Moonlighting (TV series)

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Moonlighting

Moonlighting (title card).jpg
Title screen

Created byGlenn Gordon Caron
Starring
Cybill Shepherd
Bruce Willis
Allyce Beasley
Curtis Armstrong (1986–89)
Jack Blessing
Theme music composer
Lee Holdridge
Al Jarreau
Opening theme"Moonlighting"
Performed by Al Jarreau
Composer(s)Alf Clausen
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)
English

No. of seasons
5

No. of episodes
66 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
Glenn Gordon Caron
Running timeapprox. 45–49 minutes per episode
Production company(s)

Picturemaker Productions
ABC Circle Films
DistributorDisney–ABC Domestic Television
Release
Original networkABC
Original releaseMarch 3, 1985 – May 14, 1989

Moonlighting is an American comedy-drama television series that aired on ABC from March 3, 1985, to May 14, 1989. The network aired a total of 66 episodes (67 in syndication as the pilot is split into two episodes). Starring Cybill Shepherd and Bruce Willis as private detectives, the show was a mixture of drama, comedy, mystery, and romance, and was considered to be one of the first successful and influential examples of comedy-drama, or "dramedy", emerging as a distinct television genre.[1]


The show's theme song was co-written and performed by jazz singer Al Jarreau and became a hit. The show is also credited with making Willis a star, while re-launching the career of Shepherd after a string of lackluster projects.[2][3] In 1997, the episode "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice" was ranked #34 on (the 1997) TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time.[4] In 2007, the series was listed as one of Time magazine's "100 Best TV Shows of All-Time".[5] The relationship between David and Maddie was included in TV Guide's list of the best TV couples of all time.[6]




Contents





  • 1 Plot


  • 2 Cast

    • 2.1 Main cast


    • 2.2 Guest cast



  • 3 Episodes


  • 4 Format innovations

    • 4.1 Breaking the fourth wall


    • 4.2 Fantasy


    • 4.3 Other



  • 5 Production


  • 6 Ratings and decline

    • 6.1 Cancellation


    • 6.2 Syndication



  • 7 Awards and nominations


  • 8 Home media


  • 9 Parodies


  • 10 See also


  • 11 References


  • 12 External links




Plot


The series revolved around cases investigated by the Blue Moon Detective Agency and its two partners, Madelyn "Maddie" Hayes (Shepherd) and David Addison Jr. (Willis). The show, with a mix of mystery, sharp dialogue, and sexual tension between its two leads, introduced Bruce Willis to the world and brought Cybill Shepherd back into the spotlight after a nearly decade-long absence. The characters were introduced in a two-hour pilot episode that preceded the series proper.


The show's storyline begins with the reversal of fortune of Maddie Hayes, a former model who finds herself bankrupt after her accountant embezzles all of her liquid assets. She is left saddled with several failing businesses formerly maintained as tax write-offs, one of which is the City of Angels Detective Agency, helmed by the carefree David Addison played by Willis. Between the pilot and the first one-hour episode, David persuades Maddie to keep the business and run it as a partnership. The agency is renamed Blue Moon Investigations because Maddie was most famous for being the spokesmodel for the (fictitious) Blue Moon Shampoo Company. In many episodes, she was recognized as "the Blue Moon shampoo girl," if not by name.


In his audio commentary for the Season 3 DVD, creator Glenn Gordon Caron says that the inspiration for the series was a production of The Taming of the Shrew he saw in Central Park starring Meryl Streep and Raúl Juliá. The show would parody this Shakespeare play in the Season 3 episode Atomic Shakespeare.[7]



Cast



Main cast



  • Cybill Shepherd as Maddie (Madelyn) Hayes: Maddie Hayes is a chic and smart former high-fashion model. Left bankrupt when her accountant embezzles all of her money, she is forced to make a living by running the detective agency she had previously owned as a tax write-off. Using her celebrity as a former model, she brings in clients and tries to bring some order to a business previously run without any discipline. By the time he had written 50 pages for the pilot to the show, Caron says he realized he was writing the part for Cybill Shepherd.[8][9] After reading the script, she immediately realized this was a part she wanted to do and, during her first meeting with Caron and producer Jay Daniel, remarked that it was reminiscent of a “Hawksian” comedy. The two had no idea what she was talking about, so she suggested they screen Twentieth Century, Bringing Up Baby, and His Girl Friday, three of her favorites, to see how the overlapping dialogue was handled. A week before shooting of the pilot began, Caron, Shepherd, and Willis watched Bringing Up Baby and His Girl Friday.[10]

  • Bruce Willis as David Addison: David Addison is a wisecracking detective running the City of Angels Detective Agency. Faced with the prospect of being put out of business, he convinces Maddie that they have always lost money because they were supposed to and talks her into rebranding the agency and going into business with him as her partner. Glenn Gordon Caron had to fight with ABC to put Willis in the lead role having already signed Shepherd for both the pilot and series. Caron claims he tested Willis about a third of the way through testing over 2,000 actors, knew "this was the guy" immediately, and had to fight through twice as many more acting tests and readings while arguing with ABC executives before receiving (initial) conditional authorization to cast Willis in the pilot. ABC, according to Caron, did not feel that anyone viewing would think there could possibly be any "believable" sexual tension[11] between Shepherd and Willis.


  • Allyce Beasley as Agnes DiPesto: Agnes DiPesto is the extremely loyal and quirky receptionist for the Blue Moon Detective Agency who always answers the phone in rhyme. In season two, it is revealed that she lives at 6338 Hope Street. As problems arose with getting Willis and Shepherd on screen due to personal issues, the writers started to focus on the relationship between Agnes and fellow Blue Moon employee Herbert Viola. In the series finale, Agnes berates Maddie and David for not being able to figure out their nitwit relationship as the entire set is dismantled and states “if there’s a God in heaven, he’ll spin Herbert and me off in our own series.”


  • Curtis Armstrong as Herbert Viola: Herbert Viola started at Blue Moon as an employee from a temp agency. The producers brought Armstrong in based on his work in Revenge of the Nerds and Better Off Dead, hoping to expand the role of Agnes DiPesto by giving her a love interest, thereby taking some of the filming pressure off Willis and Shepherd. As Herbert begins to shine in his duties, he gets promoted to working real cases as a junior detective. Debuting in season three, he appeared in 36 of the series' 66 episodes.


  • Jack Blessing as MacGillicudy: MacGillicudy is a Blue Moon employee and became a foil for Herbert Viola and a rival for Agnes’s affections. Debuting in season three, he appeared in 17 of the series’ 66 episodes.


Guest cast




Bruce Willis, Cybill Shepherd, Allyce Beasley, and Mark Harmon in the episode "Maddie's Turn To Cry"


In addition to the primary cast, several notable actors appeared either as guest stars or made cameos on the series.


Recurring roles:



  • Charles Rocket as Richard Addison, David's brother.


  • Eva Marie Saint and Robert Webber as Virginia and Alexander Hayes, Maddie's parents.


  • Mark Harmon appeared near the end of Season 3 as Sam Crawford, Maddie's romantic interest and rival with David.


  • Brooke Adams appeared in Season 4 as Terri Knowles, a single mother for whom David volunteered as a Lamaze partner in preparation for the birth of Maddie's child.


  • Virginia Madsen appeared in Season 5 as Annie Charnock, Maddie's cousin and a short-term romantic interest for David.

One-time roles:



  • Liz Sheridan as Selma in the pilot episode.


  • Mary Hart as herself in the pilot episode.


  • Tim Robbins as a hitman in the Season 1 episode "Gunfight at the So-So Corral".


  • C. Thomas Howell as a waiter (uncredited) in the Season 2 episode "The Lady in the Iron Mask".[12] & as a postal worker (uncredited) in the Season 3 episode "Yours, Very Deadly".


  • Orson Welles as himself delivering the cold open in the Season 2 episode "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice". It would prove to be Welles' last appearance before his death.


  • Barbara Bain as Emily Grayson in the Season 2 episode "My Fair David".


  • Dana Delany as Jillian Armstrong in the Season 2 episode "Knowing Her".


  • David Patrick Kelly as McBride in the Season 2 episode "Somewhere Under the Rainbow".


  • Dan Lauria as the Lieutenant in the Season 2 episode "Portrait of Maddie".


  • Mark Linn-Baker as Phil West in the Season 2 episode "Atlas Belched".


  • Richard Belzer as Leonard in the Season 2 episode "Twas the Episode Before Christmas".


  • Whoopi Goldberg as Camille Brand in the Season 2 episode "Camille".


  • Judd Nelson as a Police Officer in the Season 2 episode "Camille".


  • Billy Barty as himself in the Season 2 episode "Camille".


  • Paul Sorvino as David Addison Sr. in the Season 3 episode "The Son Also Rises".

  • The Temptations as themselves in the Season 3 episode "Symphony in Knocked Flat".


  • Don King as himself in the Season 3 episode "Symphony in Knocked Flat".


  • Brad Dourif as Father McDonovan in the Season 3 episode "All Creatures Great and… Not So Great".


  • Rick Ducommun as one of David's friends in the Season 3 episode "Big Man On Mulberry Street".


  • Sandahl Bergman appeared in a "dream" dance sequence in the Season 3 episode "Big Man On Mulberry Street".


  • Colm Meaney as one of Katharina's suitors in the Season 3 episode "Atomic Shakespeare".


  • Sterling Holloway as the Narrator in the Season 3 episode "Atomic Shakespeare".


  • Lionel Stander as Max in the Season 3 episode "It's a Wonderful Job".


  • Cheryl Tiegs as herself in the Season 3 episode "It's a Wonderful Job".


  • Pierce Brosnan as Remington Steele in the Season 3 episode "The Straight Poop".


  • Peter Bogdanovich as himself in the Season 3 episode "The Straight Poop".


  • Rona Barrett as herself in the Season 3 episode "The Straight Poop".


  • Donna Dixon as Joan Tenowitz in the Season 3 episode "Blonde on Blonde".


  • Sam McMurray as Moe Hyman in the Season 3 episode "Blonde on Blonde".


  • Robert Wuhl as the Nut in Holding Cell in the Season 3 episode "Blonde on Blonde".


  • Jeff Jarvis as himself in the Season 3 episode "Sam & Dave".


  • Randall 'Tex' Cobb as "Big Guy in Gas Station" in the Season 3 episode "Sam & Dave".


  • Gary Cole as Alan McClafferty in the Season 3 episode "Maddie's Turn to Cry".


  • William Hickey as Mr. Kendall in the Season 3 episode "To Heiress Human".


  • Dr. Joyce Brothers as herself in the Season 4 episode "A Trip to the Moon".


  • Ray Charles as himself in the Season 4 episode "A Trip to the Moon".


  • John Goodman as Donald Chase in the Season 4 episode "Come Back Little Shiksa".


  • Amanda Plummer as Jacqueline "Jackie" Wilbourne in the Season 4 episode "Take a Left at the Altar".


  • Terry O'Quinn as Bryant "Brian" Wilbourne in the Season 4 episode "Take a Left at the Altar".


  • Imogene Coca as Clara DiPesto in the Season 4 episode "Los Dos DiPestos".


  • Michelle Johnson as Mrs. Hunziger in the Season 5 episode "Plastic Fantastic Lovers".


  • Jennifer Tilly as Nurse Saundra in the Season 5 episode "Plastic Fantastic Lovers".


  • Colleen Dewhurst as Betty Russell in the Season 5 episode "Take My Wife, For Example".


  • Rita Wilson as Carla in the Season 5 episode "Those Lips, Those Lies".


  • Demi Moore, Bruce Willis's wife at the time, as the woman in the elevator in the Season 5 episode "When Girls Collide".


  • Timothy Leary as minister Wynn Deaupayne in the Season 5 episode "Lunar Eclipse".


Episodes

































Season
Episodes
Originally aired
First aired
Last aired


1
6March 3, 1985April 2, 1985


2
18September 24, 1985May 13, 1986


3
15September 23, 1986May 5, 1987


4
14September 9, 1987March 22, 1988


5
13December 6, 1988May 14, 1989


Format innovations


The series was created by Glenn Gordon Caron, one of the producers of the similar Remington Steele, when he was approached by ABC executive Lewis H. Erlicht. Erlicht liked the work Caron had done on Taxi and Remington Steele and wanted a detective show featuring a major star in a leading role who would appeal to an upscale audience. Caron wanted to do a romance, to which Erlicht replied “I don’t care what it is, as long as it’s a detective show.”[8]


The tone of the series was left up to the production staff, resulting in Moonlighting becoming one of the first successful TV "dramedies"— dramatic-comedy, a style of television and movies in which there is an equal or nearly equal balance of humor and serious content. The show made use of fast-paced, overlapping dialogue between the two leads, harkening back to classic screwball comedy films such as those of director Howard Hawks. These innovative qualities resulted in its being nominated, for the first time in the 50-year history of the Directors Guild of America, for both Best Drama and Best Comedy in the same year (both in 1985 and 1986).[1]



Breaking the fourth wall




Cybill Shepherd and Bruce Willis in character as Maddie Hayes and David Addison directly addressing the audience.


Moonlighting frequently broke the fourth wall, with many episodes including dialogue that made direct references to the scriptwriters, the audience, the network, or the series itself. (For example, when a woman is trying to commit suicide by jumping into a bathtub with a television playing The Three Stooges, Addison says, "The Stooges? Are you nuts? The network'll never let you do that, lady!")


Cold opens sometimes featured Shepherd and Willis (in character as Maddie Hayes and David Addison), other actors, viewers, or TV critics directly addressing the audience about the show's production itself. These cold opens were originally born out of desperation as a way to fill air time, since the dialogue on the show was spoken so quickly and the producers needed something to fill the entire hour.[13] In some other episodes, the plot suddenly changed into extended sequences that involved crew dismantling or changing the sets,[citation needed] characters wandering off the set into other parts of the studio,[citation needed] production crew stepping into the scene as a deus ex machina (e.g. a propmaster suddenly walking into the scene and taking the villain's gun away),[citation needed] or guest actors dropping character and referring to each other by their real names.[citation needed] However, other than in stand-alone openings, the main actors never stepped out of character during the episodes.



Fantasy


The series also embraced fantasy; in season two, the show aired "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice," an episode that featured two lengthy and elaborately produced black-and-white dream sequences. The episode was about a murder that had occurred in the 1940s that David and Maddie are told about by the inheritor of the then-famous nightclub where the murder had taken place. Maddie and David feud over the details of the crime, which involve a man and woman who were executed for the death of the woman's husband, with both claiming the other was the real killer and had implicated the other out of spite. After a fourteen-minute set-up sequence, the show switched to two black-and-white dream sequences where the two dreamed their version of how the murder took place. The two sequences were filmed on different black-and-white film stock so that they would look like true period films. (On the commentary on the DVD, it is said that they used black-and-white film instead of color so that the network would not later use the color film.)


ABC was still displeased with the episode, however, and fearing fan reaction to a popular show being shown in black and white, demanded a disclaimer be made at the beginning of the episode to inform viewers of the "black-and-white" gimmick for the episode. The show's producers hired Orson Welles to deliver the introduction, which aired a few days after the actor's death.




Bruce Willis as Petruchio in the episode Atomic Shakespeare.


Another famous fantasy episode was "Atomic Shakespeare," which featured the cast performing a variation of The Taming of the Shrew, with David in the role of Petruchio, Maddie as Katharina, Agnes as Bianca, and Herbert as Lucentio. The episode featured Shakespearean costumes and mixed the Shakespearean plot with humorous anachronisms and variations on Moonlighting's own running gags, including David riding in as Petruchio on a horse with BMW logos embroidered on its saddle blanket and repeatedly launching into the wrong Shakespearean soliloquy until the rest of the cast corrects him on which play he is in, and the Blue Moon office itself serving as Petruchio and Katharina's estate. The characters perform the Shakespearean dialogue in iambic pentameter, and the episode was wrapped by segments featuring a boy imagining the episode's proceedings because his mother forced him to do his Shakespeare homework instead of watching Moonlighting, which the mother described as "That show about two detectives? A man and a woman? And they argue all the time and all they really want to do is sleep together? Sounds like trash to me!"



Other


In addition, the show mocked its connection to the popular Remington Steele series by having Pierce Brosnan hop networks and make a cameo appearance as Steele in one episode. The show also acknowledged Hart to Hart as an influence: in the episode "It's a Wonderful Job," based on the film It's a Wonderful Life, Maddie's guardian angel showed her an alternate reality in which Jonathan and Jennifer Hart from the earlier series had taken over Blue Moon's lease. Although Robert Wagner and Stefanie Powers did not appear in the episode, Lionel Stander reprised his role as the Harts' assistant Max.


Both Shepherd and Willis sang musical numbers over the course of the show. In "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice," Shepherd performed both "Blue Moon" in Maddie's dream sequence and The Soft Winds' "I Told Ya I Love Ya, Now Get Out!" in David's, while in "Atomic Shakespeare," Willis sings The Young Rascals' "Good Lovin'". Willis also frequently broke into shorter snippets of Motown songs. "Good Lovin'," "Blue Moon", and "I Told Ya I Love Ya..." appeared on the Moonlighting Soundtrack.


The episode "Big Man on Mulberry Street" centers around a big production dance number set to the Billy Joel song of the same name. The sequence was directed by veteran musical director Stanley Donen.



Production


Moonlighting was unusual at the time for being one of only three shows, due to FCC regulations, to be owned and produced in-house by a broadcast network (NBC’s Punky Brewster and CBS’s Twilight Zone revival being the others). This allowed the network greater flexibility in budgeting the show since the “back-end potential” for profits was so much greater with not having to pay a licensing fee to the film studio or independent production company. As a result, ABC gave Caron a lot of control over production. Caron, however, was a perfectionist and viewed Moonlighting as the filming of a one-hour movie every week, using techniques usually reserved for big budget films. To capture the cinematic feel of the films of the 1940s, for example, he would prohibit the use of a zoom lens, opting instead to use more time-consuming moving master cameras that move back and forth on a track and require constant resetting of the lights. Diffusion disks were used to soften Cybill Shepherd’s features, and a special lens needed to be employed so that in a two shot, Maddie would be diffused and David would not.


Much of the credit for this look and feel can be attributed to the hiring of Gerald Finnerman as the director of photography. Finnerman, a second-generation cinematographer, was brought up in the old school of cinematography by working with his father, Perry Finnerman, and later as a camera operator for Harry Stradling on such films as My Fair Lady and The Picture of Dorian Gray. Finnerman would then go on to be the director of photography for the TV series Star Trek and was responsible for creating much of the mood in that show by employing black-and-white lighting techniques for color film. This background meshed perfectly with what Caron was trying to portray in the series and earned him an Emmy nomination for the black-and-white episode “The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice”. Hired for the show after the pilot was shot, Finnerman would become involved in virtually every aspect of the show including the scripts, lighting, set design, and even directing some of the later episodes.[14]




Cybill Shepherd in the episode The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice.


Typical scripts for an average one-hour television show run 60 pages, but those for Moonlighting were nearly twice as long due to the fast talking overlapping dialogue of the main characters. While the average television show would take seven days to shoot, Moonlighting would take from 12–14 days to complete with episodes and dialogue frequently being written by Caron the same day they were shot.[8] This attention to detail contributed to Moonlighting as being one of the most expensive television shows being produced at the time. Where most episodes would cost around $900,000 to produce, Moonlighting was running nearly double that. The season 2 episode "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice" could have been filmed much more cheaply by being shot in color and then decolorized, but Caron insisted on the authentic look of black-and-white film which took 16 days to shoot, bringing the cost of the episode to the then-unheard-of sum of two million dollars.[15] Caron often defended his filming practices in the name of giving the audience what they wanted and producing a quality product. He used the following analogy to illustrate the point, "The thinking in television which makes no damn sense to me, is that a half hour of television costs X, and an hour of television costs Y, no matter what that television is, it strikes me as an insane hypothesis. The parallel is, you're hungry, whether you go to McDonald's or whether you go to '21,' it should cost the same; they both fill your stomach. It's nonsense."[16]


All of this attention to detail resulted in production delays and the show became notorious for airing reruns when new episodes had not been completed in time for broadcast. The first two seasons of Moonlighting focused almost entirely on the two main characters, having them appear in almost every scene. According to Cybill Shepherd, "I left home at 5 A.M. each day. Moonlighting scripts were close to a hundred pages, half again as long as the average one-hour television series. Almost from the moment the cameras started rolling we were behind schedule, sometimes completing as few as sixteen episodes per season, and never achieving the standard twenty-two."[17]


Glenn Gordon Caron partly blamed Cybill Shepherd for production problems:



"I don't mean to paint her as the sole bearer of responsibility for the discord. But if I said to you, 'You're going to have a great new job – it's a life-defining job – but you're going to work 14–15 hours a day, and by the way, you'll never know what hours those are – sometimes you'll start at noon and work until 3 a.m., other times you won't know when or where it will be [until the last minute].' It can be very difficult, it requires an amazing amount of stamina. It's easier to do if you're still reaching for the stars, it's a lot tougher if you're already a star, if you've already reached the top of the mountain."[18]



Producer Jay Daniel talked about the difficulties between the costars in the later seasons:



"Well, I was the guy that more often than not would be the one that would go into the lions den when they were having disagreements. I'd sort of be the referee, try to resolve it so that we could get back to work. So there was that side of it. Everybody knows there was friction between the two of them on the stage. In the beginning, Bruce was just a guy’s guy. Let's just say he evolved. Over the years, he went from being the crew's best friend and just being grateful for the work and all of that to realizing that he was going to be a movie star and wanting to move on. Part of that was because of his strained relationship with Cybill. That sometimes made the set a very unpleasant place to be. Cybill – I got along with her very well at times, other times I’d have to be the one who said you have to come out of the trailer and go to work. In fairness to her, she was in the makeup chair at six thirty in the morning with pages of dialogue she hadn’t seen before, she'd work very long hours, and then be back in the makeup chair at six thirty the next morning."[19]


The delays became so great that even ABC mocked the lateness with an ad campaign showing network executives waiting impatiently for the arrival of new episodes at ABC's corporate headquarters. One episode featured television critic Jeff Jarvis in an introduction, sarcastically reminding viewers what was going on with the show's plot since it had been so long since the last new episode.


The season three clipshow episode "The Straight Poop" also made fun of the episode delays by having Hollywood columnist Rona Barrett drop by the Blue Moon Detective Agency to figure out why David and Maddie couldn't get along, as the premise to set up the clips from earlier episodes. In the end, Rona convinced them to apologize to one another, and promised the viewers that there would be an all-new episode the following week.


Shepherd's real-life pregnancy and a skiing accident in which Willis broke his clavicle further contributed to production delays. To counter these problems, with the fourth season, the writers began to focus more of the show's attention on supporting cast members Agnes and Herbert, writing several episodes focusing on the two so that the show would be able to have episodes ready for airing.



Ratings and decline


Moonlighting was a hit with TV audiences as well as with critics and industry insiders, garnering 16 Emmy nominations in just its second season. That season saw Moonlighting tie for 20th place in the Nielsen ratings. In season three the show peaked in 9th place, then dropped off slightly in a tie for 12th in its 4th season.[1]


The show's ratings decline is popularly attributed to Episode #14 of Season 3, "I Am Curious… Maddie", which infamously had Maddie and David consummate their relationship after two and a half years of romantic tension. In commentaries on the third season DVD set, however, Caron stated that he did not feel the event led to the show's decline, but that a number of other factors led to the series' decline and eventual cancellation.[7]


Much of that was attributed to the fact that in the fourth season Willis and Shepherd had little screen time together. Jay Daniel explained that, "we had to do episodes where there was no Cybill. She was off having twins. Her scenes were shot early, early on and then you had to integrate them with scenes shot weeks later. You were locked into what those scenes were because of what had already been shot with Cybill."[19] Bruce Willis was also making Die Hard during this period. When that movie became a box office success, a movie career beckoned and his desire to continue in a weekly series waned. In a series that depended on the chemistry between the two main stars, not having them together for the bulk of the fourth season hurt the ratings.


The series lost Glenn Gordon Caron as executive producer and head writer when he left the show over difficulties with the production: "I don't think Cybill understood how hard the workload was going to be. A situation arose with her, and at a certain point it became clear that… umm… suffice it to say I wasn't there for the last year and a half."[20] Shepherd recalled Caron left the show stating that it was either him or her, and he didn't think the network would choose him.[21]


When Maddie returned to Los Angeles near the end of the fourth season, the writers tried to recreate the tension between Maddie and David by having Maddie spontaneously marry a man named Walter Bishop (Dennis Dugan) within a few hours of meeting him on the train back to LA. When Shepherd read the script she strongly voiced her objection that her character would not do such a thing, but was overruled.[22] The move failed to rekindle the sparks between the main characters or capture the interest of the audience, which led to an even further ratings decline.[citation needed]



Cancellation


Neither of the principal stars was vested in the final season of the show. Bruce Willis, fresh from his Die Hard success, wanted to make more movies. Cybill Shepherd, having just given birth to twins, had grown tired of the long, grueling production days and was ready for the series to end.


In the 1988–89 TV season, the show's ratings declined precipitously. The March to August 1988 Writers Guild of America strike[23] cancelled plans for the 1987–88 Moonlighting season finale to be filmed and aired on TV in 3-D in a deal with Coca-Cola, and delayed the broadcast of the first new episode until December 6, 1988. The series went on hiatus during the February sweeps, and returned on Sunday evenings in the spring of 1989. Six more episodes aired before the series was cancelled in May of that year.


In keeping with the show's tradition of "breaking the fourth wall", the last episode (fittingly titled "Lunar Eclipse") featured Maddie and David returning from Agnes and Herbert's wedding to find the Blue Moon sets being taken away, and an ABC network executive waiting to tell them that the show has been cancelled. The characters then race through the studio lot in search of a television producer named Cy, as the world of Moonlighting is slowly dismantled.


When they find Cy, he is screening a print of "In 'n Outlaws", the episode of Moonlighting that had aired two weeks earlier. Once informed of the problem, Cy lectures David and Maddie on the perils of losing their audience and the fragility of romance. Cy was played by Dennis Dugan, the same actor who had played Walter Bishop in Maddie's marriage storyline — however, Dugan was also the director of the episode, so his acting credit was listed as "Walter Bishop".[24] David and Maddie then admit defeat that the show is ending but not before Maddie tells David 'I can't imagine not seeing you again tomorrow' and then we are treated to a clip montage of previous Moonlighting episodes and then it ends with a message stating that "Blue Moon Investigations ceased operations on May 14, 1989. The Anselmo Case[25] was never solved… and remains a mystery to this day."



Syndication


As the show had not produced enough episodes to gain a syndication contract, following its original run it was not widely seen until its DVD release, although it occasionally appeared on cable channels (including Lifetime and Bravo in the US, and W in Canada) in the 1990s and 2000s. Bravo airings often featured new claymation promos with Maddie and David using original audio clips from the series. The "Atomic Shakespeare" episode aired on Nick at Nite in 2005 as part of the network's 20th anniversary celebration. The 1985 ABC Tuesday night line-up was honored with reruns of Who's the Boss?, Growing Pains and Moonlighting, although "Atomic Shakespeare" was from the '86-'87 season. BBC Two initially carried the show in the UK from 1986 to 1989, and it ran on Sky 1 circa 1991. It has been shown on CBS Drama since November 2009. Between 2005 and 2008 the show was frequently shown on the now defunct channel ABC1.


In Asia, Moonlighting began airing season 1 and 2 on Rewind Network's HITS channel starting on December 2013.[26]



Awards and nominations



Moonlighting was nominated for a wide range of awards, including nominations for 40 Emmy Awards of which it won 7 of those. It was also nominated for 10 Golden Globe Awards of which it won 3 of those.



Home media


Anchor Bay Entertainment released the original pilot episode on DVD in region 1. Lions Gate Entertainment later released the entire series of Moonlighting, including the pilot episode, on DVD in Region 1. Each release contains bonus features including commentaries and featurettes. As of 2013, these releases have been discontinued and are out of print.


In Regions 2 & 4, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment has released all 5 seasons on DVD, although the Region 4 sets are now out of print. A complete series box set was also released in Region 2 on September 14, 2009.[27]







































DVD Name
Ep #
Release Dates
Special Features
Region 1
Region 2
Region 4
Moonlighting - The Pilot Episode (1985)
1
January 25, 2000


Bruce Willis's Original Screen Test, 12-Page Booklet which includes Photos, Bios, & Cast/Crew Lists, Audio Commentary with actor Bruce Willis and creator Glenn Gordon Caron
Seasons 1 & 2
25
May 31, 2005
October 6, 2008
March 21, 2006
"Not Just a Day Job, the Story of Moonlighting, Part 1", "Inside the Blue Moon Detective Agency, the Story of Moonlighting, Part 2", "The Moonlighting Phenomenon", Select Episode Commentaries
Season 3
15
February 7, 2006
April 20, 2009
March 7, 2007
"Memories of Moonlighting", Select Episode Commentaries
Season 4
14
September 12, 2006
June 22, 2009
July 17, 2007
Select Episode Commentaries
Season 5
13
March 6, 2007
September 14, 2009
November 15, 2007
"Maddie And David In The Making", Audio Commentaries


Parodies


Riptide, a once-popular detective series whose ratings had declined to the point of cancellation after airing against Moonlighting in the 1985–86 television season, aired an episode (the show's second-last) in 1986, in which that show's detectives acted as mentors to "Rosalind Grant" (Annette McCarthy) and "Cary Russell" (Richard Greene), the bickering stars of a television detective show pilot. Although their names were an allusion to Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell, the characters were written as parodies of Shepherd and Willis, even adopting some of their real mannerisms and clothing styles, and their dialogue contained many nods, both obvious and subtle, to Moonlighting's writing style.[28]


The episode was explicitly promoted by NBC (Riptide's network) as a Moonlighting parody, and was publicized as such widely enough that Riptide's producers felt obliged to clarify that they liked Moonlighting and intended the episode as an homage.[28]



See also


  • List of Moonlighting episodes


  • Moonlighting soundtrack


References


Notes




  1. ^ abc "Moonlighting". Museum of Broadcast Communications. Retrieved 6 January 2013..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ John Stanley. "Why 'Moonlighting' has ratings magic," The San Francisco Chronicle, November 17, 1985, Sunday Datebook, page 47:"Cybill Shepherd was finally living down the old Hollywood saw that the only reason she had made it into the business was because she had once been Peter Bogdanovich's girl. After years of empty, meaningless roles, she was doing something good, something that tapped her charms and natural talent."


  3. ^ Cliff Terry. "Why 'Moonlighting' is suddenly the talk of TV," Chicago Tribune, November 19, 1985, Tempo section, page 5: "Shepherd ... deserves the Comeback of the Year Award for rebounding from such career disasters as "Daisy Miller," ", and Peter Bogdanovich ..."


  4. ^ "Special Collectors' Issue: 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time". TV Guide (June 28-July 4). 1997.


  5. ^ Poniewozik, James (September 6, 2007). "The 100 Best TV Shows of All-TIME". Time. Time.com. Retrieved March 4, 2010.


  6. ^ "Couples Pictures, Moonlighting Photos - Photo Gallery: The Best TV Couples of All Time". TV Guide. Retrieved June 25, 2012.


  7. ^ ab "Memories of Moonlighting". Moonlighting - Season 3 DVD. Lions Gate Entertainment. 2006.


  8. ^ abc Horowitz, Joy (March 30, 1986). "The Madcap Behind 'Moonlighting'". New York Times. Retrieved June 29, 2010.


  9. ^ Shepherd, Cybill (2000). Cybill Disobedience. Avon Books. p. 229. ISBN 0-06-103014-7.


  10. ^ Shepherd, Cybill (2000). Cybill Disobedience. Avon Books. pp. 229–32. ISBN 0-06-103014-7.


  11. ^ A&E Biography Channel, "Bruce Willis" (2005), air date: 2008-06-27 (rebroadcast), 10–12pm EDST.


  12. ^ Leitch, Christopher (1985-10-01), The Lady in the Iron Mask, retrieved 2016-10-08


  13. ^ Shepherd, Cybill (2000). Cybill Disobedience. Avon Books. p. 237. ISBN 0-06-103014-7.


  14. ^ Winship, Michael (1988). Television: Companion to the PBS Television Series. New York: Random House. pp. 304–312. ISBN 978-0-394-56401-2.


  15. ^ Thompson, Robert J. (1996). Television’s Second Golden Age. New York: The Continuum Publishing Company. pp. 46–48. ISBN 0-8264-0901-6.


  16. ^ Winship, Michael (1988). Television: Companion to the PBS Television Series. New York: Random House. pp. 123–129. ISBN 978-0-394-56401-2.


  17. ^ Shepherd, Cybill (2000). Cybill Disobedience. Random House. p. 206. ISBN 0-09-187807-1.


  18. ^ "Moonlighting shines on DVD". May 21, 2005. Archived from the original on 2008-06-03.


  19. ^ ab Maiocco, Diana. "Exclusive Interview with Jay Daniel". Moonlighting Strangers. Retrieved 6 January 2013.


  20. ^ Bruce Fretts, Now & Glenn (November 26, 1999), ew.com.


  21. ^ Shepherd, Cybill (2000). Cybill Disobedience. Avon Books. p. 264. ISBN 0-06-103014-7.


  22. ^ Shepherd, Cybill (2000). Cybill Disobedience. Avon Books. p. 253. ISBN 0-06-103014-7.


  23. ^ Collins, Scott (2007-10-15), "A writers' strike nobody wants", Los Angeles Times


  24. ^ Lunar Eclipse, Moonlighting Episode Guide


  25. ^ The Anselmo case was a running gag which had been mentioned in several episodes, always avoiding any details as to what the case was about.


  26. ^ "HITS". hitstv.com.


  27. ^ "Moonlighting : The Complete Seasons 1 to 5". Amazon.com UK. Retrieved 6 January 2013.


  28. ^ ab "Spoofing Around on Riptide, Los Angeles Times, April 16, 1986.


Further reading



  • Williams, J. P. (1988). "The Mystique of Moonlighting: When You Care Enough to Watch the Very Best". Journal of Popular Film and Television. Bowling Green, Ohio. 16: 90&ndash, 99. doi:10.1080/01956051.1988.9943391.


External links







  • Moonlighting at AllMovie


  • Moonlighting on IMDb


  • Moonlighting at TV.com


  • Moonlighting in the Encyclopedia of Television

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