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For all its deft balancing of slum tensions and ethnic sensibilities, Hill Street Blues is most endearing for its raucous wit, used not to leaven but to spice the mix. Consider, for example, the Patton-jawed Lieut. Howard Hunter (James B. Sikking), who sees the ghetto as one more Vietnamese village to destroy, and is forever taking a SWAT at the enemythose "sawed-off Hispanics," "Third World mutants," "geeks with the wild hair." One week, Howard tried to recruit Officer Lucy Bates (Betty Thomas), who is shy, sharp-faced and, by her lights, feloniously tall. Though the macho cracker Andy Renko (Charles Haid) tells her she has "a rare understanding of the male hormonal imperative," Lucy frets that her blind dates won't measure: "Do you have any boots with Cuban heels?"
Part of the Hill Street kick comes from watching good writers and actors get away with this sort of thing on the prude tube. But Bochco and Kozoll, cop-show veterans who were persuaded in 1979 by then NBC President Fred Silverman to try the genre one more time, won unusually free rein. "We demanded total artistic freedomand got it," recalls Bochco. In network television, total artistic freedom means that if you threaten to hold your breath till your face turns blue, maybe you can insinuate some sizzling badinage between Phil and the lickerish Grace Gardner (Barbara Babcock). "There's a wonderful madness to writing this show," says Kozoll. "With 13 major characters and so much going on, you can drag anything in." As a decade of R-rated movies has shown, freedom does not guarantee quality. Talent and ambition, pumping at high octane, can achieve it.
"Recently," says Director Butler, "we were sitting here wondering, 'Where did we go right?' " No one goes right in prime time without a 30% share of the viewing audience, and right now Hill Street hangs precariously in the mid-20s. "What's wrong with 12 million viewers?" asks Daniel J. Travanti, who as Captain Frank Furillo runs the station house with high ideals and good sense. Veronica Hamel, who plays Furillo's elegant girlfriend, Joyce, accuses NBC of having played "Russian roulette" with the program by scheduling it in five different time slots within its first three months. "My family couldn't find it and there were times when I couldn't find it," Hamel says. "I don't think the Nielsen families ever found it."
Ironically, Silverman's successor as NBC chairman is Grant Tinker, the former head of MTM. Tinker is expected to leave decisions on the future of Hill Street to NBC Entertainment President Brandon Tartikoff, who promises that "NBC will stay with the show. It is a loss leader that attracts certain viewers back to network TV." Bochco would rather attract the regular TV audience. But he is pessimistic:
"The vast number of viewers go to the television as a medicine cabinet. They need something to shut them down. But we grab the viewer by the throat and say, 'You can't be passive.' " Perhaps the exposure of Hill Street Blues on the Emmy show will persuade the mass audience that it might enjoy being a little less careful out there in TV land. By Richard Corliss.
Reported by Martha Smilgis/Los Angeles
