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McCoy
Genre Drama
Written by Dean Hargrove
Roland Kibbee
Directed by Nicholas Colasanto
Richard Quine
Starring Tony Curtis
Roscoe Lee Browne
Lucille Meredith
Composer Dick DeBenedictis
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes5 (including a pilot film)
Production
ProducerRoland Kibbee
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time90 mins.
Production company Universal TV
Original release
Network NBC
ReleaseOctober 5, 1975 (1975-10-05) –
January 25, 1976 (1976-01-25)
Related
NBC Sunday Mystery Movie

McCoy is an American comedy-drama series that starred Tony Curtis and aired on NBC-TV during the 1975–1976 season.

Synopsis

The series stars Tony Curtis as a con man who, along with a team of friends, "out-cons" bad guys in order to steal back their ill-gotten gains and return the loot to its rightful owners. The schemes were elaborate and laced with satirical humor. The series bears resemblances to the then-recent film The Sting, as well as to the contemporary series Switch and the British literary character Simon Templar.[ original research?] Co-starring with Curtis was Roscoe Lee Browne as a nightclub comedian.

Episodes

Title Directed by: Written by: Air date
1"The Big Ripoff" Richard Quine Dean Hargrove,
Roland Kibbee
March 11, 1975 (1975-03-11)
Series pilot: McCoy schemes to retrieve the ransom money that was paid for an oil tycoon's wife.
2"Bless the Big Fish" Nicholas ColasantoPhilip ChapinOctober 5, 1975 (1975-10-05)
A crafty financial adviser cheats Papa Leone out of $450,000, and Leone tries to commit suicide as a result; McCoy intervenes with a plan to recover the money.
3"Double Take"Richard QuineDean Hargrove,
Roland Kibbee,
Howard Leeds
November 30, 1975 (1975-11-30)
4"In Again Out Again" Stan DragotiUnknownJanuary 4, 1976 (1976-01-04)
J. Carter Sloan takes advantage of dying Bob Mayfield by forcing him to make a $200,000 life insurance contract, which affects Bob's sister's interests.
5"New Dollar Day"Nicholas ColasantoUnknownJanuary 25, 1976 (1976-01-25)

Production and reception

The series was produced in the format of two-hour telefilms, that were broadcast as part of the NBC Sunday Mystery Movie as one of several rotating series that would air once a month. Other series involved in the Universal Television franchise package were Columbo, McCloud, and McMillan & Wife. However, McCoy failed to garner the same ratings as its fellow programs and was cancelled after an initial 90-minute pilot TV movie ("The Big Ripoff") and four two-hour episodes were broadcast. A novelization of the pilot, written by Linda Stewart as "Sam Stewart", titled for the series, was published by Dell in 1976, and reprinted as McCoy: The Big Rip-Off, under W.H. Allen's Star imprint in the United Kingdom.

See also

Leverage

External links