Emergency: Zero


5:00 pm - 6:00 pm, Tuesday, December 16 on WZME MeTV (43.3)

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About this Broadcast
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Zero

Season 3, Episode 10

Doctors treat a boy who attempted to commit suicide by leaping from an apartment ledge; paramedics rescue a man trapped in a doughnut machine. Brackett: Robert Fuller. Tommy: Bobby Eilbacher. Gage: Randolph Mantooth. Vera: Mariette Hartley. DeSoto: Kevin Tighe. Jake: Anthony Eisley. Early: Bobby Troup. Celia: Vivian Bonnell. Morton: Ron Pinkard. TV Host: Dick Enberg. Stanley: Michael Norell. Nurse: Ginny Golden. Kelly: Tim Donnelly. Newspaper Man: Dick Whittinghill.

repeat 1973 English
Action/adventure Rescue Hospital Medicine

Cast & Crew
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Robert Fuller (Actor) .. Dr. Kelly Brackett
Bobby Troup (Actor) .. Dr. Joe Early
Kevin Tighe (Actor) .. Roy DeSoto
Randolph Mantooth (Actor) .. John Gage
Ron Pinkard (Actor) .. Dr. Morton
Michael Norell (Actor) .. Capt. Stanley
Tim Donnelly (Actor) .. Chet Kelly
Bobby Eilbacher (Actor) .. Tommy
Mariette Hartley (Actor) .. Vera
Anthony Eisley (Actor) .. Jake
Jan Arvan (Actor) .. Hotel Manager
Vivian Bonnell (Actor) .. Celia
Dick Enberg (Actor) .. TV Host
William Bryant (Actor) .. Captain, Engine 52
Nora Marlowe (Actor) .. 1st Woman
Ginny Golden (Actor) .. Nurse
Dick Whittinghill (Actor) .. Newspaper Man
Dick Hammer (Actor) .. Capt. Hammer
Sam Lanier (Actor) .. Dispatcher
Jo Ann Worley (Actor) .. Maude Grayson

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Robert Fuller (Actor) .. Dr. Kelly Brackett
Born: July 29, 1933
Birthplace: Troy, New York, United States
Trivia: Robert Fuller spent his first decade in show business trying his best to avoid performing. After his film debut in 1952's Above and Beyond, Fuller studied acting with Sanford Meisner at New York's Neighborhood Playhouse but never exhibited any real dedication. He tried to become a dancer but gave that up as well, determining that dancing was "sissified." Fuller rose to nominal stardom fairly rapidly in the role of Jess Harper on the popular TV western Laramie (1959-63). Once he found his niche in cowboy attire, he stuck at it in another series, Wagon Train, turning down virtually all offers for "contemporary" roles. When westerns began dying out on television in the late 1960s, Fuller worked as a voiceover actor in commercials, earning some $65,000 per year (a tidy sum in 1969). On the strength of his performance in the Burt Topper-directed motorcycle flick The Hard Ride, Fuller was cast by producer Jack Webb as chief paramedic Kelly Brackett on the weekly TVer Emergency, which ran from 1972 through 1977. In 1994, Robert Fuller was one of several former TV western stars who showed up in cameo roles in the Mel Gibson movie vehicle Maverick.
Bobby Troup (Actor) .. Dr. Joe Early
Born: October 13, 1918
Died: February 07, 1999
Kevin Tighe (Actor) .. Roy DeSoto
Randolph Mantooth (Actor) .. John Gage
Born: September 19, 1945
Ron Pinkard (Actor) .. Dr. Morton
Michael Norell (Actor) .. Capt. Stanley
Born: October 04, 1937
Tim Donnelly (Actor) .. Chet Kelly
Born: September 03, 1944
Bobby Eilbacher (Actor) .. Tommy
Mariette Hartley (Actor) .. Vera
Born: June 21, 1940
Birthplace: Weston, Connecticut, United States
Trivia: Never the typical ingénue, American actress Mariette Hartley was distinguished by attractively offbeat facial features and a full, throaty voice -- acting tools that enabled her to play a wide spectrum of ages and personalities even when she was barely out of her teens. The granddaughter of behavioral psychologist John B. Watson, Hartley began her training at Carnegie Tech, then studied acting under Eva LeGalleine . Shakespeare was Hartley's forte in her salad days; thus, she was a full-blown professional before the age of 21. Hartley's first film, Ride the High Country (1961), may well have been her best; as the runaway bride of a mentally deficient mountain man, Hartley was permitted to forego cutesiness and glamour, spending most of the film in dusty male western garb. She was so good in this first appearance that MGM literally had no idea what to do with her; the solution was to cast her as a garden-variety damsel in distress in Drums of Africa (1963), which Hartley now regards as her worst film (and it is -- far worse than the more obvious candidate, 1971's The Return of Count Yorga). Then as now, Hartley was better served on TV than in films. Appearing with regularity on such programs as Twilight Zone and Bonanza, Hartley exuded an intelligence and versatility rare in so young an actress. She gained a following with her recurring role on the nighttime soapera Peyton Place (1965), then provided the only bright moments of the misfire satirical sitcom The Hero (1966), in which she played the wife of a bumbling TV cowboy (Richard Mulligan). Her TV work load increased in the '70s, during which time she appeared as futuristic heroine Lyra-a in Gene Roddenberry's TV pilot Genesis II, a role which gained a great deal of press attention due to Hartley's exotic midriff makeup (her character was endowed with two navels). She also won an Emmy for her appearance in a 1978 installment of The Incredible Hulk. A popular talk-show raconteur, Hartley was able to parlay her no-nonsense persona into a series of lucrative camera commercials, in which she co-starred with James Garner. Her easy rapport with Garner led many to believe that she was married to the Rockford Files star, compelling her to make public appearances wearing a sweatshirt emblazoned with the message "I am NOT Mrs. James Garner" (she was, in fact, married to producer/director Patrick Boyriven). Her high audience "Q" rating led certain TV producers to believe that Hartley would be ideally cast as a news reporter on the 1983 sitcom Goodnight, Beantown. The casting was good, the show wasn't. Nor were follow-ups in this vein, including a foredoomed hitch as co-host of the 1987 revamping of CBS Morning News titled The Morning Program and the very short-lived newsroom-oriented weekly drama WIOU (1990). That the actress took to kidding about her many TV failures only added to her upbeat public image -- an image which masked a surfeit of grief brought on by the alcoholism and suicide of Hartley's father, which formed the basis of her 1990 book Breaking the Silence. Audiences were able to see this serious side of Mariette Hartley in her frequent TV-movie appearances, notably her performance as grieving mother Candy Lightner in M.A.D.D.: Mothers Against Drunk Driving. Mariette Hartley remained busy on films and in television into the '90s; once again, the TV work was more rewarding than the movie assignments, which included such negligible entertainments as Encino Man (1992).
Anthony Eisley (Actor) .. Jake
Born: January 01, 1925
Died: January 29, 2003
Trivia: Six-foot granite-jawed Anthony Eisley came into his own as a leading man on television in the late 1950s and early 1960s, before switching to more demanding and complex character and supporting roles. The son of a corporate executive, he was born Frederick Glendinning Eisley in Philadelphia, PA in 1925. He spent most of his childhood moving with his family as his father's various positions took them from city to city, every few years. He was bitten by the acting bug early in life, but had no serious was of pursuing a career in the field until he joined a stock company in Pennsylvania. He began getting theater roles after that and by the early 1950s had begun working in television and feature films, the latter usually uncredited, under the name Fred Eisley -- this also included his first series work, in Bonino (1953), starring Ezio Pinza and a young Van Dyke Parks. While his theater work included such prime fare as Mister Roberts and Picnic, when it came to movies and television he was in every kind of production there was, from independent, syndicated TV series such as Racket Squad to high-profile movies like The Young Philadelphians, and Eisley broke through to star billing in the Roger Corman-directed horror film The Wasp Woman (1960) (working opposite Susan Cabot in the title role). Around that same time he took the role of John Cassiano in Pete Kelly's Blues (1959), a short-lived TV series directed and produced by Jack Webb. It was after being seen in a stage production of Who Was That Lady that Eisley was cast as Tracy Steele, the tough ex-cop turned private detective in the series Hawaiian Eye. It was also with that series that he became Anthony Eisley. Following the three-year run of that series, Eisley resumed work as a journeyman actor, but the array of roles that he took on improved exponentially -- in one episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show, entitled "The Lady And The Tiger And The Lawyer", he guested as a seemingly affable, attractive new neighbor of the Petries who admits, in the end, that he has a problem with spousal abuse that prevents him from choosing either of the women they've aimed at him at a possible match; and in Samuel Fuller's groundbreaking film drama The Naked Kiss, he plays a hard-nosed cop who uncovers a sinister, deeply troubling side to his city's much-publicized children's hospital and the people behind it. Eisley appeared in dozens of television series and movies over the ensuing three decades, always giving 100% of himself even when the budget and the production were lacking (see The Navy Vs. The Night Monsters . . . .. But on the sets of television shows, especially, where the quality was there, his work was without peer -- that was one reason that Jack Webb, who had used him in Pete Kelly's Blues, made Eisley a part of his stock company, using him in six episodes of Dragnet in the 1960s. Those shows are especially fascinating to watch for the quiet intensity of his performances -- he mostly played morally-compromised character, including a man plotting the murder-for-hire of his wife, an affable but corrupt police lieutenant, and career criminal who thinks (incorrectly) that he has outsmarted the detectives who are questioning him. Eisley's credits, in keeping with his image from Hawaiian Eye, were heavily concentrated in series devoted to law enforcement. He continued working through the 1990s, and died of heart failure in 2003, at the age of 78.
Jan Arvan (Actor) .. Hotel Manager
Born: January 01, 1912
Died: January 01, 1979
Vivian Bonnell (Actor) .. Celia
Born: May 23, 1924
Dick Enberg (Actor) .. TV Host
Born: January 09, 1935
Birthplace: Mount Clemens, Michigan, United States
Trivia: Was an assistant professor and assistant baseball coach at California State University at Northridge from 1961 to '65. Hosted the game shows The Perfect Match (1967), Sports Challenge (1971-73), Baffle (1973-74) and Three for the Money (1975). Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1998. Received an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Indiana University in 2002. Has earned nine Sportscaster of the Year awards and 14 Sports Emmy Awards, including a Lifetime Achievement Award. Wrote a one-man play entitled COACH: The Untold Story of College Basketball Legend Al McGuire, which was first performed in 2005 at Marquette University.
William Bryant (Actor) .. Captain, Engine 52
Born: January 31, 1924
Trivia: Not to be confused with variety-show host Willie Bryant, American general purpose actor William Bryant kept busy in outdoors films. He was featured in such westerns as Ride Beyond Vengeance (1966), Heaven with a Gun (1969) and John Wayne's Chisum (1970). His additional non-western credits include Gable and Lombard (1976), Mountain Family Robinson (1977) (in a leading role) and Corvette Summer (1977). From 1976 through 1978, William Bryant costarred as Lieutenant Shilton on the Robert Wagner/Eddie Albert TV detective series Switch, and also appeared for a time as Lamont Corbin on the daytime serial General Hospital.
Nora Marlowe (Actor) .. 1st Woman
Born: January 01, 1914
Died: January 01, 1977
Ginny Golden (Actor) .. Nurse
Dick Whittinghill (Actor) .. Newspaper Man
Born: March 05, 1913
Died: January 24, 2001
Dick Hammer (Actor) .. Capt. Hammer
Sam Lanier (Actor) .. Dispatcher
Jo Ann Worley (Actor) .. Maude Grayson
Born: September 06, 1937

Before / After
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M*A*S*H
6:00 pm