig | January 5, 1969 |
2 | "Death Comes in Small Packages" | Unknown | Jerry Thomas | January 12, 1969 |
3 | "Voices" | Harvey Hart | Ernest Frankel | January 19, 1969 |
4 | "Let George Do It" | Unknown | Unknown | January 26, 1969 |
5 | "The Lost Hours" | Arthur Marks | Jackson Gillis | February 2, 1969 |
6 | "The Hazing" | Unknown | Unknown | February 16, 1969 |
7 | "Encounter" | Lewis Allen | James L. Brooks | February 23, 1969 |
8 | "Dead Reckoning" | Unknown | Unknown | March 9, 1969 |
9 | "Wedding Cake Blues" | Unknown | Unknown | March 23, 1969 |
10 | "The Twenty Mile Jog" | Unknown | Unknown | April 13, 1969 |
11 | "Molly" | Unknown | Unknown | May 18, 1969 |
12 | "Intermission" | Richard Wechsler | Michael Zagor | May 25, 1969 |
13 | "Casino" | Unknown | Unknown | June 1, 1969 |
14 | "Kidnap" | Harvey Hart | Jackson Gillis | June 8, 1969 |
15 | "The Shortest Courtship" | Unknown | Unknown | June 15, 1969 |
16 | "Welcome Home, Jerry Stanley" | Unknown | Unknown | June 22, 1969 |
References
- Brooks, Tim and Marsh, Earl. (1979) The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows, p 427. Ballantine Books, New York.
- Brooks and Marsh, op cit
- Goodwin, Fritz. (1969, May 31-June 6). The operation was a failure ... but the patient survived, pp 12-14. TV GUIDE.
- Brooks and Marsh, op cit
- Goodwin, op cit
- Goodwin, op cit