Showing posts with label Get Christie Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Get Christie Love. Show all posts

Monday, January 29, 2018

Here We Go Again

As hard as this may be to believe, ABC-TV has greenlighted a pilot film for a reboot of the 1974-1975 crime drama Get Christie Love!, which starred Teresa Graves as a (literally) kick-ass Los Angeles undercover cop. According to Deadline Hollywood, this not-quite-remake will star Canadian-American actress Kylie Bunbury.
The new Get Christie Love (no ! in the title), written by [executive producer Courtney] Kemp, is an action-packed, music-driven drama that centers on Christie Love (Bunbury), an African-American female CIA agent who leads an elite ops unit. She transforms into whomever she needs to be to get the job done, especially when it’s down to the wire and the stakes are life and death. The high-adrenaline missions of the series are anchored by an emotional mystery about Christie’s first love—unearthing the truth about this relationship will be the biggest mission impossible of her life.
Adding further to 2018’s reboot fever, In Reference to Murder blogger B.V. Lawson notes that “CBS also ordered pilots for the Magnum P.I. and Cagney & Lacey reboots. The original Tom Selleck Magnum series ran from 1980 to 1988, while Tyne Daly and Sharon Glass’ female-fronted police procedural was on the air from 1982 to 1988.”

READ MORE:New Magnum P.I. & Lacey Likely to Be Diverse as Broadcast Networks Eye Most Inclusive Pilot Leads Ever,” by Nellie Andreeva (Deadline Hollywood).

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

“If It’s Trouble, She’s Your Girl”



Four months ago, when I wrote about the 1970s TV crime drama Get Christie Love! as part of The Rap Sheet’s “Killed in the Ratings” series (focusing on unsuccessful fall debut programs), I wasn’t able to locate the main title sequence from that show starring Teresa Graves. I had to embed a promo spot, instead. More recently, however, the introduction has popped up on YouTube.

Does this cheesy video bring back memories for anybody but me?

Friday, September 17, 2010

Killed in the Ratings: “Get Christie Love!”

(The eighth entry in a month-long series about American TV crime dramas that debuted with fanfare, but are now largely forgotten.)

Title: Get Christie Love!

Starring: Teresa Graves and Charles Cioffi

Original Run: 1974-1975 (22 episodes, plus pilot), ABC-TV

Premise: Inspired generally by Dorothy Uhnak’s 1970 novel, The Ledger, but certainly influenced by “blaxploitation” films of its era, this show starred former Laugh-In regular Graves as the first African-American female undercover cop on the Los Angeles police force, working to bring down drug dealers and other high-risk malcontents. The big-’fro’d, bare-midriffed Ms. Love had a smile to melt hearts, but she could also protect herself in dangerous situations, whether with a few karate chops or several well-aimed swings of her capacious handbags. And she rarely failed to deliver her signature line when apprehending criminals: “You’re under arrest, Sugah.” Her initial LAPD supervisor was the perpetually concerned Lieutenant Matthew Reardon (Cioffi), replaced in later episodes by former Maverick co-star Jack Kelly as Captain Arthur Ryan.

Additional Notes: According to Wikipedia, this show grew out of a well-received ABC teleflick of the same title, shown in January 1974. But the subsequent series was “financed on a meager budget and [was] heavily sanitized to conform to Graves’ religious morals (she had become one of Jehovah’s Witnesses since the making of the TV film).”

Above: Get Christie Love!’s write-up in the September 7-13, 1974, Fall Preview edition of TV Guide. (Click to enlarge the image.) Below: A 1974 promotional spot for Graves’ series, plus its original main title sequence (with a theme sung by Luchi De Jesus).





This third video clip is the final version of the series’ opening title sequence, made after Jack Kelly joined the cast. The new theme music was composed by Glen A. Larson and Stu Phillips.



READ MORE:She’s a Cop, Oh Yeah!”: Get Christie Love!, by Hal Horn (The Horn Section).

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Wolper Delivers His Exit Line

From the Web site Television Obscurities we receive the sad news that American TV and film producer David L. Wolper passed away yesterday at age 82. Wolper is probably best remembered for his TV miniseries Roots and The Thorn Birds, as well as for his work as executive producer of the 1997 film L.A. Confidential. However, TV trivia enthusiasts will also remember Wolper as the executive producer of Get Christie Love!, a 1974-1975 ABC-TV crime drama, inspired by a Dorothy Uhnak novel, that starred Laugh-In’s Teresa Graves as an undercover police woman given to uttering such cheesy lines as “You’re under arrest, Sugah.”

Television Obscurities offers much more on Wolper’s career here.

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

The Pioneering Policewoman

There’s tragic news coming out of Long Island today, where author Dorothy Uhnak, a former New York City Transit Authority policewoman who went on to write gritty police procedurals, one of which inspired a short-lived TV series, has died, reportedly of a self-inflicted drug overdose. She was 76 years old.

Born Dorothy Goldstein in the Bronx, New York, on April 24, 1930, it’s said that as a young “tomboy” she hung around and took typing assignments at the NYPD’s 46th Precinct, which was located near her home. Then, after attending City College, she signed on with the transit police in 1953. “She won two awards for bravery, but sometimes had an unusual perspective on people she arrested,” The New York Times reports. “She gave $125 she had won on a television quiz show to the pregnant wife of [a] large armed man who had attacked her.” However, after 14 years with the transit force, a dozen of them as a detective, Uhnak resigned to complete her college education (though she also suggested that sexual discrimination might have been behind her departure). Her first book, the semi-autobiographical Policewoman: A Young Woman’s Initiation Into the Realities of Justice, was published in 1964. (It later gave rise to the 1974-1978 Angie Dickinson TV series Police Woman, which Uhnak told Mystery*File interviewer Ed Lynskey “wasn’t about my book at all. It was pure Hollywood.”) Her debut novel, The Bait (1968), won the Edgar Award for Best First Mystery Novel and introduced police detective Christie Opara, who would go on to appear in two subsequent Uhnak stories, The Witness (1969) and The Ledger (1970). That third Opara novel became a catalyst for the 1974-1975 blaxploitation TV series Get Christie Love!, which starred Laugh-In’s Teresa Graves as a beautiful, kick-ass undercover cop with a memorable signature line (“You’re under arrest, Sugah”), but earned little, save derision, from the author. “It was self-torture to watch them do such silly things,” Uhnak recalled. “No police officer did what they portrayed.”

Much to the regret of Opara fans, Uhnak soon abandoned her series character at the prodding of her Simon & Schuster editor, Michael Korda, who wanted her to write “a big police book, like The Godfather ...,” the author told Lynskey. “I was already feeling constrained by the Christie Opara series by wanting to write darker, more sweeping, and realistic books because the police department makes you see the real world. I saw a lot of dark things while as a police officer and that’s why I agreed to write Law and Order,” a multi-generational story about a family of cops, which was published in 1973 and made into a TV movie in 1976. She went on to compose The Investigation (1977), which earned a spot on H.R.F. Keating’s 100 Best Crime and Mystery Books list and was the basis for yet another Hollywood project, this time the 1987 TV flick that brought Telly Savalas back to his best-known role, as Lieutenant Theo Kojak, in Kojak: The Price of Justice. In the years since, she produced four more novels: False Witness (1981), Victims (1985), The Ryer Avenue Story (1993, which paid homage to the Bronx of her youth), and Codes of Betrayal (1997).

In Mystery*File, Lynskey spelled out Uhnak’s “contribution in helping to establish police-turned-authors as viable market forces.” He wrote:
She preceded Joseph Wambaugh (to whom she is most often compared), William Caunitz, Gerald Petievitch, and other male police professionals/scribes. Female authors coming later who wrote about a tough crime-fighting protagonists include Marcia Muller, Sue Grafton, Sara Paretsky, Nevada Barr, Katy Munger, and Patricia Cornwell. Finally, Ms. Uhnak’s books are on Women’s Studies reading lists at many universities, suggesting that her work has more than a commercial appeal.
The author’s daughter, Tracy Uhnak, told the Times that “her mother had had a variety of accidents in recent years, was often depressed, and had discussed suicide matter-of-factly.” Dorothy Uhnak apparently died on Saturday in Greenport, New York.

(Hat tip to Sarah Weinman.)

READ MORE:A Precinct of Her Own,” by Sarah Weinman
(Barnes and Noble Review).