Quincy, M.E.: The Thigh Bone's Connected to the Knee Bone


04:00 am - 05:00 am, Sunday, January 25 on KSTC get (Great Entertainment Television) (5.4)

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About this Broadcast
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The Thigh Bone's Connected to the Knee Bone

Season 2, Episode 4

A human bone unearthed at an excavation site provides a clue to a 20-year-old homicide. Jack Klugman. Frank Haley: Stephen Macht. Sue Jackson: Linda Kelsey. Milt Jordon: Fred Grandy. Monahan: Garry Walberg. Lee: Lynnette Mettey. Borden Manchester: Harold Sylvester. Astin: John S. Ragin. Robert Gideon: John Chandler. Fred Burton: Gus Corrado. Claude Stern: Ron Thompson.

repeat 1977 English
Crime Drama Mystery & Suspense Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Jack Klugman (Actor) .. Quincy
Garry Walberg (Actor) .. Lt. Frank Monahan
Lynette Mettey (Actor) .. Lee Potter
John S. Ragin (Actor) .. Dr. Astin
Stephen Macht (Actor) .. Frank Haley
Linda Kelsey (Actor) .. Sue Jackson
Fred Grandy (Actor) .. Milt Jordon
Harold Sylvester (Actor) .. Borden Manchester
Louis Guss (Actor) .. Spence
John Chandler (Actor) .. Robert Gideon
Gus Corrado (Actor) .. Fred Burton
Ron Thompson (Actor) .. Claude Stern
Jack Bannon (Actor) .. Morgue Attendant
Lynnette Mettey (Actor) .. Lee Potter
Joe Finnegan (Actor) .. Joe Ives
Elisha Cook Jr. (Actor) .. Trout
Donald Petrie (Actor) .. Officer
Scott Wells (Actor) .. Officer
Raymond O'keefe (Actor) .. Student
Tina Andrews (Actor) .. Student

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Jack Klugman (Actor) .. Quincy
Born: April 27, 1922
Died: December 24, 2012
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Commenting on his notorious on-set irascibility in 1977, Jack Klugman replied that he was merely "taking Peter Falk lessons from Robert Blake," invoking the names of two other allegedly hard-to-please TV stars. Klugman grew up in Philadelphia, and after taking in a 1939 performance by New York's Group Theatre, Klugman decided that an actor's life was right up his alley. He majored in drama at Carnegie Tech and studied acting at the American Theatre Wing before making his (non-salaried) 1949 stage-debut at the Equity Library Theater. While sharing a New York flat with fellow hopeful Charles Bronson, Klugman took several "grub" jobs to survive, at one point selling his blood for $85 a pint. During television's so-called Golden Age, Klugman appeared in as many as 400 TV shows. He made his film debut in 1956, and three years later co-starred with Ethel Merman in the original Broadway production of Gypsy. In 1964, Klugman won the first of his Emmy awards for his performance in "Blacklist," an episode of the TV series The Defenders; that same year, he starred in his first sitcom, the 13-week wonder Harris Against the World. Far more successful was his next TV series, The Odd Couple, which ran from 1970 through 1974; Klugman won two Emmies for his portrayal of incorrigible slob Oscar Madison (he'd previously essayed the role when he replaced Walter Matthau in the original Broadway production of the Neil Simon play). It was during Odd Couple's run that the network "suits" got their first real taste of Klugman's savage indignation, when he and co-star Tony Randall threatened to boycott the show unless the idiotic laughtrack was removed (Klugman and Randall won that round; from 1971 onward, Odd Couple was filmed before a live audience). It was but a foretaste of things to come during Klugman's six-year (1977-83) reign as star of Quincy, M.E.. Popular though Klugman was in the role of the crusading, speechifying LA County Coroner's Office medical examiner R. Quincy, he hardly endeared himself to the producers when he vented his anger against their creative decisions in the pages of TV Guide. Nor was he warmly regarded by the Writer's Guild when he complained about the paucity of high-quality scripts (he wrote several Quincy episodes himself, with mixed results). After Quincy's cancellation, Klugman starred in the Broadway play I'm Not Rappaport and co-starred with John Stamos in the 1986 sitcom You Again?. The future of Klugman's career -- and his future, period -- was sorely threatened when he underwent throat surgery in 1989. He'd been diagnosed with cancer of the larynx as early as 1974, but at that time was able to continue working after a small growth was removed. For several years after the 1989 operation, Klugman was unable to speak, though he soon regained this ability. He continued working through 2011, and died the following year at age 90.
Garry Walberg (Actor) .. Lt. Frank Monahan
Born: June 10, 1921
Died: March 27, 2012
Lynette Mettey (Actor) .. Lee Potter
John S. Ragin (Actor) .. Dr. Astin
Born: May 05, 1929
Birthplace: Newark, New Jersey
Stephen Macht (Actor) .. Frank Haley
Born: May 01, 1942
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: American actor Stephen Macht has proven to be a master at playing handsome, outwardly successful men whose inner doubts are never far from the surface. Macht's film debut was in 1977's The Choirboys, after which he appeared primarily in medium-budget shockers like Nightwing (1979) Amityville II: The Possession (1982) and Monster Squad (1987). Macht seemed on the verge of TV stardom when he accepted the leading role of a family man who chucks the suburban life to set up home in the inner city in the 1981 series The American Dream; the critics were impressed, but the audiences were tuned to the competition. Since that time, Stephen Macht has had recurring roles as Joe Cooper on Knot's Landing and as Chris Cagney's lawyer-boyfriend David Keeler on Cagney and Lacey.
Linda Kelsey (Actor) .. Sue Jackson
Born: July 28, 1946
Birthplace: Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Trivia: Began a fellowship at the renowned Guthrie Theater Company in Minneapolis shortly after her graduation from the University of Minnesota in 1968. Made an early small-screen acting turn in the 1973 made for TV-movie The Picture of Dorian Gray, in which she played the title character's unwitting love interest. Received five consecutive Emmy Award nominations (1978-82) and three consecutive Golden Globe nominations (1979-81) for her supporting role as a reporter in the acclaimed TV series Lou Grant, starring Ed Asner. Returned to her local theater roots following a slowdown in her television acting career. In 2009, took part in stage performances of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, reenacting a 1974 episode of the series in which she'd appeared as a young woman with hopes of taking over the "Happy Homemaker" show.
Fred Grandy (Actor) .. Milt Jordon
Born: June 29, 1948
Trivia: Actor Fred Grandy enjoyed two distinct careers -- an initial career as an actor and a proverbial second wind on the political stage. As a thespian, Grandy signed for guest spots on early-'70s series including Maude and Phyllis, but built his reputation via his nine-season portrayal of Yeoman-Purser Burl "Gopher" Smith, right-hand man to Captain Merrill Stubing (Gavin MacLeod), on the popular television sitcom The Love Boat (1977-1986). He proved popular with audiences, but by the mid-'80s reportedly grew tired of acting and gravitated to the political arena because he found it more challenging. Indeed, in 1986 -- the year of Boat's cancelation -- Grandy was elected as a Republican member of the House of Representatives from Iowa.
Harold Sylvester (Actor) .. Borden Manchester
Born: February 10, 1949
Louis Guss (Actor) .. Spence
Born: January 01, 1918
Trivia: Long a familiar presence on the New York stage and TV scene, Louis Guss has specialized in blue-collar ethnic roles. Guss' earliest screen credit was as Dominic in Harry and Tonto (1974). His showiest screen portrayal was as Raymond Coppomaggi in the irresistible romantic comedy Moonstruck (1987). On network television, Louis Guss was seen as Uncle Bennie on the 1991 sitcom Man in the Family.
John Chandler (Actor) .. Robert Gideon
Born: January 28, 1935
Died: February 16, 2010
Trivia: Pasty-faced American actor John Davis Chandler played his first unregenerate punk in 1961's The Young Savages. Chandler's subsequent unsavory screen characters included the implicitly incestuous Jimmy Hammond in Sam Peckinpah's Ride the High Country (1961) and the title role in Mad Dog Coll (1961). From time to time he has attempted sympathetic characterizations, billing himself as John Chandler. Though he periodically left show business for other lines of work, John Davis Chandler was still showing up in films and on TV into the late '70s.
Gus Corrado (Actor) .. Fred Burton
Ron Thompson (Actor) .. Claude Stern
Born: July 05, 1953
Jack Bannon (Actor) .. Morgue Attendant
Born: June 14, 1940
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Best known for playing Donovan on the mid-'70s television series Lou Grant, supporting actor Jack Bannon has only occasionally ventured into feature films. The son of actor Jim Bannon and actress Bea Benaderet, he got his start in the '60s, guest starring on such television series as Rat Patrol.
Lynnette Mettey (Actor) .. Lee Potter
Joe Finnegan (Actor) .. Joe Ives
Elisha Cook Jr. (Actor) .. Trout
Born: December 26, 1906
Died: May 18, 1995
Trivia: American actor Elisha Cook Jr. was the son of an influential theatrical actor/writer/producer who died early in the 20th Century. The younger Cook was in vaudeville and stock by the time he was fourteen-years old. In 1928, Cook enjoyed critical praise for his performance in the play Her Unborn Child, a performance he would repeat for his film debut in the 1930 film version of the play. The first ten years of Cook's Hollywood career found the slight, baby-faced actor playing innumerable college intellectuals and hapless freshmen (he's given plenty of screen time in 1936's Pigskin Parade). In 1940, Cook was cast as a man wrongly convicted of murder in Stranger on the Third Floor (1940), and so was launched the second phase of Cook's career as Helpless Victim. The actor's ability to play beyond this stereotype was first tapped by director John Huston, who cast Cook as Wilmer, the hair-trigger homicidal "gunsel" of Sidney Greenstreet in The Maltese Falcon (1941). So far down on the Hollywood totem pole that he wasn't billed in the Falcon opening credits, Cook suddenly found his services much in demand. Sometimes he'd be shot full of holes (as in the closing gag of 1941's Hellzapoppin'), sometimes he'd fall victim to some other grisly demise (poison in The Big Sleep [1946]), and sometimes he'd be the squirrelly little guy who turned out to be the last-reel murderer (I Wake Up Screaming [1941]; The Falcon's Alibi [1946]). At no time, however, was Cook ever again required to play the antiseptic "nerd" characters that had been his lot in the 1930s. Seemingly born to play "film noir" characters, Cook had one of his best extended moments in Phantom Lady (1944), wherein he plays a set of drums with ever-increasing orgiastic fervor. Another career high point was his death scene in Shane (1953); Cook is shot down by hired gun Jack Palance and plummets to the ground like a dead rabbit. A near-hermit in real life who lived in a remote mountain home and had to receive his studio calls by courier, Cook nonetheless never wanted for work, even late in life. Fans of the 1980s series Magnum PI will remember Cook in a recurring role as a the snarling elderly mobster Ice Pick. Having appeared in so many "cult" films, Elisha Cook Jr. has always been one of the most eagerly sought out interview subjects by film historians.
Donald Petrie (Actor) .. Officer
Born: April 02, 1954
Scott Wells (Actor) .. Officer
Raymond O'keefe (Actor) .. Student
Tina Andrews (Actor) .. Student
Born: April 23, 1954

Before / After
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Quincy, M.E.
03:00 am