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M*A*S*H television series cast members c. 1974. Back row: Larry Linville, Wayne Rogers, and Gary Burghoff. Front row: Loretta Swit, Alan Alda, and McLean Stevenson This is a list of characters from the M*A*S*H franchise created by Richard Hooker, covering the various fictional characters appearing in the novel MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors (1968) and its sequels M*A*S*H Goes to Maine ...
The franchise depicts a group of fictional characters who served at the fictional "4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (M*A*S*H)" during the Korean War, loosely based on the historic 8055th MASH unit. Hawkeye Pierce is featured as the main character, played by Donald Sutherland in the 1970 film M*A*S*H and by Alan Alda on the television series ...
Colonel Sherman Potter (Harry Morgan) assumes command of the 4077th, and orders Klinger to get into uniform, but when his body rejects it, Hawkeye tells him to wear a slip underneath. Col. Potter soon gets acquainted with Hawkeye and B.J., bonding with them post-surgery over drinks and a chorus of There's a Long Long Trail A-Winding. Larry ...
The TV series M*A*S*H arrived on our televisions in 1972 and more than five decades later, Fox is honoring the series with a reunion special. The anti-war sitcom about the doctors and nurses who ...
On Monday, Jan. 1, M*A*S*H fans are invited to ring in the new year with M*A*S*H: The Comedy That Changed Television, a two-hour special airing on Fox and featuring new interviews with series vets ...
The ’60s, which had just ended, were full of people shouting, ranting, protesting, speaking self-righteous truth to power. In “M*A*S*H,” Hawkeye and Trapper John didn’t shout. They ...
The next morning, Frank attempts to assemble the company for a formal send-off, but Hawkeye and Trapper are out of uniform and unshaven, and Corporal Klinger wears a particularly elaborate dress made specially for the occasion. Henry arrives in his new suit, and Frank and Margaret give Blake a formal salute, but Henry chides Frank for being too ...
After three straight days of surgery, an over-exhausted Hawkeye is unable to sleep. In his disillusion, he decides to find out who is responsible for the war. One of the things Hawkeye does is that he has Radar O'Reilly send off a telegram to President Harry S. Truman demanding to know who started the war.