T.H.E. Cat

T.H.E. Cat
Genre Action drama
Created by Harry Julian Fink
Written by Ronald Austin
James D. Buchanan
Harry Julian Fink
Robert Hamner
Herman Miller
Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Jack Turley
Directed by Alan Crosland, Jr.
Paul Baxley
Don McDougall
Maurice Vaccarino
Boris Sagal
Starring Robert Loggia
Composer(s) Lalo Schifrin
Country of origin USA
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 26
Production
Producer(s) Boris Sagal
Running time 30 mins.
Production company(s) NBC Productions
Distributor NBC Universal Television Distribution
Release
Original network NBC
Original release September 16, 1966 – March 31, 1967

T.H.E. Cat is an American action drama that aired during the 1966–1967 television season on NBC.

The series was co-sponsored by R.J. Reynolds (Winston) and Lever Brothers and was created by Harry Julian Fink, the creator of Dirty Harry.

Robert Loggia starred as the title character, Thomas Hewitt Edward Cat. T.H.E. Cat is a forerunner of television characters such as The Equalizer, who skirt the edges of the law and bring skills from earlier careers on behalf of those needing more help than the police can offer.

The series preceded the 1968–1970 ABC television series It Takes a Thief, which was also about a cat burglar who used his skills for good.

Synopsis

"Out of the night comes a man who saves lives at the risk of his own. Once a circus performer, an aerialist who refused the net. Once a cat burglar, a master among jewel thieves. Now a professional bodyguard. Primitive... savage... in love with danger. The Cat!"

This was the intro of a series that was, for a variety of reasons, truly ahead of its time. It had a hero who was a reformed thief, having spent an unspecified term in prison,[1] and of Gypsy heritage. In the mold of famed private-eye Peter Gunn and the waterfront bar Mother's, Cat operated out of the Casa Del Gato (House Of The Cat) in San Francisco, of which he was part owner.

The show was dark and moody, fitting the character, and was one of the first to use martial arts in a realistic way. (The others were The Green Hornet, which premiered on ABC the same year, and the earlier 1960 syndicated series, The Case of the Dangerous Robin starring Rick Jason.) This was unknown on TV at that time and rarely seen even in films (an exception was The Manchurian Candidate, the first Hollywood movie to show martial arts in realistic fashion instead of the "judo chops" usually depicted). The series also featured a number of highly gifted guest stars and relied heavily on the film noir school to set the tone of the series.

Despite rumors to the contrary, Cat was not an assassin. Nor did he work for San Francisco P.D., although he was brought in on certain operations (such as the pilot episode) where a specialist was called for (his SFPD contact was Captain McAllister, played by R.G. Armstrong). In the October 7 episode "Brotherhood", Cat performed sniper duty during a hostage situation; this was long before S.W.A.T. teams were created. Cat carried a Walther PP automatic in .32 caliber and a balanced throwing knife strapped to his left forearm. He was lethal with both.

Casting

Series star Robert Loggia had previously played a character known as "the cat" in the 1958–1960 Walt Disney television series The Nine Lives of Elfego Baca, in which Loggia played Baca, an Old West Mexican-American lawman whose nickname was "the cat," a fact viewers were reminded of each week in the series' theme song.[2] The series ran for 26 episodes and was recut into a feature movie.

After T.H.E. Cat, Loggia, an actor with a long history of film and television credits, went on to star in a number of high-profile hit Hollywood films including the Tom Hanks hit film Big, the sci-fi film Independence Day, An Officer and a Gentleman, Scarface, and Sylvester Stallone's Over the Top. In 1985, Loggia was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of crusty private detective Sam Ransom in the thriller Jagged Edge, and had the starring role in another NBC series, Mancuso, FBI, for which he was nominated for an Emmy in 1989.

Episodes

Cast

Guest stars: Chris Alcaide, Barbara Stuart, Steve Ihnat, Robert Duvall, Laura Devon, Yvonne Romain, Sorrell Booke, Diana Muldaur

Custom car

Several times he drove a Chevrolet Corvette. It was a mid sixties convertible Stingray. It was customized with an bar that extends up and over back of the driver. It is not however a roll bar – there were two flaps on the top portion. When the headlights were rolled to the on position there were accents by each light that mimic a cat's eye shape. Its body was painted black.

References

  1. Gowran, Clay (October 31, 1966). "Plan More Kisses for Bone Busting Cat". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved September 4, 2016.
  2. "Elfago Baca". Legends: Outlaws & Lawmen. Boulder, Colorado USA: Active Interest Media, Inc. June 2013. Special edition of American Cowboy magazine. Page 28: "Walt Disney, the only producer of 1950s TV Westerns to focus on minority issues, powerfully told the full story of Baca's career in a ten-episode mini-series for ABC between 1958–1960, starring Robert Loggia. The title The Nine Lives of Elfago Baca, played off the hero's nickname 'El Gato,' the cat."
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