michael cole / the mod squad interview

2
GROOIIY hnd of Go trippin' back in time ' with those cool 'M0D SQUAD'cops as they finally arrive on DVD BY FRANK TOVECE Special to Newsday t was originally to be called "The Young Detectives." Maybe if it had beerl it would have gone the way of the shortlived "The Young Lawyers" and "The Young Rebels" that soon I followed. But somewhere duringthe show's development, in that halcyon year ofl968, the title got changed to the catchier, kitschi- er "The Mod Squad," a name promising something other than youngversions ofour same old elders. Its first 13 episodes come out on DVD Tuesday, givingnostalgic boomers achance to remember when they wereTheYoung Whippersnappers. A cop show for the counterculture, "The Mod Squad" starred Michael Cole, Clar- ence Williams III and Peggy Lipton as, respectively, ayoung white dude, a young black bro and a young Cole, in a recent photo, still looks a bit mod. {t + ,*,, .i & a fi { i + says David Bushman, curator of New York's Paley Center for Media (formerly the Museum of Television and Radio). "It suc- cessfully drew in that young audience and made it feel it spoke to them - and did it with- out alienating older viewers, since it had the trappings ofa police drama.'The Mod Squad' was remarkable for its time in what it addressed and . . . it deserves credit for taking on the issues it did." "We had shows about topics nobody was dealingwith at the time," says co-star Cole bytelephone from Los Angeles, where he continues to appear occasionally on series including "ER" andinTVmovies. While the early 1960s had seen such hard-hit- ting, topical dramas as 'iThe Defenders" and "East Side,/ West Side" - what histori- ans call "Kennedy-era" blond chick working as a youth- culture undercover team for the Los Angeles Police Department. Tige Andrews played their police superior, Capt. Adam Greer. Very loosely based on a 1950s I-APD narcotics squad headed by series creator Bud Ruskin, the show became a four-season hit on ABC. And for all its sanitized TV vision ofhippies and Hell's Angels, pro- testers and "pigs," it broke ground in giving the screen its fust lasting counterculture protagonists - something the oltensibly more sophisticated movies wouldn't do for another year, with the break- through youth-culture film "Easy Rider." "It was one of the earliest attempts to deal with the counter- culture and the disillusioned- youth sensibility of the time," or "Ngw Frontier" dramas - they had la?gely been replaced in midl decade by escapist balm like "The Wild Wild West" and stAndard genre shows like "The FBI." "We did an episode on abortion," Cole says. "Anothcr on anti-Semitism. And, of course,.lve also addressed the Vietnam War and racism. It was pop culture-ish, but we were dealing with very serious situa- tions. And Aaron had to fight to gei some of those shows on." Producer power "Aaron" would be the late Aaron Spelling, early ih his career before becoming a megaproducer of hits iike "Charlie's Angels," "Starsky and Hutch," "Beverly Hills 902f0" and countless other shows. Parinered with comedian- producer Danny Thomas in HIP, HIB I Y ciramas had t'ew young- I adult leads before "i-tre tvtod I' Squad" in 1968. But that show sparked a quest for "relevant" (code word for hip, youth-orient- ed) shows, most of which hit the air in the fall ofl970. Dig these short- lived youth-culrure dramas, baby! HURRAH

Upload: frank-lovece

Post on 28-Nov-2015

73 views

Category:

Documents


9 download

DESCRIPTION

Newsday (December 16, 2007). By Frank Lovece

TRANSCRIPT

GROOIIYhnd of

Go trippin' back in time' with those cool 'M0D SQUAD'cops

as they finally arrive on DVD

BY FRANK TOVECESpecial to Newsday

t was originally to be called"The Young Detectives."Maybe if it had beerl itwould have gone the wayof the shortlived "TheYoung Lawyers" and "TheYoung Rebels" that soon

I followed. But somewhereduringthe show's development, inthat halcyon year ofl968, the titlegot changed to the catchier, kitschi-er "The Mod Squad," a namepromising something other thanyoungversions ofoursame old elders. Itsfirst 13 episodes comeout on DVD Tuesday,givingnostalgicboomers achance toremember when theywereTheYoungWhippersnappers.

A cop show for thecounterculture, "TheMod Squad" starredMichael Cole, Clar-ence Williams III andPeggy Lipton as,respectively, ayoungwhite dude, a youngblack bro and a young

Cole, in a recentphoto, still looksa bit mod.

{t+

,*,,

.i

&afi

{i+

says David Bushman, curator ofNew York's Paley Center forMedia (formerly the Museum ofTelevision and Radio). "It suc-cessfully drew in that youngaudience and made it feel itspoke to them - and did it with-out alienating older viewers,since it had the trappings ofapolice drama.'The Mod Squad'was remarkable for its time inwhat it addressed and . . . itdeserves credit for taking on the

issues it did.""We had shows

about topics nobodywas dealingwith at thetime," says co-starCole bytelephonefrom Los Angeles,where he continues toappear occasionally onseries including "ER"andinTVmovies.While the early 1960shad seen such hard-hit-ting, topical dramas as'iThe Defenders" and"East Side,/ WestSide" - what histori-ans call "Kennedy-era"

blond chick working as a youth-culture undercover team for theLos Angeles Police Department.Tige Andrews played their policesuperior, Capt. Adam Greer. Veryloosely based on a 1950s I-APDnarcotics squad headed by seriescreator Bud Ruskin, the showbecame a four-season hit on ABC.And for all its sanitized TV visionofhippies and Hell's Angels, pro-testers and "pigs," it broke groundin giving the screen its fust lastingcounterculture protagonists -something the oltensibly moresophisticated movies wouldn't dofor another year, with the break-through youth-culture film "EasyRider."

"It was one of the earliestattempts to deal with the counter-culture and the disillusioned-youth sensibility of the time,"

or "Ngw Frontier" dramas - theyhad la?gely been replaced in midldecade by escapist balm like "TheWild Wild West" and stAndardgenre shows like "The FBI." "Wedid an episode on abortion," Colesays. "Anothcr on anti-Semitism.And, of course,.lve also addressedthe Vietnam War and racism. Itwas pop culture-ish, but we weredealing with very serious situa-tions. And Aaron had to fight togei some of those shows on."

Producer power"Aaron" would be the late

Aaron Spelling, early ih his careerbefore becoming a megaproducerof hits iike "Charlie's Angels,""Starsky and Hutch," "BeverlyHills 902f0" and countless othershows. Parinered with comedian-producer Danny Thomas in

HIP,HIB

I Y ciramas had t'ew young-I adult leads before "i-tre tvtodI' Squad" in 1968. But that show

sparked a quest for "relevant"(code word for hip, youth-orient-ed) shows, most of which hit the airin the fall ofl970. Dig these short-lived youth-culrure dramas, baby!HURRAH

it:l:ii

,tn'*

.,,ir

MichaelCole and Peggy Liptonwere cool with working for thepolice in "The Mod Squad,"which comes to DVD Tuesday.

Thomas-Spelling Productions,Spelling contributed his singularcombination of showmanship andsocioiogical sawy, traits thathelped him predict what peoplewould want to see - even ifpeople didn't always know itthemselves - and then sell it.

"\['hen Aaron started to sell theshorv," Cole recalis, "a lot ofPeo-ple thoughlit wouldn't get anaudience because lit teamed] awhite, a black and a girl." RobertCulp and Bill Cosby pioneeredintegrated series leads with "ISpy" in 1965, Greg Morris was Partof the "Mission: Impossiblc" teamfrom the start in'66 and DonMitchell aided "Ironside" tn'67.

But the first two were globetrot-ting secret-agent fantasies. "ModSquad," set here at home, was acop show in form but thematical-ly aspired to be a naturalisticdrama. That made it the target ofanti-integrationist ire. "We gothate mail," Cole says. "And themore we got, the more we knewwe were on the right path -thanks to Aaron. He really stuckto his guns."

Or didn't, in anothercontext: The show'sthree young cops -disgraced rich kid PeteCochran (Cole), ghettodenizen Linc Hayes(Williams) and prosti-tute's daughter julieBarnes (Lipton) -didn't carry fuearms.Cole says that was hisidea. "On the second orthird day [ofproduc-tionl, I went to Aaron'soffice. I told him we'reabout peace and love,so let's not have theMod Squad ever carry agun. And we didn't. Wemade a point of, whenthe bad guy dropped hisgul, to take that weapon4nd throw it away.Itwas symbolic, a wayofsaying,'We don't needthat.' " Cole and Lipton(who was also marriedto QuincyJones for 16

taking LSD, the plot could be that {of nearly any detective show. :

What gives it and subsequent iepiiodts their distinctive voice is itfie visible camaraderie of its three Iyoung stars, and something else - .,

a feeling that the actors believe I

what their characters believe, that :

they're making a difference during I

atumultuous time filled withpossibilities. 'l

"'The Mod Squad'was ground- .

breaking in the r-ealm of sociallYrelevant drama," says Bushman, p.

citing as an example a later season-. r

one episode, "Peace Now - ArlY tBlau,r' about the family dynamics :

of an Army general and his paci- \fist son, who's in prison for dodg- !ing the draft. One 1970 episode ,- involves the death of i

Far out, man! iDig this clip :from "The :

Mod Squad." I

an immigration officer lwho rnayhavebeentrafficking in illegal .l

aliens. How 2007 is lthat? i

Its cultural signifi- '1

cance aside, "TheMod Squad" really

'.

isn't a towering Pinna- '

cle of TV drama. Butit was a well-crafted iweekly show with ;

ambitious and laud- |

able ideas, and evenlanded a best-dramaEmmy nomination its ;

second year. The :

three stars were good 1

actors for the roles -particularly Broadwayveteran Williams, butit was Lipton who gotan Emmy nominationeach year.

"It was the first TVdrama to embrace thecounterculture," saysclassic-TV authority

"lhe New Peoph" (ABC,1969-70)

- Forty young Americans become"Lost" on a South Pacific island,and try to create a better societYthan their parents did. ProducerAaron Spelling teamed with wtiterRod Serling - in which "TwilightZone" was that?

'The Young Rebels" (ABC,1970-7l )

- The American Revolutiontelevised. Four youthfol colonists(including Lou Gossett |r.) fightthe power lr:.1777.'The Yorng lawyers" (ABC,L970-n) - From their storefrontoffice, idealistic Boston students

years) appear innewinterviews on the DVDs, as do"Mod Squad" guest stars Ed Asner,Tyne Daly, Lou Gossett |r. andLesley AnnWarren.

Belief systemThe premiere episode involves

some very ungroovy businessmenblackmailing a politician. Asidefrom the blackmailers havingphotos of the politician's daughter

Iay down the law to slumlords,head-busting cops and other ex-ploiters of the people.i'Storcftont larryerd'(cBS, l97o) -From their storefront office, idealis-tic L.A. associates lay down the lawto slumlt rds, head-busting coPsand other exploiters ofthe people.

Diane Albert, former editor andpublisher of "The TV Collector.""The three lead characters werethe vanguard of [drama-series]protagonists who weren't olderpeople; it didn't look like showshve years or even a year beforeit. But," she admits, "I thinkanybody up to about age 39 isgoing to find'The Mod Squad' a

bit corny."

"The lntems' (CBS,1970-n) -Three white guys, one black gttY,

one blond chick YoungPhYsiciansat New North Hospital oPerate ontough issues of the day. Before hewas B.J. Hunnicut on ((M*A*S*H,"

Mike Farreil played a doctorhere. - FRANK LOVECE

RTAINMFNT

NrwsDAY.COfiI'l/rv 1