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Lou Grant

  • Série télévisée
  • 1977–1982
  • TV-PG
  • 1h
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,3/10
2,7 k
MA NOTE
Lou Grant (1977)
The trials of a former television station manager, turned newspaper city editor, and his journalist staff.
Liretrailer0:26
1 vidéo
99+ photos
CriminalitéDrame

Les procès d'un ancien directeur de chaîne de télévision, devenu rédacteur en chef de la ville, et de son équipe de journalistes.Les procès d'un ancien directeur de chaîne de télévision, devenu rédacteur en chef de la ville, et de son équipe de journalistes.Les procès d'un ancien directeur de chaîne de télévision, devenu rédacteur en chef de la ville, et de son équipe de journalistes.

  • Création originale
    • James L. Brooks
    • Allan Burns
    • Gene Reynolds
  • Vedettes
    • Edward Asner
    • Robert Walden
    • Mason Adams
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,3/10
    2,7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Création originale
      • James L. Brooks
      • Allan Burns
      • Gene Reynolds
    • Vedettes
      • Edward Asner
      • Robert Walden
      • Mason Adams
    • 17Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 2Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • A remporté 13 prix Primetime Emmy
      • 28 victoires et 73 nominations au total

    Épisodes114

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux cotés

    Vidéos1

    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 0:26
    Teaser Trailer

    Photos103

    Voir l’affiche
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    + 96
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    Distribution principale99+

    Modifier
    Edward Asner
    Edward Asner
    • Lou Grant
    • 1977–1982
    Robert Walden
    Robert Walden
    • Joe Rossi
    • 1977–1982
    Mason Adams
    Mason Adams
    • Charlie Hume
    • 1977–1982
    Jack Bannon
    Jack Bannon
    • Art Donovan
    • 1977–1982
    Daryl Anderson
    Daryl Anderson
    • Dennis "Animal" Price…
    • 1977–1982
    Nancy Marchand
    Nancy Marchand
    • Mrs. Pynchon
    • 1977–1982
    Linda Kelsey
    Linda Kelsey
    • Billie Newman
    • 1977–1982
    Allen Williams
    Allen Williams
    • Adam Wilson…
    • 1977–1982
    Michael Irving
    • Jayson
    • 1977–1981
    Laurence Haddon
    Laurence Haddon
    • Foreign Editor…
    • 1977–1981
    Emilio Delgado
    Emilio Delgado
    • Rubin Castillo…
    • 1979–1982
    Barbara Jane Edelman
    • Linda…
    • 1978–1982
    Sidney Clute
    Sidney Clute
    • National Editor…
    • 1978–1981
    Ivan Bonar
    Ivan Bonar
    • Foreign Editor…
    • 1977–1982
    Charles Bracy
    • Leon…
    • 1977–1982
    Robert Rothwell
    Robert Rothwell
    • Man #2…
    • 1977–1982
    Peggy McCay
    Peggy McCay
    • Marian Hume
    • 1978–1982
    Ray Oliver
    • Wayne Burroughs…
    • 1977–1981
    • Création originale
      • James L. Brooks
      • Allan Burns
      • Gene Reynolds
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs17

    7,32.6K
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    10

    Avis en vedette

    10DA-4

    What it was & where it stands

    An earlier reviewer's "bleeding heart" references suggest a right-wing orientation. Perhaps this explains his sweeping but unsubstantiated comments concerning how this show's episodes were developed. "Lou Grant" was created by James L. Brooks and Allan Burns, the writer-producers behind "Mary Tyler Moore," and Gene Reynolds, the force behind the TV incarnation of "M*A*S*H," who became the sole Executive Producer in the second year. Younger producers under Reynolds included Seth Freeman from "The Waltons" and Gary David Goldberg. However convenient it may be for people with an agenda to think otherwise the producers, not the star, dictated the content. There's no evidence Edward Asner ever suggested a single storyline, and plenty of testimony crediting others.

    The entire MTM library was sold several times after Grant Tinker divested himself in order to run NBC. The likelihood of ever again seeing this fine show, which won 16 Emmys, two Humanitas prizes, and the Peabody Award, is absolutely zilch. Write to 20th Century Fox Television if you'd like the chance to see it, but don't expect to get anywhere.
    rcj5365

    30 years ago.....One of the greatest dramatic shows of the 1970's "Lou Grant" made television history

    In the final episode of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show"(CBS-TV:1970-1977),when everyone but idiotic anchorman Ted Baxter was fired from station WJM-TV in Minneapolis in 1977,Mary Richards and her fellow casualties were left reeling. It was a bittersweet finale for the beloved series after seven seasons. Then Mary's old crusty boss,station news director Lou Grant,made a smooth transition. Within weeks,he had blown Minneapolis and snagged a good job in Los Angeles as the city editor of The Tribune. That's right:Lou Grant went from the glamour and glitz of TV news(such as it was at bumbling WJM) to embrace print journalism. At The Tribune,the formerly comic Lou(still played by Edward Asner)got serious about news. What resulted was "Lou Grant," a superlative drama series that became one of the greatest dramatic shows ever to embrace the mid-1970's. This was a grand series that arrived in the blazing afterglow of Watergate coverage and the rehealing from the aftermath of the Vietnam War. The bracing message of that era: Two dogged reporters(and a newspaper that backed them up)could change the world-and earn the public's adoration.

    Anti-press fulminations from the Nixon administration were largely nullified by scandals and disgrace in the White House. It was only later that an anti-media crusade took hold,drawing the battle lines between the press and the government,and breeding suspicion among much of the citizenry. It was later,as well,that newspapers were obliged to adapt to emerging,unimagined challenges:new media platforms,"citizen journalists",and information-dispersing gadgets with global reach that anyone could buy. The Trib reporters were spared these distractions and identity crises. For them,news still took the form of ink on paper,preferably with comics,crosswords puzzles,and horoscopes were part of the deal. The zeitgeist of "Lou Grant" was set forth in the clever opening sequence and this show celebrated it. Sure it may seem primitive that,in its first season,Trib reports were getting information and their sources with pencil and paper and banging out their stories on the typewriters. But "Lou Grant" was breaking ground from its debut on September 20,1977 producing 114 episodes for CBS-TV until the series finale on September 13,1982. Produced under Mary Tyler Moore's production company,MTM Productions.

    Reconfiguring a half-hour sitcom into a hour long drama was risky. The show dared to populate "Lou Grant" with a full-out ensemble cast which not only included Ed Asner,but also Robert Walden who played driven young investigate reporter Joe Rossi;Mason Adams as Managing Editor Charlie Hume;Linda Kelsey as reporter Billie Newman determined to make good in what was at the time a male-domination profession along with another ambitious young girl reporter Carla Mardigian portrayed by Rebecca Balding(who lasted one season). Also on board was the glorious Nancy Marchand(later,of course Tony's craven mother on "The Sopranos")was Mrs. Pynchon,who was the genteel owner of the Trib. Taking full advantage of its news-oriented setting,this was a brilliant series that dealt with issues ranging from nuclear accidents to religious freedom,media ethics and civil and social rights. This was a big-hearted series that won 13 Emmys,two Humanita Prizes and a Peabody award among many honors. This was drama-comedy hybrid that emerged from the series creators:James L. Brooks and Allan Burns(the writers-producers from "Mary Tyler Moore"),along with Gene Reynolds(who was not only the principal behind the TV incarnation of "M*A*S*H",but also was the producer of such shows as "Room 222"). This was a series that broke ground in the way television dramas are depicted and to this day it still holds the title some 30 years later.
    10DFClayton

    Lou Grant, timeless relevance

    Immigration reform, hate crimes against gay people, teen pregnancy, illiteracy, eminent domain, Ponzi schemes, etc. If I stop here and ask you to finish this, you might conclude with a summary about Bernie Madoff or other recent event.

    But these are just some of the many subjects shown weekly on Lou Grant from 1977 to 1982. The stories are over 30 years old but amazingly still every bit as relevant in today's society as they were then. And just as amazing was the incredible risk Mary Tyler Moore's MTM Enterprises took when she transitioned to producing a hard-hitting drama from 2 decades of comedy experience. After winning 3 Golden globes, 23 other awards, and 61 various nominations (IMDB 2012), the show has proved worth the risk in a big way.

    I didn't have the education or knowledge of world events (such as it is) to appreciate the show's content when it first aired. But I'm glad I rediscovered and watched these episodes while in a nostalgic mood. Now, I can greatly appreciate how progressive MTM and her staff were in the production of Lou Grant and its relevance to today's events.
    8jtola-24404

    Standard fora good show

    Great iconic actors, writing of the highest caliber. Just good TV!
    9Lejink

    Paper tiger

    Another great MTM studio production from the 70's taking the major risk of re-setting a familiar comedic character - the boozy, boorish TV editor Lou Grant as the central character in a 50 minute topical drama set in a major city news-room.

    Like its MTM comedy predecessors, likewise invariably named after one character "Lou Grant" of course isn't just about Lou, it's more about the interplay with an ensemble of strong, supporting characters. Better yet, the plot-lines were literate and credible slices of real life, often centring on corruption in high places, with the leg-work being done by the two bright young reporters Joe Rossi, played by Robert Walden and Billie, played by Linda Kelsey. Also in support are beatnik photographer Animal, presumably named after one of the Muppets, the style-conscious sub-editor Art Donovan and at the top end of the paper, its matriarch publisher Mrs Pynchon and her right hand man, Charlie Hulme. Edward Asner in the title role did a fine job re-inventing himself as the pugnacious but principled title character. The whole programme could have failed if his character had failed its transition but this was never in doubt right from the first episode I've recently re-watched.

    The plots invariably involved some sort of moral dilemma for one of the characters, not unnaturally given the post-Watergate interest in newspapers and their role in exposing dirty deeds done in high places. Critics might argue against the show's occasional bleeding-heart liberalism, but I remember it just as high quality US drama and staying up till well after 11 o'clock to watch it in the days before video recorders.

    In its wake came other MTM hit series like "Hill Street Blues" and "St Elsewhere" but I think I enjoyed this series even better than those. Bad fashion sense aside and even conceding the much lesser role that newspapers play in news dissemination today, I don't think this show has aged much at all, a testimony to good writing and good acting all round.

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    Drame

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Mrs. Pynchon, the widowed owner of the fictional Los Angeles Tribune, was based on Katherine Graham, the real widowed owner of the Washington Post, and on Dorothy "Dolly" Schiff, owner and publisher of the New York Post. For example, Schiff always carried her little dog with her, as Mrs. Pynchon does.
    • Citations

      Billie Newman: I hate it when people tell me to calm down!

    • Connexions
      Featured in The 30th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1978)

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    • How many seasons does Lou Grant have?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 20 septembre 1977 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Gazeteciler
    • Lieux de tournage
      • The Title Guarantee & Trust Building, 411 West 5th Street, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Los Angeles Tribune Building)
    • société de production
      • MTM Enterprises
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 4:3

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