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Cagney & Lacey TV Show Overview
Cagney & Lacey is
an American television series that first aired on the CBS
television network for seven seasons from March 25, 1982 to
May 16, 1988. It is considered to be American television's
first serious drama series with two female leads. A police
procedural, the show starred Switch alumna Sharon Gless and
veteran television actress Tyne Daly as New York City police
detectives who led very different lives: Christine Cagney (Gless)
was a single, career-minded woman, while Mary Beth Lacey
(Daly) was a married working mother. The series was set in a
fictionalized version of Manhattan's 14th Precinct (Midtown
South), which in real life is located at 357 West 35th
Street.
Al Waxman co-starred as Cagney and Lacey's supervisor, Lt.
Bert Samuels. Dan Shor joined the cast from 1985 to 1986 as
detective Jonah Newman. Dick O'Neill played a recurring role
as Cagney's alcoholic father, Charlie Cagney, a former NYPD
officer who regaled her with stories of the old days;
Christine later fought alcoholism as well.
Cagney & Lacey Television Series Season Episodes on DVD
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Cagney &
Lacey - Season 1(The Complete First Season) on DVD
(1982)
Amazon.com DVD Review - Twenty-two early
episodes of the breakthrough television series,
Cagney & Lacey, are gathered in this Season 1 pack,
though these do not include those with early Cagneys
Loretta Swit and Meg Foster. Directed by Karen
Arthur, written by a female team, and starring two
filmic heroes of the feminist movement--Sharon Gless
as Christine Cagney and Tyne Daly as Mary-Beth
Lacey--the show pioneered on-screen presentation of
independent, working women. With Cagney as the
career-minded single woman, and Lacey as the
mother/wife juggling job with home time, the two
detectives serve as foil characters, the way other
cop shows such as ChiPs, Moonlighting, or Charlie's
Angels starred police with opposing opinions. But
where other shows cast the foxiest people possible,
Cagney & Lacey relied on character development
instead of sex. That is not to say that Gless
and Daly aren't attractive, for indeed they are.
Episodic narratives include Cagney & Lacey fighting
female spousal abuse in "A Cry For Help"; date rape
in "Date Rape"; racism in "Let Them Eat Pretzels,"
and many other issues targeted in the
consciousness-raising feminist movement of the '70s
and '80s. Many of the episodes, compared to the
lightning fast-paced cop shows airing today, are
slow and surprisingly non-humorous. But regardless
of the show's occasional descent into tedium, Cagney
& Lacey did much to promote the image of the
self-made, multitasking woman. The two-part
featurette, "Breaking the Laws of TV," starring
heavyweights such as Gloria Steinem, critically
places the show in TV history by contextualizing
what was happening in the women's movement
concurrent to the show's airing. Though the show may
have its dull moments, it is fascinating to remember
how television has changed over the decades. —Trinie
Dalton |
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