| 1. | Barney Miller: Season 1 | 1974 |
| 2. | Barney Miller: Season 2 | 1975 |
| 3. | Barney Miller: Season 3 | 1976 |
| 4. | Barney Miller: Season 4 | 1977 |
| 5. | Barney Miller: Season 5 | 1978 |
| 6. | Barney Miller: Season 6 | 1979 |
| 7. | Barney Miller: Season 7 | 1980 |
| 8. | Barney Miller: Season 8 | 1981 |
Barney Miller
Barney Miller is the kind of cop we'd all like to run into. He is always sensible. He maintains order over a squad room of detectives who gamble for a hobby, get hit on by anything in skirts, go to renaissance philosophy conventions for fun, and would really prefer to be writing. Nearly all of the action takes place in the squad room where the citizens and criminals are brought in to complicate the mix.
Lieutenant Scanlon investigates an anonymous letter that identifies a member of the precinct as a homosexual. An angry shopper destroys to an elevator's MUZAK machine.
A prisoner claims to be Jesus Christ. A drug dealer is caught with a large stash. An elderly mugger poses as a photographer to entice lonely women.
The detectives are preoccupied with Barney's posted vacation schedules. A string of false alarms suggests that a sniper may be after a cop. A man won't donate a kidney to his ailing brother.
A monk suffers a transgression with a prostitute. Dietrich may not be ideal for mugging detail, especially if in drag.
Harris objects to the fact that the Burmese chauffeur being arrested for a traffic accident is actually an indentured servant.
A bookstore owner is angry when a strip club opens near his store. A man is convinced that he is on the verge of spontaneous combustion.
The clerk that sold Wojo a sick bird changes his strict no-return policy when he learns that the detective is a police officer. A suicide hot line operator becomes suicidal. Harris's book publication is interrupted when Dietrich refuses to sign a release.
A former master criminal becomes incoherent following his lobotomy. A victim is unable to use the telephone to report being mugged because he's Amish.
A judge overrules an attorney by hitting him on the head with a gavel. A woman reports crimes that actually happen on soap operas.
The squad searches for a viral strain stolen from a lab. A woman is convinced that her husband is really a clone.
A detective goes undercover to trap a dentist with instruments that seem to go missing. One man's hands are a nuisance to others and a musical instrument to himself.
Weary apartment dwellers band together to catch a burglar. A census taker takes drastic measures to count an unco-operative target.
Harris poses as a vagrant to go undercover to solve a string of crimes, and then he disappears. A woman wants Wojo or Dietrich to make a baby with her.
Harris disappears while going undercover as a vagrant. Luger chooses to be demoted rather than to retire.
Marty's friend Mr. Driscoll tries to reclaim his son by kidnapping him from a playground. A self-proclaimed time traveler advises Harris to adjust his stock portfolio.
A rash of unusual robberies leads to an eccentric gun collector. A man who is trying to recover his television set robs the police vault. Wojo fears that a depressed Luger is planning to commit suicide.
The staff serves the annual department-mandated ritual day in uniform, except Harris who wears his customary high-end clothes.
Dietrich is arrested for participating in an anti-nuclear rally. A lottery winner dispenses of his prize money by throwing it out a window. Barney discovers he can't afford his apartment now that it is being converted into a condominium.
Harris is assigned to book Dietrich, whose arrest earns a visit from Internal Affairs. A nuclear engineer is arrested for splashing participants with atomic water.
An architect decides to blow up his own building.
An inventor steals the plans for his own invention. The squad tries hypnosis to uncover the name of a criminal that Wojo can't remember.
Barney is discouraged at being passed over yet again for promotion to the rank of deputy inspector.
|
Ron Glass | Det. Ron Harris |
|
Max Gail | Det. Stan 'Wojo' Wojciehowicz |
|
Ron Carey | Officer Carl Levitt |
|
Steve Landesberg | Det. Sgt. Arthur Dietrich |
|
Hal Linden | Capt. Barney Miller |
|
James Gregory | Inspector Frank Luger |
|
George Murdock | Lt. Ben Scanlon |
|
Norman Bartold | Jack Corwin |
|
Allan Miller | Nelson Haskell |
|
John Dullaghan | Ray Brewer |
|
Leonard Frey | Alfred Royce |
|
Kay Medford | Lila Wakeman |
|
Elaine Giftos | Laura Kiergo |
|
Dino Natali | Officer Zatelli |
|
James Cromwell | Neil Spencer |
|
David Paymer | Felix Morrissey |
|
Arthur Malet | Henry Creighton |
|
Jeff Corey | Caleb Webber |
|
David Clennon | Howard Speer |
|
Richard Libertini | Adam Boyer |
|
Jenny O'Hara | Sgt. Holly Scofield |
|
Kenneth Tigar | Jesus Christ |
|
Bruce Kirby | Frank Rossman |
|
Peter Jurasik | George Alsop |
|
Stefan Gierasch | Dr. Joseph Burlson |
| Director | Noam Pitlik |
|
| Writer | Frank Dungan, Jeff Stein, Danny Arnold, Theodore J. Flicker, Tony Sheehan, Rich Reinhart, Jim Tisdale, Calvin Kelly, Jaie Brashar, Judith Anne Nielsen, Richard Beban, Mark Brull, Wally Dalton, Shelley Zellman, Bob Colleary | |
| Producer | Danny Arnold, Noam Pitlik, Gary Shaw, Tony Sheehan, Roland Kibbee | |
| Musician | Jack Elliott, Allyn Ferguson | |
| Photography | George Spiro Dibie | |
| Nr Discs | 1 |
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