Dictionary Definition
kookie adj : informal or slang terms for mentally
irregular; "it used to drive my husband balmy" [syn: balmy, barmy, bats, batty, bonkers, buggy, cracked, crackers, daft, dotty, fruity, haywire, kooky, loco, loony, loopy, nuts, nutty, round the
bend, around the
bend, wacky, whacky]
Extensive Definition
77 Sunset Strip was the first hour-length
private detective series in American
television history. It was also the first in a series of
ABC clones that included Bourbon
Street Beat, Hawaiian Eye
and Surfside 6—all
of which were eventually revealed to share the same fictional
universe.
It is further notable for being the subject of an
ownership battle between Roy Huggins
and Warner
Brothers, which was the proximate cause of Huggins' departure
from the studio. It was actually based on novels and short stories
written by Huggins prior to his arrival at Warner, but, as a matter
of legal record, derived from a brief Caribbean
theatrical release of its pilot, Girl on
the Run. The show ran from 1958 to 1964 and won the 1960
Golden
Globe Award for best TV series.
Description
The series revolved around two Los Angeles detectives, both former government secret agents: Stuart ("Stu") Bailey (Efrem Zimbalist Jr., playing a character that Huggins had created in his 1946 novel The Double Take, which he later adapted into the 1948 movie I Love Trouble) and Jeff Spencer (Roger Smith, who later married actress/singer/dancer Ann Margaret, and became her manager, as well). Spencer was also a former government agent, and a non-practicing attorney. They worked out of swank digs at 77 Sunset Strip, between La Cienega Boulevard and Alta Loma Road on the south side of the Strip next door to Dean Martin's real-life lounge, Dino's. Suzanne, the beautiful French switchboard operator played by Jacqueline Beer, handled the phones.Hanging around for comic relief were Roscoe the
racetrack tout played
by Louis
Quinn, and the rock and
roll-loving, wisecracking, hair-combing, hipster, P.I. wanna-be, valet
parking attendant next door, Gerald Lloyd Kookson III
("Kookie"), played by Edd Byrnes.
Comb sales soared. So much for Huggins' hopes for a straight P.I.
series. Hard-boiled drama was out and occasionally self-deprecating
humor was common. Many of the episodes were named "capers". The
catchy theme song, written by the accomplished team of Mack David and
Jerry
Livingston, typified the show's breezy, jazzed atmosphere. The
song became the centerpiece of an
album of the show's music in Warren Barker-led orchestrations,
which was released in 1959.
The Edd Byrnes character Kookie became a cultural
phenomenon, with his slang
expressions such as "ginchy" and "piling up Zs" (sleeping). When
Kookie helped the detectives on a case by singing a song, Edd
Byrnes began a singing career with "Kookie, Kookie, Lend Me Your
Comb" (based on his frequent combing of his hair). When his demands
for more money were not met, Byrnes left the show, but he came back
as a full-fledged partner in the detective firm in May 1960; in 1961,
Robert
Logan became the new parking lot attendant, J.R. Hale, who
usually spoke in abbreviations. In 1960, Richard
Long moved from the recently canceled detective series Bourbon
Street Beat with his role of Rex Randolph, but he left the
program in 1962.
The show's popularity was such that rising young
actors clamored for a guest spot. Up-and-comers who made guest
appearances included William
Shatner, Mary Tyler
Moore, Shirley
MacLaine look-alike
Gigi Verone, Robert
Conrad, Dyan Cannon,
Jay
North, Connie
Stevens, Adam West,
Tuesday
Weld, James
Garner, Marlo
Thomas, Max Baer,
Jr., Elizabeth
Montgomery, Karen
Steele, DeForest
Kelley, Susan
Oliver, Peter Breck,
Roger
Moore, Donna
Douglas, Troy
Donahue, Ellen
Burstyn, Chad
Everett, Gena
Rowlands, and Diane Ladd.
Even established film and TV actors plus older stars guested as
well, including Fay Wray,
Francis
X. Bushman, Liliane
Montevecchi, Keenan Wynn,
Ida
Lupino, Rolfe Sedan,
Jim
Backus, Billie
Burke, Buddy Ebsen,
George
Jessel, Peter Lorre,
Burgess
Meredith, Nick Adams,
and Roy
Roberts, amongst others. The show was so "cool" that even
sports stars such as Sandy Koufax
had a guest role in an episode.
In 1963, as the show's
popularity waned, the entire cast except for Zimbalist was let go.
Jack
Webb was brought in as executive
producer and William
Conrad as director.
The character of Stuart Bailey became a globe-hopping investigator,
with lavish international sets. The show was canceled at the end of
the year.
Spinoffs and legacy
The success of 77 Sunset Strip led to the creation of several other detective shows in exotic locales, all produced by the Warner Brothers studio which created "Strip" — Bourbon Street Beat in New Orleans, Hawaiian Eye in Hawaii and Surfside 6 in Miami. The casts (not to mention the scripts) of the various shows sometimes crossed to the other programs, which was logistically easy since they were all actually shot in Hollywood on the Warner Bros. lot.Currently, there is only a mere engraving in the
sidewalk commemorating 77 Sunset Strip between La Cienega
& Alta Loma
Road and the area is slated for re-development as part of
"The Sunset
Millennium" Project. In a twist of fate, the opposition to the
redevelopment of the area is known as "Save Our Strip" or "SOS" and
is spear-headed by former 77 Sunset Strip semi-regular
Gigi Verone. There is no number 77 on the Strip, as all Sunset
Boulevard addresses in the area have four digits.
Episode list
See List of 77 Sunset Strip episodesNotes
External links
- 77 Sunset Strip at Thrilling Detective
- 77 Sunset Strip at TV.com
- 77 Sunset Strip at TVparty.com
- 77 Sunset Strip at AmericanLife TV Network website
- Roy Huggins' Archive of American Television Interview
kookie in German: 77 Sunset
Strip