Naked City is a police drama series which aired from 1958 to
1963 on the ABC television network. It was inspired by the 1948 motion picture of the same name, and mimics its
dramatic "semi-documentary" format.
Filmed on location in New York City, the series centers on the
detectives of NYPD's 65th Precinct, but episode plots were often focused more on the criminals and victims
portrayed by guest stars. Primary writer Stirling Silliphant nurtured a focus on intelligent drama with
elements of comedy and pathos, leading to significant critical acclaim for the series, and leading film and
television actors of the time sought out guest-starring roles. In addition to Silliphant, who went on to win
an Academy Award for his script of In the Heat of the Night, writers of Naked City episodes included veteran
TV writer Howard Rodman and blacklisted screenwriter Arnold Manoff, writing under the pseudonym "Joel
Carpenter."
In addition, extensive location shooting made New York as much a star of the series
as any of the actors.
Many scenes were filmed in the south Bronx near Biograph Studios,
where the series was produced, and in Greenwich Village and other neighborhoods of Manhattan. The exterior of
the "65th Precinct" was the Midtown North Precinct at 306 West 54th Street between Eighth and Ninth
Avenues.
Naked City first aired in 1958 as a half-hour series starring
James Franciscus and John McIntire playing, respectively, Detective Jimmy Halloran and Lt. Dan Muldoon — the
same characters as in the 1948 film. While critically acclaimed, the series did not garner high ratings. Midway
through the season, McIntire quit the show because of his desire to leave New York and move back to the West
Coast. His departure was handled by dramatically killing off his character in the opening scene of the episode
"The Bumper". Horace McMahon was then introduced in the same episode as his more crusty replacement, Lieutenant
Mike Parker. In its first season, the half-hour version of Naked City preceded the ABC crime/police reality show
called Confession, in which Jack Wyatt, later an Episcopalian priest, interviewed assorted criminals to
determine why they had rejected societal mores and turned to a life of lawlessness.
Even with the cast change, Naked City was cancelled by ABC at the end of the 1958-1959
season. One of the show's sponsors (Brown & Williamson), along with production staff, successfully lobbied
the network to revive the show as an hour-long series, which premiered in 1960.
The 1960 version featured Paul Burke as "Detective Adam Flint", a
sensitive and cerebral cop in his early thirties who does much of the legwork in the episodes. The preceding
season, Burke had appeared with David Hedison in the short-lived NBC espionage drama, Five Fingers. Horace
McMahon returned as Lieutenant Mike Parker as did Harry Bellaver as the older, mellow Sgt. Frank Arcaro. Nancy
Malone appeared as Adam Flint's aspiring actress girlfriend, Libby. The hour long version of the show was
broadcast on ABC in the 10:00 p.m. slot on Wednesday nights.
Stirling Silliphant went on to create Route 66 for CBS in 1960 in which he used the same semi-anthology format of building the stories around
the guest stars, rather than the regular cast.
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