Emergency! is an American television series which ran from January 1972 to 1979 on NBC. It was produced by Jack Webb and co-produced and created by Robert A. Cinader.
The series followed the Paramedic Program of the Los Angeles County Fire Department (LACoFD) with the focus on the personnel of Fire Station 51, in particular paramedics Johnny Gage (played by Randolph Mantooth) and Roy DeSoto (played by Kevin Tighe). The paramedics coordinated with the staff of Rampart General Hospital: Dr. Kelly Brackett (Robert Fuller), Dr. Joe Early (Bobby Troup), and chief nurse Dixie McCall RN (Julie London).
Other regular characters included: Captain Dick Hammer (first season alternately portrayed by Dick Hammer and John Smith), Firefighter engineer Mike Stoker (who, in real life was a Los Angeles County firefighter). Chet Kelly (Tim Donnelly), Marco Lopez (uses his real name), Captain Hank Stanley (Michael Norell) (seasons two through seven), Dr. Michael Morton (Ron Pinkard) (in the pilot episode, his character is "Dr. Tom Gray"), and Dispatcher (uncredited Sam Lanier).
Other occasional regulars included Battalion Chiefs Conrad (Art Balinger) and McConike (William Boyett), and Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy Vince (Vince Howard)
While Troup and London were married in real life, the character of McCall was written to be a love interest for Brackett. Further muddying the picture, before marrying Troup in 1959, she had been married to Webb from 1947 to 1953. That divorce must have been amicable, as Webb had repeatedly hired Troup for roles on Dragnet and Adam-12.
The show highlighted the adventures of the still fledgling paramedic program and its popularity encouraged various communities in North America to establish and improve emergency services as hiring paramedics. The show was also credited for demonstrating first aid techniques that enabled some viewers to save lives in real emergencies. When the medical community saw that the general public were using First Aid and CPR in response to this show, they started the teaching programs for CPR in every state. However, the show later had to add a disclaimer stating that the first aid techniques demonstrated should only be performed by trained persons.
The series spun-off an animated version called Emergency +4 (featuring four teenagers who participated in adventures with the paramedics) which ran from 1973 to 1976. The series itself was considered a spin-off of an earlier Jack Webb series, Adam-12. Strangely, the characters in Adam-12 appear in one episode, while another episode had a subplot in which one of the paramedics watched Adam-12 as a television show. Further complicating things, is the fact that the Los Angeles County Fire Department does not serve the City of Los Angeles, it makes the spin-off somewhat factually dubious, which is not typical of Jack Webb productions.
Charlton Comics published several issues of an Emergency! comic book in the mid-1970s.
When the program was first syndicated it went by the title Emergency One. Renaming programs for syndication was commonplace until the 1980s. It is rarely seen today since the series is now owned by the Jack Webb Estate.
Universal Studios (the series' original distributor) has so far issued domestic DVD editions of the series' first two seasons. The North American DVD release date for season 1 was August 23, 2005. The North American DVD release date for season 2 was February 7, 2006.
1970s TV shows in the United States | Drama television series | Medical television series | Television spin-offs | NBC network shows | NBC Universal Television shows
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"Emergency!".
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