NYPD Blue
NYPD Blue | |
---|---|
Genre | Police procedural |
Created by | |
Starring | (See: Main cast) |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 12 |
No. of episodes | 261 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | (See: Production and crew) |
Producer | (See: Production and crew) |
Running time | 47–49 minutes |
Production companies |
|
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | September 21, 1993 March 1, 2005 | –
Related | |
NYPD Blue is an American
NYPD Blue was met with critical acclaim, praised for its grittiness and realistic portrayal of the cast's personal and professional lives, though the show garnered controversy for its depictions of
Main cast
Character | Actor | Position | Seasons | |||||||||||
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2
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3
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4
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5
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6
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7
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9
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11
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12
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John Kelly | David Caruso | Detective | Main | |||||||||||
Andy Sipowicz | Dennis Franz | Detective/Sergeant | Main | |||||||||||
Arthur Fancy | James McDaniel | Lieutenant/Captain | Main | |||||||||||
Laura Michaels Kelly | Sherry Stringfield | A.D.A. | Main | |||||||||||
Janice Licalsi | Amy Brenneman | Officer/Detective | Main | |||||||||||
James Martinez | Nicholas Turturro | Officer/Detective/Sergeant | Main | |||||||||||
Sylvia Costas | Sharon Lawrence | A.D.A. | Recurring | Main | Recurring | Main | ||||||||
Greg Medavoy | Gordon Clapp | Detective | Recurring | Main | ||||||||||
Donna Abandando | Gail O'Grady | P.A.A. | Recurring | Main | Guest | |||||||||
Bobby Simone | Jimmy Smits | Detective | Main | Guest | ||||||||||
Adrienne Lesniak | Justine Miceli | Detective | Recurring | Main | ||||||||||
Diane Russell | Kim Delaney | Detective | Recurring | Main | Guest | |||||||||
Jill Kirkendall | Andrea Thompson | Detective | Recurring | Main | ||||||||||
John Irvin | Bill Brochtrup | P.A.A. | Recurring | Recurring | Main | |||||||||
Danny Sorenson | Rick Schroder
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Detective | Main | |||||||||||
Baldwin Jones | Henry Simmons | Detective | Main | |||||||||||
Valerie Haywood | Garcelle Beauvais | A.D.A. | Main | |||||||||||
Connie McDowell | Charlotte Ross | Detective | Main | |||||||||||
Tony Rodriguez | Esai Morales | Lieutenant | Main | |||||||||||
John Clark Jr. | Mark-Paul Gosselaar | Officer/Detective | Main | |||||||||||
Rita Ortiz | Jacqueline Obradors | Detective | Main | |||||||||||
Eddie Gibson | John F. O'Donohue | Detective/Sergeant | Recurring | Guest | Main | |||||||||
Thomas Bale | Currie Graham | Lieutenant | Main | |||||||||||
Laura Murphy
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Bonnie Somerville | Detective | Main |
Production and crew
Produced by
The series was shot on film and framed for a 16:9 ratio from the first episode, though it was not natively broadcast in HD until season 9. In 2016 the first eight seasons were remastered into a 2K resolution HD image for use in future syndication and streaming releases.[4] The 90-minute versions of "Lost Israel, Part 2," "Honeymoon at Viagra Falls," and "Hearts and Souls" were not included in this project and are available only on the DVD releases, as standard definition 4:3 episodes. The streaming remastered editions use the 60-minute versions of those episodes.
Exterior shots of the 15th Precinct used the 9th Precinct building on East 5th Street in New York City, also used for Kojak.[5]
- Steven Bochco – Executive Producer/Writer
- David Milch – Executive Producer/Writer
- Paris Barclay – Supervising Producer/Director
- Steven DePaul – Supervising Producer/Director
- Matt Olmstead – Executive Producer/Writer
- Nicholas Wootton – Executive Producer/Writer
- Bill Clark – Executive Producer/Writer
- Mark Tinker – Executive Producer/Director
- Hans VanDoornewaard – Executive Producer
- William M. Finkelstein – Executive Producer
- Gregory Hoblit – Executive Producer/Director
- Kathy Bates – Director
- Leonard Gardner – Producer/Writer
- Mike Post – Music
- Edward Rogers – Music
The show was initially a vehicle for David Caruso.[6][7] John Kelly was the main character, and the first season revolved around him and his professional and personal lives. Promotional shots for the show depicted Caruso in the foreground and other first-season characters set off behind him. Season two had the departure of John Kelly, and the show was thereafter built around an ensemble cast.
Music
This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2021) |
The show used an instrumental theme by prolific TV composer
Plot
Season 1
Kelly's personal life is as frenetic as his professional life. He is reluctantly going through a divorce from his wife, Laura, and is embarking on an affair with a uniformed cop, Janice Licalsi. To complicate matters further, Licalsi's police-officer father is on the payroll of mob boss Angelo Marino. Licalsi, in an attempt to protect her father, has been ordered to do a "hit" on Kelly. Instead, Licalsi murders Marino, and the repercussions come back to haunt both Kelly and her.
Sipowicz, meanwhile, sobers up and begins a relationship with ADA Sylvia Costas. The other detective in the squad, Greg Medavoy, a married man, embarks on an affair with the squad's new administrative aide, Donna Abandando.
Season 2
Licalsi is found guilty of the manslaughter of Marino and his driver, and is given a two-year sentence. Because of Kelly's involvement with Licalsi, and the widely held belief that he withheld evidence that could have given her a longer sentence, he is transferred out of the 15th to working as a dispatcher and subsequently chooses to leave the department altogether. He is replaced by Bobby Simone, a widower whose previous job was that of driver for the police commissioner. This does not sit well with Sipowicz, but after learning that Simone took the assignment to be present for his wife, who was suffering from cancer, Sipowicz learns to accept his new partner and eventually builds a strong friendship with him. When Sipowicz's relationship with Sylvia leads to marriage, he asks Simone to be his best man.
After an affair with a journalist whom he suspects has used information that he disclosed to her after an intimate moment to boost her career, Simone begins a relationship with another new member of the squad, Diane Russell. Sipowicz, as a recovering alcoholic, recognizes from Russell's behavior that she also has a drinking problem. After much prompting, she begins attending Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). In another storyline, due to his low self-esteem and disbelief that a woman like Donna could love him, Medavoy's relationship with her breaks down, due in no small part to Donna's visiting sister.
Season 3
At the beginning of the season, Sylvia becomes pregnant with Andy's child. A baby boy, Theo, is born towards the end of the season. This is contrasted with the fate that awaits Sipowicz's older son, Andy Jr., who announces that he plans to join the police force in nearby Hackensack, New Jersey, after being discharged from the Air Force due to an injury. Sipowicz is finally bonding with his long-estranged son when Andy Jr. is gunned down trying to help people in a bar holdup. This causes the elder Sipowicz to fall off the wagon. Simone kills Andy Jr.'s murderers in an act of self-defense while attempting to arrest them.
Bobby and Diane, who had placed their relationship on hold while she attended AA, resume seeing each other. Diane begins drinking again when her abusive father beats her mother. Her father is eventually killed, and her mother becomes the prime suspect.
James Martinez and new detective Adrienne Lesniak begin an affair, but Lesniak later breaks it off, because her last relationship with a fellow cop ended disastrously, and tells Medavoy (Martinez's partner and the squad gossip) that she is gay. After James is shot, recovers, and returns to work, and Lesniak and he get to know each other, she admits that the story she told Medavoy was a lie. Martinez later breaks up with her due to her controlling and unpleasant behavior, and Lesniak eventually leaves the squad. Medavoy leaves his wife, recognizing that she is holding him back, but it is too late to save his relationship with Donna, who leaves to take a job with Apple in California.
Seasons 4–5
During the next two seasons, a few minor cast changes are made: Donna is replaced by several PAAs, most notably by Gina Colon (played by
Seasons 6–8
Two additional critical incidents occur during
The next two seasons had the continuation of Sipowicz's relationship with Sorenson (in whom Sipowicz sees a resemblance to his late son), along with more changes in the squad. Departing during this time were Kirkendall (due to her unknowing involvement in her ex-husband's dirty dealings), Martinez (following his promotion to uniformed sergeant), Fancy as squad leader (following his promotion to captain), and Russell (for a
At the end of season eight, Sorenson is approached by the owners of a strip club to work for them providing information. Still reeling from Russell's abruptly ending their brief affair, he accepts the offer. After reporting to Lt. Rodriguez, Sorenson goes undercover, but then goes missing, after a stripper he was seeing turns up dead in his apartment (though not by his doing). The Sorenson character was written out at the start of
Seasons 9–12
Assisting on the investigation is Officer John Clark Jr., played by Mark-Paul Gosselaar. He is promoted to detective third grade for his heroic actions in the shootout that ended with the death of the hitman who had murdered Danny and an undercover federal agent; Sipowicz is promoted to detective first grade at the same time. Fancy had previously recommended Sipowicz for first grade at the same time as Simone for a high-profile case they both worked several years earlier; while Simone was promoted, the negative incidents in his past caused the department to deny Sipowicz's promotion.
The newly minted Det. Clark becomes Sipowicz's newest (and greenest) partner. As had occurred with Simone and Sorenson, initially tension exists between Clark and Sipowicz, largely due to an old feud from years earlier involving Sipowicz and Clark's father, John Clark Sr. (
The remaining four years had a continuing focus on Sipowicz as the main character, as had been the case since Simone's death. Another unlikely romance developed between Sipowicz and Connie McDowell. This came about due to her ability to stand up to Sipowicz's gruffness, and her tender relationship with Theo (played by Austin Majors). They eventually married, and after adopting McDowell's sister's baby daughter (following the sister's murder by her husband, Connie's brother-in-law), had a child of their own. The McDowell character eventually became an off-screen character in the second half of the 11th season and throughout the final season due to issues between Ross and show executives.
Rodriguez was written out halfway through the 11th season, after his IAB enemy Capt. Pat Fraker shot and nearly killed him in a drunken rage, then was acquitted; the acquittal, combined with him not making the Captain's promotion list, caused him to retire and take a lucrative job in private security. Sgt. Eddie Gibson, played by former NYPD officer
In the final few episodes, the storylines revolved around the impending retirement of Det. Medavoy and Sipowicz's promotion to Sergeant and later assumption of command of the 15th Detective Squad. The series finale introduced two new young detectives named Quinn and Slovak, who echoed the first days of Irish-American Kelly and Polish-American Sipowicz.
Controversy
The series included more nudity and raw language than was common on broadcast television, which resulted in at least 30 of the network's affiliates—mostly in smaller markets—not running the series when it debuted, with the show airing in many of those markets on a
In 2005,
According to NYPD Blue: A Final Tribute, a
Awards and nominations
NYPD Blue has won 84 out of 285 award nominations. The series has garnered 84
Episodes
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | Rank | Rating (seasons 1-4)/ Viewers (in millions) (seasons 5-12) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||||
1 | 22 | September 21, 1993 | May 17, 1994 | 18 | 13.9[b] | |
2 | 22 | October 11, 1994 | May 23, 1995 | 7 | 16.5 | |
3 | 22 | October 24, 1995 | May 21, 1996 | 10 | 14.1 | |
4 | 22 | October 15, 1996 | May 20, 1997 | 13 | 12.5 | |
5 | 22 | September 30, 1997 | May 19, 1998 | 19 | 15.0[36] | |
6 | 22 | October 20, 1998 | May 25, 1999 | 15 | 14.4 | |
7 | 22 | January 11, 2000 | May 23, 2000 | 17 | 15.6[37] | |
8 | 20 | January 9, 2001 | May 22, 2001 | 23 | 16.2[38] | |
9 | 23 | November 6, 2001 | May 21, 2002 | 31 | 12.3 | |
10 | 22 | September 24, 2002 | May 20, 2003 | 34 | 11.3 | |
11 | 22 | September 23, 2003 | May 11, 2004 | 51 | 9.9 | |
12 | 20 | September 21, 2004 | March 1, 2005 | 42 | 10.1 |
Critical reception
NYPD Blue has generally received rave reviews from leading television critics.
Average seasonal ratings
Season | Episodes | Timeslot (EDT) | Season Premiere | Season Finale | TV season | Rank | Nielsen rating (Households, seasons 1-6; Viewers (in millions), seasons 7–12) |
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1 | 22 | Tuesday 10:00pm | September 21, 1993 | May 17, 1994 | 1993–94
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#18 | 13.0 |
2 | 22 | October 11, 1994 | May 23, 1995 | 1994-95
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#7 | 15.7 | |
3 | 22 | October 11, 1995 | May 21, 1996 | 1995-96
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#10 | 13.5 | |
4 | 22 | September 15, 1996 | May 20, 1997 | 1996-97
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#13 | 12.1 | |
5 | 22 | September 3, 1997 | May 19, 1998 | 1997-98
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#17 | 10.5 | |
6 | 22 | October 20, 1998 | May 25, 1999 | 1998-99
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#12 | 10.4 | |
7 | 22 | January 11, 2000 | May 23, 2000 | 1999-2000
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#17 | 15.5 | |
8 | 20 | January 9, 2001 | May 22, 2001 | 2000-01
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#23 | 16.2 | |
9 | 22 | Tuesday 9:00pm | November 6, 2001 | May 21, 2002 | 2001-02
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#31 | 12.3 |
10 | 22 | Tuesday 10:00pm | September 24, 2002 | May 20, 2003 | 2002-03
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#34 | 11.3 |
11 | 22 | September 23, 2003 | May 11, 2004 | 2003-04
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#51 | 9.9 | |
12 | 20 | September 20, 2004 | March 1, 2005 | 2004-05
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#42 | 10.1 |
Home media
On October 3, 2013, it was announced that
In Region 2, Mediumrare acquired the rights to release the remaining eight seasons of the show on DVD in the United Kingdom.
Seasons 1-12 are available on
In Australia and New Zealand, all twelve seasons are Streaming on Disney+. Also like The Simpsons, the first six seasons are cropped to HD 16:9. UK and Ireland Disney plus also carry all the seasons with the same format issue.
DVD Name | Ep # | DVD Release dates | Extra features | ||
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Region 1 | Region 2 (UK) | Region 4 | |||
The Complete 1st Season | 22 | March 18, 2003[54] | May 19, 2003[55] | June 17, 2003[56] |
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The Complete 2nd Season | 22 | August 19, 2003[57] | October 6, 2003[58] | February 17, 2004[59] |
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The Complete 3rd Season | 22 | February 21, 2006[60] | April 17, 2006[61] | May 29, 2006[62] |
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The Complete 4th Season | 22 | June 20, 2006[63] | August 14, 2006[64] | August 21, 2006[65] |
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The Complete 5th Season | 22 | January 21, 2014[66] | December 10, 2012[67] | N/A |
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The Complete 6th Season | 22 | June 24, 2014[68] | December 10, 2012[69] | N/A |
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The Complete 7th Season | 22 | September 30, 2014[70] | February 25, 2013[71] | N/A | |
The Complete 8th Season | 20 | January 13, 2015[72] | February 25, 2013[73] | N/A | |
The Complete 9th Season | 23 | April 5, 2016 | March 25, 2013[74] | N/A | |
The Complete 10th Season | 22 | August 23, 2016 | April 1, 2013[75] | N/A | |
The Complete 11th Season | 22 | November 15, 2016 | April 29, 2013[76] | N/A | |
The Complete 12th Season | 20 | January 17, 2017 | April 29, 2013[77] | N/A |
Legacy
TV reviewer and author Alan Sepinwall informally began his career by blogging recaps and analyses of NYPD Blue episodes.[78]
Sequel
The sequel of the series was announced in October 2018.[79] The pilot is a co-production between 20th Century Fox TV, which was behind the original series, and ABC Studios, and producers were casting its four main roles at the time of the announcement. The storyline would revolve around the murder of Andy Sipowicz, with his son Theo as a uniformed police officer who works to earn promotion to detective while investigating his father's killing.[80]
On May 10, 2019, it was reported that the sequel's pilot would be retooled for a potential midseason pickup.[81] On January 30, 2020, it was reported that the sequel was no longer in active development at ABC.
References
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{{cite journal}}
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(help) - ^ "Did FCC rush to judgment on 'NYPD Blue'?". Today.com. Associated Press. August 29, 2006. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
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External links
- Official websites for the show from ABC, Court TV, TNT and Bravo!
- Series ending commentary from MSNBC, Slate (via the Wayback Machine), and The Christian Science Monitor
- Alan Sepinwall/Amanda Wilson entire series
- David Milch's Active Imagination, a May 2002 interview
- NYPD Blue at IMDb