Ultimajock said:...Chad Everett was a solid performer on Medical Center. (I assume he also was good on Surfside 6, tho I've never seen that series.) I seem to recall that he, like other Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer television stars (Michael Parks of Then Came Bronson for ex) tried his hand at pop music singing for M-G-M's record label, with middling results at best. Unfortunately, there was also the incident on a 1972 Dick Cavett Show when Everett said something so inherently chauvinist that it led fellow guest Lily Tomlin to walk out of the show in a fit of righteous indignation...
KML-224 said:We had him and Sherman Hemsley (The Jeffersons) die on the same day. If they come in threes, can we count astronaut Sally Ride? She died early in the week at age 61, after a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer.![]()
...the Los Angeles Times obit said he started out in a small role on Surfside 6, and I took that to suggest it was at least a recurring role, from their phrasing. As I said, I never saw the show, so I don't know if it was a one-timer or recurring. I do recall he was in the 11th episode of Branded, playing both the first Confederate soldier Jason McCord killed in battle at Fredericksburg, and the soldier's younger brother who McCord encounters 20 years later...bpatrick said:I don't recall Chad Everett being a regular on "Surfside 6" (but then again,
I always associate that show with Troy Donahue)
...CBS ran Medical Center for its last three seasons, ending in September 1976, at 10:00/9:00 Monday nights. From October 1982 to December 1987, and then from April to June 1988, that same time slot was used by CBS to air Cagney & Lacey, co-starring James Daly's daughter Tyne...BTW, Bill Paley, who always seemed to distrust young leading characters, insisted that
there be an older doctor on "Medical Center"; James Daly got that part.
Wright County Guy said:Sorry if this is off-topic, but when was "Medical Center" last seen in syndication?