| 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.
The department restructures precincts into specialty squads. Luger gets the 12th assigned as a homicide squad. A man murders his barber. A woman hires a hit man to kill her husband and then changes her mind.
Barney's frustration boils over when the new homicide-only edict results in the death of an old friend. Dietrich tracks down the hitman's intended target. Harris woos the precinct's crime photographer.
A drunk and disorderly man turns out to be a delegate from the 1976 Democratic convention. Barney discovers that the newly assigned Officer Nash is not really a police officer.
The precinct's newest detective is convinced that his colleagues are on the take and asks not to be included.
Wojo takes a personal interest in a fellow vet whose crime spree may be related to Agent Orange exposure during the Vietnam War. A domestic dispute occurs at the Brauer household when their apartment building becomes "clothing optional."
The precinct is besieged by a large group of prostitutes. Dorsey develops a protective stance with a young one. Harris receives stock tips from another. Dietrich is tempted by all of them as he experiments with celibacy.
Dietrich feels guilty and resigns when he shoots a felon. A playwright assaults an incompetent actor.
The detectives are edgy because someone is sending specific information about them to Internal Affairs. Harris sets up a reunion between an elderly cat burglar and his wife who reported him missing years ago.
Harris is assigned to direct a pornographic movie for an investigation. An former-generation radio news reporter assaults a young television anchor.
Audience members at the screening of Harris' over-budget film include a blind mugging victim and an overeager charity collector.
A mugger claims he was following a psychic vision. A language professor vandalizes a grammatically incorrect billboard.
Barney anxiously waits for news about Wojo who chased a looter into the Hudson River. A deaf woman is arrested for prostitution.
A gypsy has an incredibly compelling motive for harassing the owner of a novelty store. A librarian takes extreme measures to enforce quiet among her patrons.
Wojo asks Barney's daughter out on a date. A sporting goods store owner takes the law in his own hands. Arnold Ripner sues Harris over the lawyer's portrayal in the detective's novel.
Barney is charged with contempt of court when he refuses to name an informant. A restaurant may have refused to serve a man because of his appearance.
While Barney spends the night in jail for contempt of court, Harris supervises the squad room.
An expensive doll is abducted for ransom. A man claims he was swindled out of a ticket on the space shuttle. Luger names Barney as a beneficiary in his will.
A woman threatens to blow up the squad room with a homemade bomb. The jury reaches a verdict in Harris's libel suit. Retired Detective Phil Fish drops in for a visit.
Luger turns a small disturbance with the Hassidic community into a full-blown riot. The squad discovers a survivalist couple setting up their housekeeping in the sewer (steam tunnels)
The detectives object to wearing their new bulletproof vests. Luger interviews the detectives in case of the need for an obituary.
The officers arrest a rainmaker, only to discover that he was hired by the drought-ridden city. Wojo, Harris, and Dietrich each consider applying for a job opening in vice.
Harris is forced to liquidate his possessions to pay the judgment in Arnold Ripner's lawsuit.
|
Ron Glass | Det. Ron Harris |
|
Max Gail | Det. Stan 'Wojo' Wojciehowicz |
|
Ron Carey | Officer Carl Levitt |
|
Steve Landesberg | Det. Sgt. Arthur Dietrich |
|
Hal Linden | Barney Miller |
|
James Gregory | Inspector Frank Luger |
|
Paul Lieber | Det. Sgt. Eric Dorsey |
|
William Windom | Cellmate |
|
Jack Murdock | Officer Perelli |
|
Allyn Ann McLerie | Harriet Shulton |
|
Harold J. Stone | Steven Haddad |
|
Jack Dodson | Henry St. Martin |
|
John Dullaghan | Ray Brewer |
|
J.J. Barry | Arthur Duncan |
|
Tricia O'Neil | Alex Kramer |
|
Jack Somack | Mr. Cotterman |
|
Maggie Brown | Lt. Melinda Holly / Salvation Army |
|
James Cromwell | Jason Parrish |
|
Jeffrey Tambor | William Klein |
|
Robert Costanzo | Ed Foronjy |
|
Larry Hankin | Earl Kelso |
|
Arthur Malet | Malcolm Gower |
|
Doris Roberts | Harriet Brauer |
|
J. Pat O'Malley | Walter Dooley |
|
Abe Vigoda | Det. Phil Fish |
| Director | Noam Pitlik |
|
| Homer Powell |
|
|
| Writer | Frank Dungan, Jeff Stein, Danny Arnold, Theodore J. Flicker, Tony Sheehan, Jeff Stein, Nat Mauldin, Jordan Moffet, Lee H. Grant, Greg Giangregorio, Jim Tisdale, Paul Robinson Hunter | |
| Producer | Danny Arnold, Roland Kibbee, Noam Pitlik, Gary Shaw, Tony Sheehan | |
| Musician | Jack Elliott, Allyn Ferguson | |
| Photography | George Spiro Dibie | |
| Nr Discs | 1 |
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