| 1. | Quincy, M.E.: Season 1 | 1976 |
| 2. | Quincy, M.E.: Season 2 | 1977 |
| 3. | Quincy, M.E.: Season 3 | 1977 |
| 4. | Quincy, M.E.: Season 4 | 1978 |
| 5. | Quincy, M.E.: Season 5 | 1979 |
| 6. | Quincy, M.E.: Season 6 | 1980 |
| 7. | Quincy, M.E.: Season 7 | 1981 |
| 8. | Quincy, M.E.: Season 8 | 1982 |
Quincy, M.E.
Quincy, M.E, a man who must have been a nightmare to work with! Quincy was a crusading Medical Examiner in Los Angeles, an expert at his job he was always capable of finding something that everyone else missed. A small clue that would go against all the rest of the evidence in a case and would lead to him arguing with his boss, Asten, and/or the investigating detective, nearly always Monahan. Quincy started of as a straight forward crime series with a difference, it was a M.E. investigating not a police officer or private eye.As the series went from strength to strength the writers, probably with a little push from Klugman, started bringing in stories about social injustice rather than criminal. Most of the time this worked, in fact it is sometimes interesting to see that some of the things highlighted still have not changed even now! Sometimes it came over a little preachy but the show can never be faulted for trying to enlighten the eyes of its viewers.
Finally getting to spend a bit of leave time with his latest flame, Barbara, Quincy heads off away from Los Angeles. They nearly get run off the road and then witness an accident.
After a racing car accident proves fatal for a former Grand Prix driver, Quincy's autopsy brands the crash a possible homicide.
Quincy's powers of persuasion are put to the test when he crusades for a 7-year old boys re-evaluation as an autistic child.
A patient dies just hours after having had a successful surgical operation. An 'Affirmative Action' doctor is suspended because of his 'mistake' .
A fire in a small motel room causes the death of the single woman occupying it. The evidence shows that the identity of the woman is Jessica Ross, the country's top newswoman.
Quincy is gravely wounded at the scene of a crime, so it is up to Sam, Asten and Lt. Monaghan to solve the case he was working on and catch the person who shot him.
An apparent murder victim becomes the object of Quincy's thorough investigation and identification when his mother and sister insist that he is still alive.
Quincy's latest lady friend moves into a new apartment and accidentally discovers two mummified bodies.
After four nights of continuous rain a man finds a body by his car. Once Quincy has completed the autopsy he announces that the man died of typhoid, an extremely infectious disease.
The M.E.'s office is helping a hospital with their organ donation program. Quincy goes there to help declare a young man dead and he was told that his kidney would go to a man whose constantly having dialysis.
Quincy investigates the death of a young man at a home for people who have committed a crime but are considered mentally incapable and are therefore not sentenced to proper prison.
A roundup of prostitutes follows the death of an athlete who contracted a drug-resistant strain of gonorrhea.
Quincy delves into the world of cosmetic surgery after he autopsies a woman who killed herself because she hated the scars a botched operation caused.
The son of a friend of Quincy's dies of a seizure due to a massive drug overdose. Quincy and the boy's father are determined to find out who prescribed the drugs and why the boy was unable to get help.
Quincy continues in his quest to get close down Dr. Colella's surgery and stop him from continuing to issue prescriptions for drug addicts.
A large passenger jet crash-lands 40 miles outside LA. Quincy and Sam are sent out to start the identification of the bodies and to make sure that the crash scene is kept intact.
Monaghan asks Quincy to push the autopsy of a young car thief to the top of his priority list. The boys' friend is claiming that a police officer chased him down and killed him after they were stopped in their stolen car.
A teenage girl dies after an abortion, and Quincy learns from her boyfriend that the doctor who performed on her may have been drunk. Quincy finds it hard to hold him accountable when everyone around him so willing to cover up for him.
Quincy and Sam have to stay late, going over work that was completed by a Medical Examiner who, it turned out, wasn't qualified for the job.
A Marine recruit's death may have been the result of a drill sergeant's vendetta.
Quincy discovers a construction worker died due to pollution in the ground under his home.
A retired magician's assistant dies performing his mentor's best illusion.
An ailing woman's accidental death outrages Quincy when he discovers that she had been seeing a holistic doctor and had been treated with natural medicines rather than scientific ones.
|
Jack Klugman | Dr. R. Quincy / M.E. |
|
Robert Ito | Sam Fujiyama |
|
John S. Ragin | Dr. Robert Asten |
|
Joseph Roman | Sgt. Brill |
|
Garry Walberg | Lt. Frank Monahan |
|
Val Bisoglio | Danny Tovo |
|
John Nolan | Bartender |
|
Marc Scott Taylor | Mark |
|
Eddie Garrett | Ed |
|
Karen Philipp | Robin Rollin |
|
James A. Watson Jr. | District Attorney |
|
Peter Virgo | Pet |
|
Charles Leland | Chuck |
|
Frances Lee McCain | Dr. Barrie Stoddard |
|
Don Stark | Henessey |
|
Morgan Paull | Defense Attorney |
|
Michael Constantine | Brock Campbell |
|
William Prince | Prosecutor |
|
Raymond St. Jacques | Dr. Charles Martin |
|
Floyd Levine | Major Levy |
|
A Martinez | Marty Herrera |
|
Dimitra Arliss | Dr. Kershner |
|
Allan Miller | Capt. Harry Collier |
|
Charles Aidman | Dr. Mason Colella |
|
Danny Mora | Jose |
| Nr Discs | 1 |
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