Emergency: Musical Mania


4:00 pm - 5:00 pm, Tuesday, November 18 on KTIV MeTV (4.3)

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About this Broadcast
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Musical Mania

Season 2, Episode 11

The hospital staff works to save a poisoned child whose backwoods parents are distrustful of the doctors. Dixie: Julie London. Betty: Kathryn Kelly Wiget. Larry: Stephen Hudis. Early: Bobby Troup. Brackett: Robert Fuller. Clements: Russell Wiggins. Mrs. Clements: Kathleen Gackle.

repeat 1972 English
Action/adventure Rescue Hospital Medicine

Cast & Crew
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Robert Fuller (Actor) .. Dr. Kelly Brackett
Julie London (Actor) .. Nurse Dixie McCall
Stephen R. Hudis (Actor) .. Larry Snyder
Bobby Troup (Actor) .. Dr. Joe Early
Kathryn Kelly Wiget (Actor) .. Betty
Stephen Hudis (Actor) .. Larry
Hal Bokar (Actor) .. Al
Russell Wiggins (Actor) .. Clements
Kathleen Gackle (Actor) .. Mrs. Clements
Dick Hammer (Actor) .. Capt. Hammer
Lillian Lehman (Actor) .. Carol Williams
Sam Lanier (Actor) .. Dispatcher
Alice Nunn (Actor) .. Mrs. Lucille Rogers

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.
Julie London (Actor) .. Nurse Dixie McCall
Born: September 26, 1926
Died: October 18, 2000
Trivia: Sultry blues vocalist Julie London began her film career long before she achieved fame as a recording artist. In 1945, 18-year-old London was selected to play a bargain-basement jungle princess, appearing opposite a gorilla in the PRC cheapie Nabonga. She was pretty bad, but no worse than the film itself. By the time she was cast as a sexy teenager in The Red House (1947), her acting had improved immensely, and by the time she played the female lead in the 1951 programmer The Fat Man, it looked as though she actually had a future in films. Still, London's greatest claim to fame was her long string of hit records ("Cry Me a River" et. al.) of the 1950s; many male admirers bought her albums simply to gaze upon her come-hither countenance on the dust jacket. Her status as every red-blooded American boy's wish dream was gently lampooned in Frank Tashlin's The Girl Can't Help It (1956), in which she appears as a spectral vision who transfixes a wistful Tom Ewell. Her best dramatic film appearances of this period include her leading-lady gigs in Voice in the Mirror (1958) and Man of the West (1958). From 1945 through 1955, Julie London was the wife of actor/producer Jack Webb; years after the divorce, London played Nurse Dixie McCall on the popular Jack Webb-produced TV series Emergency, in which she co-starred with her second husband, actor/jazz musician Bobby Troup.
Stephen R. Hudis (Actor) .. Larry Snyder
Born: May 17, 1957
Bobby Troup (Actor) .. Dr. Joe Early
Born: October 13, 1918
Died: February 07, 1999
Kathryn Kelly Wiget (Actor) .. Betty
Stephen Hudis (Actor) .. Larry
Hal Bokar (Actor) .. Al
Born: January 01, 1985
Died: January 01, 1990
Russell Wiggins (Actor) .. Clements
Kathleen Gackle (Actor) .. Mrs. Clements
Born: September 13, 1948
Birthplace: Santa Clara, California
Trivia: Born Kathleen Gackle. Lead actress, onscreen from The Missouri Breaks (1976).
Dick Hammer (Actor) .. Capt. Hammer
Lillian Lehman (Actor) .. Carol Williams
Born: February 12, 1947
Sam Lanier (Actor) .. Dispatcher
Alice Nunn (Actor) .. Mrs. Lucille Rogers
Born: January 01, 1927
Died: January 01, 1988
Trivia: Alice Nunn was a character actress who enjoyed a 24-year career on-stage, in movies, and on television. Born in Jacksonville, FL, in 1927, she was bitten by the performing bug early in life; she was in school productions of such works as My Sister Eileen and attended the Wesleyan Conservatory and School of Fine Arts. Nunn later trained at the American Theater Wing and worked in radio as a continuity director before getting her break in New Faces of 1956. A singing comedienne who resembled a young Pert Kelton crossed with Sheila James, Nunn worked on-stage with Shelley Berman and Nancy Walker, and made her screen debut on television in episodes of Petticoat Junction. She later became a regular denizen of '60s sitcoms, playing comically strong-willed, often slightly belligerent women. Fans of 1960s sitcoms may remember her from Camp Runamuck as Mahala May Gruenecker, the head counselor of Camp Divine and the nemesis of series star Arch Johnson's Commander Wivenhoe; she was the perfect foil to Johnson's hulking macho boys camp leader, locking horns with him every week in much the same way that Margaret Rutherford had with Alastair Sim in the movie The Happiest Days of Your Life. Nunn's first feature film was Johnny Got His Gun (1971), in which she was one of the nurses. She was also a regular cast member of the Tony Orlando and Dawn variety show, but many of her film roles were bits, such as "Fat Lady" in Mame (1974) and "Passenger with Dog" in Airport 1975. She occasionally got bigger roles, such as the put-upon servant Helga in Mommie Dearest (1981), and is probably best remembered by 1980s filmgoers and Tim Burton fans for her portrayal of "Large Marge," the lady truck driver who frightens the hero in Pee-Wee's Big Adventure (1985). If Nunn hadn't been so good at comedy, and exploiting the funny side of her imposing girth and presence, she might have been an older rival to Shirley Stoler, but it was not to be -- she died of heart failure in the summer of 1988, at age 60.

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M*A*S*H
5:00 pm