Murder, She Wrote | |
---|---|
![]() End of original opening title sequence for Murder, She Wrote. |
|
Format | Mystery, Procedural drama |
Created by | Peter S. Fischer Richard Levinson William Link |
Starring | Angela Lansbury William Windom Tom Bosley (1984–1988) Ron Masak (1988–1996) |
Theme music composer | John Addison |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 12 |
No. of episodes | 264 + 4 TV Movies (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Angela Lansbury Peter S. Fischer Richard Levinson William Link David Moessinger |
Running time | 60 Minutes |
Production company(s) | Corymore Productions in association with Universal Television |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | CBS |
Original run | September 30, 1984 – May 19, 1996 |
Chronology | |
Related shows | The Law & Harry McGraw |
Murder, She Wrote is an American television mystery series starring Angela Lansbury as mystery writer and amateur detective Jessica Fletcher.[1][2] The series aired for twelve seasons from 1984 to 1996 on the CBS network, with 264 episodes transmitted. It was followed by four TV films and a spin-off series, The Law & Harry McGraw. It is one of the most successful and longest-running television shows ever for CBS, with close to 23 million viewers in its prime, and was a staple of its Sunday night lineup for a decade. The series is also successful around the world.
Lansbury was nominated for a total of ten Golden Globes and twelve Emmy awards for her work on Murder, She Wrote. She holds the record for the most Golden Globe nominations for Best Actress in a television drama series and the most Emmy nominations for outstanding lead actress in a drama series for Murder, She Wrote, with those nominations netting her four Golden Globe awards. The series received three nominations but no wins in the Outstanding Drama Series category at the Emmys. It was nominated for a Golden Globe in the same category six times and won twice.
Since the series ended in 1996, a series of four TV movies were released between 1997 and 2003, a game created by Legacy Interactive was released for the PC platform in 2009,[3] and a spin-off novel series, written by Donald Bain, continues to the present.
Contents |
Murder, She Wrote might never have come about had producers Richard Levinson and William Link succeeded with their TV series Ellery Queen. That series folded after a single season, but Levinson and Link were still committed to the concept of a bestselling murder-mystery novelist who solved real murders when not at the typewriter. In collaboration with writer-producer Peter S. Fischer, with whom they had previously worked on Columbo, Levinson and Link changed the gender of their protagonist from male to female and transformed the character from a good-looking, absent-minded young pedant to a middle-aged, down-to-earth widow.
Murder, She Wrote was originally pitched as an American version of the Agatha Christie character Miss Marple, but the owners of the rights to that character refused to allow it. Believing Angela Lansbury, who had played Miss Marple in The Mirror Crack'd in 1980, would be perfect as a TV detective, Fischer, Levinson and Link created the role of Jessica Fletcher. With their creation debuting on Sunday, September 30, 1984, the producers were able to parlay their "mystery writer/amateur detective" premise into a 12-year hit for CBS.
The title comes from Murder, She Said, which was the title of a 1961 film adaptation of Agatha Christie's Miss Marple novel 4:50 from Paddington. The character of Jessica Fletcher could be thought to be based on a combination of Miss Marple, Agatha Christie herself, and another Christie character, Ariadne Oliver, who often appears in the Hercule Poirot mysteries.
The show revolved around the day-to-day life of a retired English teacher who, after being widowed in her early fifties, becomes a very successful mystery writer. Despite fame and fortune, Jessica remains a resident of Cabot Cove, a cozy coastal town in Maine, and maintains her links with all of her old friends, never letting her success go to her head. Exterior shots of Cabot Cove were filmed in Mendocino, California.
Her one eccentricity is an insatiable curiosity, especially whenever murder rears its ugly head, which it does with great regularity. The mystery term "Cabot Cove syndrome" was eventually coined to describe the constant appearance of dead bodies in remote locations.
In most episodes, Jessica somehow becomes entangled in a murder investigation. The police are almost always willing to arrest the most likely suspect, but Jessica invariably feels that the so-called guilty party is innocent. Carefully and methodically piecing the clues together and asking astute questions, she always manages to trap the real murderer, who, given the series' "special guest star" policy, was often played by a famous film or TV personality.
Jessica's relationship with law enforcement officials varies from place to place. Both sheriffs of Cabot Cove resign themselves to having her meddle in their cases. However, most detectives and police officers do not want her anywhere near their crime scenes, until her accurate deductions convince them to listen to her. Some are happy to have her assistance from the start, often because they are fans of her books. With time, she makes friends in many police departments across the U.S., as well as a British police officer attached to Scotland Yard.
In 1991, newly appointed executive producer David Moessinger and producer J. Michael Straczynski were brought aboard in an effort to shore up ratings. They moved Jessica to New York, and revitalized the show, bringing it back into the top ten from the mid-thirties where it had fallen. It was Straczynski who made her an instructor in writing and criminology, and is widely held to have most emphasized her role as a working writer, with all the deadlines and problems involved in that profession.
Following the 1991–92 season, Angela Lansbury became the series' executive producer after she and her husband's production company, Corymore Productions, purchased a majority interest in Murder, She Wrote from Universal Television. As the series entered the middle of the decade, it remained a Sunday night staple and eventually became the longest running mystery series in television history. While the ratings for Murder, She Wrote had slipped slightly following its resurgence in 1991, it still maintained a loyal viewing audience.
By the end of the 1994–95 season, Murder, She Wrote's eleventh, Lansbury began to consider ending the series, as her advancing age became a concern (as she had just turned seventy). However, CBS effectively made the decision for her that fall. After spending eleven years on Sunday, the network's longest running weekly series (at that time) was moved to Thursday nights at 8 PM. This put the series in direct competition with the first hour of NBC's Must See TV lineup, which had been drawing the highest ratings of the week for any network for years. More specifically, Murder, She Wrote would be facing off against NBC's comedy Friends, which was entering its second season on the network and was given the 8 PM timeslot for the fall, and The Single Guy, a brand-new sitcom that NBC gave the coveted 8:30 timeslot between Friends and Seinfeld. CBS cited that Murder, She Wrote was "skewing too old" in the ratings demographics, as—while the series was still successful—they were not gaining the valued 18–49 ratings demographic that is most desired among networks.
Despite protests of many of the show's fans, CBS refused to budge on the new timeslot. Friends had finished its first season (1994–95) in ninth place in the final Nielsen ratings. This situation was exacerbated further by the success of The Single Guy (which many attributed to piggybacking off of Friends), as well as another freshman sitcom, Boston Common, which debuted in March 1996 against the second half of Murder, She Wrote. CBS cancelled the series in August 1996 after twelve seasons, the last of which saw Murder, She Wrote plummet out of the top 50 rated programs (see below). To soften the blow, the network agreed to air several Murder, She Wrote movies over the next few years; the first was broadcast in 1997, with three more following in 2000, 2001, and 2003.
Following the ending of the series of 264 episodes (of which all were one-hour episodes except for the two-hour pilot episode that launched Season One), four two-hour TV movies followed as listed below:
Over its twelve year run Murder, She Wrote received numerous award nominations. Angela Lansbury herself holds the record for the most Emmy nominations for outstanding lead actress in a drama series with twelve, one for each season. She never won, which is also a record.
Group | Award | Year(s) | Won |
---|---|---|---|
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series (Angela Lansbury) | 1985–1996 | No |
Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (John Addison) | 1985 | Yes | |
Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Bruce Babcock) | 1993, 1995 | No | |
Outstanding Costume Design for a Series (Alfred E. Lehman) | 1986 | Yes | |
Golden Globe Awards | Best TV Series – Drama | 1985, 1986 | Yes |
Best TV Series – Drama | 1987–1990 | No | |
Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series – Drama (Angela Lansbury) | 1985, 1987, 1990 & 1992 | Yes | |
Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series – Drama (Angela Lansbury) | 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1993 & 1995 | No | |
Edgar Awards | Best Episode of a TV Series ("Deadly Lady") | 1985 | Yes |
Best Episode of a TV Series ("The Dead File") | 1993 | No | |
Screen Actors Guild Awards | Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series – Drama (Angela Lansbury) | 1995 | No |
Murder She Wrote maintained extremely high ratings finishing in the top 15 of shows for eleven of its twelve seasons (8 of its 12 seasons it was in the top ten), even well into its late seasons. At the beginning of its twelfth season in 1995, CBS moved the show from its extremely popular Sunday night time slot to Thursday night forcing it to compete with NBC's Must See Line Up. The show rated as the following:
Season | Episodes | Season Premiere | Season Finale | TV Season | Rank | Viewers (in millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 22 | September 30, 1984 | April 21, 1985 | 1984–1985 | #8[4] | 17.06 |
2 | 22 | September 29, 1985 | May 18, 1986 | 1985–1986 | #3[5] | 21.73 |
3 | 22 | September 28, 1986 | May 10, 1987 | 1986–1987 | #4[6] | 22.19 |
4 | 22 | September 20, 1987 | May 8, 1988 | 1987–1988 | #9[7] | 17.89 |
5 | 22 | October 23, 1988 | May 21, 1989 | 1988–1989 | #8[8] | 17.98 |
6 | 22 | September 24, 1989 | May 20, 1990 | 1989–1990 | #13[9] | 16.30 |
7 | 22 | September 16, 1990 | May 12, 1991 | 1990–1991 | #12[10] | 15.26 |
8 | 22 | September 15, 1991 | May 17, 1992 | 1991–1992 | #8[11] | 15.56 |
9 | 22 | September 20, 1992 | May 16, 1993 | 1992–1993 | #5[12] | 16.47 |
10 | 21 | September 12, 1993 | May 22, 1994 | 1993–1994 | #11[13] | 15.07 |
11 | 21 | September 25, 1994 | May 14, 1995 | 1994–1995 | #8[14] | 14.88 |
12 | 24 | September 21, 1995 | May 19, 1996 | 1995–1996 | #65[15] | 9.50 |
Aside from its original run on CBS, Murder, She Wrote has been syndicated in many countries around the world, and continues to be to this day.
In December 2009, casual game developer and publisher Legacy Interactive, under license with Universal Pictures Digital Platforms Group (UPDPG), announced the release a PC/MAC video game based on the television series. In the game, players help Jessica Fletcher to solve five unusual murders.[16]
|
|