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Decoy (also titled Policewoman Decoy) [1] is an American crime drama television series created for syndication and initially broadcast from October 14, 1957, to July 7, 1958, with 39 black-and-white 30-minute episodes. The series was the first American police series with a female protagonist. [2] Many Decoy episodes are in the public domain. [3]
Get Christie Love, starring Teresa Graves, the pilot for which preceded Police Woman by about two months, the pilot for Police Woman airing in March 1974 as an episode of Police Story entitled "The Gamble". The syndicated 1957 series Decoy, starring Beverly Garland, was the first series, a 30-minute drama, to focus on a female police officer.
The pilot for this series was an episode of Police Story titled "The Gamble" (March 26, 1974), in which Angie Dickinson was introduced as a vice officer named Lisa Beaumont. Season 1 (1974–75) [ edit ]
WPC 56 is a British television police procedural series, created and partly written by Dominique Moloney and broadcast on BBC One.The stories feature the first woman police constables (WPC) to join the fictional Midlands Constabulary at Brinford Police Station in 1956.
There are ten lists of episodes of the 1955–1962 television series Alfred Hitchcock Presents and the 1962–1965 The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, split by season: Alfred Hitchcock Presents season 1, 1955–56; Alfred Hitchcock Presents season 2, 1956–57; Alfred Hitchcock Presents season 3, 1957–58; Alfred Hitchcock Presents season 4, 1958–59
A police woman is a female police officer. Police woman may also refer to: Police Woman, a 1970s American drama, starring Angie Dickinson; Police Women, a 2009 American reality documentary series; Police Woman, a 1974 martial arts movie, starring Yuen Qiu (with a cameo by Jackie Chan) Policewomen, a 1974 exploitation film
The episode aired a month after a similarly controversial episode of Marcus Welby, M.D. on ABC garnered national protests. Mindful of that recent controversy, NBC delayed the episode and ordered some changes, but they were not enough to allay gay and lesbian concern over network television's negative portrayal of homosexuality. After ...
It first aired on Monday, October 17, 1983, and was the seventh most-watched prime time program in the United States for the week, out-drawing Monday Night Football. [2] [3] It was rebroadcast in early July 1985, during the American summer TV season, when it was the most-viewed program of the week.