The San Pedro Beach Bums
The San Pedro Beach Bums | |
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The San Pedro Beach Bums cast
The cast of The San Pedro Beach Bums
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Genre | Situation comedy |
Starring | Christopher Murney Stuart Pankin John Mark Robinson Darryl McCullough Jeff Druce Christopher De Rose Louise Hoven Susan Mullen Lisa Reeves Kristoff St. John Nancy Morgan |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 11 (1 unaired) plus pilot |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Aaron Spelling Douglas S. Cramer |
Producer(s) | E. Duke Vincent (pilot) |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company(s) | Aaron Spelling Productions |
Distributor | CBS Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | September 19 December 19, 1977 |
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External links | |
[{{#property:P856}} Website] |
The San Pedro Beach Bums is a 1977 United States comedic television series about five carefree young men living together on a houseboat in San Pedro, California. It aired from September 19 to December 19, 1977. Its May 1977 pilot movie was entitled The San Pedro Bums.[1][2]
Contents
Cast
- Christopher Murney...Buddy Binder
- Stuart Pankin...Anthony "Stuf" Danelli
- John Mark Robinson...Ed "Dancer" McClory
- Darryl McCullough...Moose Maslosky
- Jeff Druce...Boychick (pilot only)
- Christopher De Rose...Boychick (weekly series)
- Louise Hoven...Louise
- Susan Mullen...Suzi Camelli
- Lisa Reeves...Margie
- Kristoff St. John...Ralphie
- Nancy Morgan...Julie
Synopsis
Five carefree young men in their early 20s who all had been friends since high school discover a derelict boat in the harbor at San Pedro, California. They take possession of it, name it Our Boat, and move aboard to use it as their houseboat. Buddy is smart, tough, streetwise, always confident, and the group's self-proclaimed leader; the shy, nervous, and not very bright Dancer is so nicknamed because he is too fidgety to sit still; Stuf is intellectual and sophisticated and a compulsive eater and gourmand who sees beauty in being overweight; Moose is large, muscled, and stupid, but gentle; and Boychick is a Clark Gable-like ladies man. Headquartered aboard Our Boat, they experience many slapstick, almost cartoonish adventures.[1][2][3][4]
Suzi Camelli, Julie, and Ralphie are friends of the Bums, Margie is a lifeguard, and Louise is the waitress at Tina Teena's Beach Café.[4]
Production
On May 13, 1977, ABC broadcast the pilot for The San Pedro Beach Bums, a 90-minute movie entitled The San Pedro Bums which told the story of the "Bums" finding Our Boat and moving aboard. Although a similar premise had not worked in the unsuccessful NBC comedy-drama It's a Man's World in 1962-1963, ABC believed enough in the concept that it picked up the show as a weekly one-hour situation comedy for its fall 1977 schedule. Concerned that the use of the word "bums" in the pilot's title could be construed as negative and drive some viewers away unless softened by a more lighthearted connotation, ABC changed the name of the weekly series to The San Pedro Beach Bums. A cast change also took place, with Jeff Druce, who played Boychick in the pilot, replaced by Christopher De Rose in the weekly series.[5]
In order to boost viewership for The San Pedro Beach Bums, ABC scheduled it as the lead-in for the 1977 season of the popular ABC Monday Night Football. To garner extra attention for the show's premiere in September 1977, the women who starred as the "Angels" in the hit ABC program Charlie's Angels – Kate Jackson, Jaclyn Smith, and Cheryl Ladd – guest-starred as themselves in the episode.
Aaron Spelling and Douglas S. Cramer were the show's executive producers. E. Duke Vincent wrote and produced the pilot, and Barry Shear directed it.[6] Episode directors were Jack Arnold, Allen Baron, Earl Bellamy, Gene Nelson, George Tyne, and Don Weis. Episode writers included Earl Barret, William Raynor, and Myles Wilder.
Broadcast history
The San Pedro Beach Bums aired at 8:00 p.m. on Mondays throughout its run. ABC broadcast new episodes weekly from September 19 to October 31, 1977, followed by one more in November 1977 and two December 1977. Despite heavy promotion, highly favorable scheduling, and cross-marketing with more successful ABC shows, The San Pedro Beach Bums never gained much of an audience, and ABC cancelled the show after the broadcast of its tenth episode on December 19, 1977.[1][2] An eleventh episode never aired.
Episodes
Season # | Episode # | Title | Plot/Notes | Original air date |
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– | – | Pilot: "The San Pedro Bums" | Five carefree young men who have been friends since high school find a derelict boat in the harbor at San Pedro, California. They name it Our Boat and decide to move aboard and use it both as their houseboat and as the headquarters for an erstwhile fishing business. Before long, a gang of toughs robs one of their friends, and they set about ridding the waterfront of the miscreants. This episode aired as a 90-minute television movie. For the weekly series, the name was changed from The San Pedro Bums to The San Pedro Beach Bums. Jeff Druce, who played Boychick in the pilot, was replaced by Christopher De Rose in the weekly series. | May 13, 1977 |
1 | 1 | "The Angels and the Bums" | The Bums try to recruit the women of Charlie's Angels to judge the Miss Harbor Beauty Contest. The "Angels" – Kate Jackson, Jaclyn Smith, and Cheryl Ladd – guest-star along with Herb Edelman and Jenny Sherman. | September 19, 1977 |
1 | 2 | "The Shortest Yard" | The Bums decide to teach a lesson in fair play to a football team that specializes in cheating and cheap shots. Frank Gifford guest-stars as himself. Denny Evans, Martin Kove, Richard X. Slattery, Roger Callard, and Tim Rossovich also guest-star. | September 26, 1977 |
1 | 3 | "The Magnificent Moose" | A bully tries to impress Marge by belittling Moose. Joseph Burke and Ian Tanza guest-star. | October 3, 1977 |
1 | 4 | "Godfathers Five" | Dancer gets a job as an assistant to a private investigator, and his first assignment is to protect a baby that is in danger of being kidnapped. Meanwhile, two confidence men convince Stuf that he has a future as a movie star and swindle him out of $2,000 for a phony screen test. Cliff Norton, Dee Wallace Stone, Joe Bennett, and Theodore Bikel guest-star. | October 10, 1977 |
1 | 5 | "The Winners Circle" | Marge's uncle is in debt and asks the Bums to hide a thoroughbred race horse he owns so it cannot be seized before he pays his creditors. Bob Corso, Dick Balduzzi, Parley Baer, Rachel Longaker, and Roger C. Carmel guest-star. | October 17, 1977 |
1 | 6 | "The Bums vs. the Reds" | After a lovelorn Soviet sailor jumps ship in San Pedro, the Bums try to help him make a touring professional tennis player his fiancé. Allan Rich, Elya Baskin, Larry Hankin, and Pavla Ustinov guest-star. | October 24, 1977 |
1 | 7 | "Sweepstakes Bums" | The Bums search frantically for a winning lottery ticket worth $250,000 that they have misplaced. Arlene Golonka, Keene Curtis, Paulene Myers, and Regis Philbin guest-star. | October 31, 1977 |
1 | 8 | "A Bum Thanksgiving" | The Bums help an elderly homeless woman conceal her poverty and put on a great Thanksgiving dinner to impress her visiting son. David Knapp guest-stars. | November 21, 1977 |
1 | 9 | "Love Boat Bums: Bums Take a Cruise" | The Bums find adventure on a cruise in an episode that cross-markets with the hit ABC series The Love Boat. Dennis Robertson, Jane Zachary, and Lyle Waggoner guest-star. | December 12, 1977 |
1 | 10 | "Lifting is My Lift" | Moose is fired after a beer keg rolls off his truck, explodes, and sprays beer all over the company president. The still virtually unknown Arnold Schwarzenegger guest-stars as "Muscleman." Eileen Barnett and Lloyd Bochner also guest-star. | December 19, 1977 |
1 | 11 | "May the Best Bums Win" | ? | never |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 McNeil, Alex, Total Television: The Comprehensive Guide to Programming From 1948 to the Present, New York: Penguin Books, 1996, p. 899.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Brooks, Tim, and Earle Marsh, The Complete Directory to Prime-Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present, Sixth Edition, New York: Ballantine Books, 1995, ISBN 0-345-39736-3, p. 721.
- ↑ wordpress.com Forgotten Shows of My Nonage #32: The San Pedro Beach Bums
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 hollywood.com The San Pedro Beach Bums: Credits
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 nytimes.com The San Pedro Bums (1977)
- ↑ nytimes.com The San Pedro Bums Cast and Credits
- ↑ IMDb Episodes cast for The San Pedro Beach Bums (1977)
- ↑ tv.com The San Pedro Beach Bums
- ↑ arnoldfest.com The San Pedro Beach Bums (1977)
- ↑ cbsnews.com Arnold: 70's style - CBS News
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- American Broadcasting Company network shows
- 1977 American television series debuts
- 1977 American television series endings
- 1970s American television series
- 1970s American comedy television series
- American television sitcoms
- English-language television programming
- Television shows set in Los Angeles, California
- Television series by Spelling Television
- Television series by CBS Television Studios