Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
After the success of Barney Miller, Linden decided to revive his music career with a nightclub act. In his act, Linden played the clarinet, performed pop and Broadway standards backed by a big band, and discussed his life and career. [9] [25] In March 2011, he began touring with the cabaret show An Evening with Hal Linden: I'm Old Fashioned ...
Barney Miller is an American sitcom television series set in a New York City Police Department police station on East 6th Street in Greenwich Village (Lower Manhattan). The series was broadcast on ABC from January 23, 1975, to May 20, 1982.
Hal Linden, TV's Barney Miller, talks of his return trip to the Flat Rock Playhouse in April for the staged reading of 'The Journals of Adam and Eve.' Times-News talks with Hal Linden on his ...
Linden, 92, is known for his portrayal of Barney Miller in the 1970s TV show of the same name. It was about a police department in New York City, and the sitcom ran for eight seasons from 1975-82.
Pitlik directed episodes of 29 different TV series including Barney Miller (102 episodes, more than anyone else), Wings (27 episodes), Night Court (1 episode), Mr. Belvedere (44 episodes), Off the Rack (6 episodes), Taxi (11 episodes) and One Day at a Time (18 episodes).
Hal Linden: Barney Miller Barney Miller — 1981: Judd Hirsch: Alex Reiger: Taxi "Elaine's Strange Triangle" ABC: Alan Alda: Hawkeye Pierce M*A*S*H — CBS Hal Linden: Barney Miller Barney Miller — ABC Richard Mulligan: Burt Campbell Soap — John Ritter: Jack Tripper: Three's Company — 1982: Alan Alda: Hawkeye Pierce: M*A*S*H "Where There ...
Barrie on the set of Barney Miller in 1975 with Hal Linden. From 1975 to 1978, Barrie was credited in 37 episodes of Barney Miller, starring Hal Linden, as Barney's wife Elizabeth. In the 1979 television mini-series Backstairs at the White House she portrayed Mamie Eisenhower.
Barney Miller is an American situation comedy television series set in a New York City Police Department police station in Greenwich Village. The series originally was broadcast from January 23, 1975, to May 20, 1982, on ABC. It was created by Danny Arnold and Theodore J. Flicker. Noam Pitlik directed the majority of the episodes.