Quinn Martin Productions TV intros
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- Опубліковано 7 сер 2024
- Quinn Martin Television Series Produced by Quinn Martin (1922 - 1987):
00:00 The New Breed October 3, 1961 - June 5, 1962 ABC
00:10 The Fugitive September 17, 1963 - August 29, 1967 ABC
01:11 Twelve O'Clock High September 18, 1964- January 13, 1967 ABC
01:43 The F.B.I. September 19, 1965 - April 28, 1974 ABC
02:23 The Invaders January 10, 1967 - March 26, 1968 ABC
04:05 Dan August September 23, 1970 - April 8, 1971 ABC
05:11 Cannon September 14, 1971 - March 3, 1976 CBS
06:06 Banyon September 15, 1972 - January 12, 1973 NBC
07:09 The Streets of San Francisco September 16, 1972 - June 9, 1977 ABC
08:16 Barnaby Jones January 23, 1973 - April 3, 1980 CBS
09:05 The Manhunter September 11, 1974 - March 5, 1975 CBS
10:00 Caribe February 17, 1975 - May 12, 1975 ABC
10:50 Bert D'Angelo/Superstar February 21, 1976 - July 10, 1976 ABC
11:55 Most Wanted October 16, 1976 - August 20, 1977 ABC
13:08 Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected February 2, 1977 - August 24, 1977 NBC
14:11 The Runaways April 27, 1978 - September 4, 1979 NBC
15:02 A Man Called Sloane September 22, 1979 - December 22, 1979 NBC - Розваги
The Fugitive, The Invaders, and The Streets Of San Francisco were the first shows I saw that had me hooked on those iconic intros.
Quinn Martin was one of a kind! Always produced excellent programs!
THE BEST QM PROD I ENJOYED MOST ON TV KID⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Quinn Martin really loved major orchestra music with strong brass section for his shows intro's.
The Streets of SF had the greatest theme, composed by Patrick Williams!
these are great. thanks for posting them.
The irony of William Conrad doing the opening narration of The Fugitive,later on starring in Cannon with guest star..David Jansen The Fugitive!
This was pretty awesome thank you!!!
That voice over guy was sure kept busy!
HANK SIMMS.
I'm so used to Hank Simms listing the guest stars.
Quinn Martin Television Series Produced by Quinn Martin (1922 - 1987):
00:00 The New Breed October 3, 1961 - June 5, 1962 ABC
00:10 The Fugitive September 17, 1963 - August 29, 1967 ABC
01:11 Twelve O'Clock High September 18, 1964- January 13, 1967 ABC
01:43 The F.B.I. September 19, 1965 - April 28, 1974 ABC
02:23 The Invaders January 10, 1967 - March 26, 1968 ABC
04:05 Dan August September 23, 1970 - April 8, 1971 ABC
05:11 Cannon September 14, 1971 - March 3, 1976 CBS
06:06 Banyon September 15, 1972 - January 12, 1973 NBC
07:09 The Streets of San Francisco September 16, 1972 - June 9, 1977 ABC
08:16 Barnaby Jones January 23, 1973 - April 3, 1980 CBS
09:05 The Manhunter September 11, 1974 - March 5, 1975 CBS
10:00 Caribe February 17, 1975 - May 12, 1975 ABC
10:50 Bert D'Angelo/Superstar February 21, 1976 - July 10, 1976 ABC
11:55 Most Wanted October 16, 1976 - August 20, 1977 ABC
13:08 Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected February 2, 1977 - August 24, 1977 NBC
14:11 The Runaways April 27, 1978 - September 4, 1979 NBC
15:02 A Man Called Sloane September 22, 1979 - December 22, 1979 NBC
Just in case, I think that the Banyon open here was only used for the pilot movie, which may not have involved Quinn Martin. An example of the open as it appeared in the series (with the various QM touches) is at ua-cam.com/video/qGc3nYzKZyM/v-deo.html.
The only one remember watching was Cannon. The main star never ran anywhere after the criminals as he was so fat!
Seems like Bradford Dillman was in every show
10:50 was done in Italian. Italian title is Alla a Ricera di Julie. In English, it is what kind of a cop are you? Spin-off of The Streets of San Francisco episode "Superstar." The show unfortunately flopped.
most of them did
david janssen na época do fugitivo já parecia mais velho. ainda que usasse maquiagem .😶
@ 8:52 - Now that is a special guest star.
TV power broker
The announcer committed suicide 😢
No!
Yes. Look it up! Dick Wesson
Hank Simms usually announced the opening titles.
Even though Dick Wesson announced a few QM productions, he worked exclusively on 'THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF DISNEY"- and was associated with the Disney studio as far back as "DISNEYLAND" in 1954. Unfortunately, he was very ill towards the end of 1978, and decided to end it all in January 1979.