Dan Tanna
Created by Michael
Mann
Television's
slick Vegas private eye DAN TANNA tools around town in
his flashy 1957 T-Bird, complete with .44 Magnum and phone, and
has an office in the Desert Inn Casino and Hotel, owned by Philip
Roth. But he did work for all the casinos, and seemed to know
everyone, including the ton of celebrities that wandered through
this show, playing themselves. Tanna wore jeans, was properly
tough, and got into a lot of cases involving beautiful women.
He has two secretaries, a smart one, Beatrice, and a dumb one,
Angie. And he can count on the help of his two Vietnam buddies,
Harlon Two Leaf and Costigan, as well as the occasional aid from
sergeant Bella Archer of the Vegas cops. Greg Morris (Mission
Impossible) had a recurring role as a rather nasty cop with a
grudge against Tanna.
Tanna makes it clear he is not a bodyguard nor does he do divorces. Mostly, it seems, he rescued damsels (always knock-outs) in distress. Intentionally or not, it was as slick and soulless as the town in which it was set. And even though the show was popular, it was the beginning of the end for television private eyes. Subsequent shows seemed unable or unwilling to break the formula that this one nailed down. Every possible cliche was used, from the handsome, glib, jeans-clad eye with the sports coat, the cool car, the ditzy secretary to the cool location, the beautiful clients, the war buddies, etc., etc.
Instead of well-written scripts, or good acting, the show contented itself with style. Alas, this style was in the form of Vegas-type glamour: guest stars and celebrities playing themselves, playing bit roles or appearing in cameos. It was the most star-studded TV private eye show in history, with appearances by such schmaltzy Vegas "stars" types such as Morey Amsterdam, Shelley Fabares, Shelly Berman, Sid Caesar, Cesar Romero, Doc Severinson, Muhammad Ali, Lola Falana, Minnesota Fats, Dean Martin, Barbi Benton, Shelley Winters, Wayne Newton, the Captain and Tennille, Rodney Allen Rippy and even Bert Cohen, the president of Desert Inn, appearing as himself. I mean, really! Dean Martin? Lola Falana? The Captain and Friggin' Tennille? Gimme a break!
And a few years later, Robert Urich did it all over again as SPENSER, a show that tried a bit harder, but only ended up as a more pretentious version of Vega$, albeit without any appearances from Lola or Dino. Again it was Urich's charisma more than anything that kept the show going.
Series creator Michael Mann went on to create the equally shallow (but better looking) Miami Vice, and the excellent and aptly-titled Crime Story, and to direct Daniel Day Lewis as proto-private eye Natty "Hawkeye" Bumpo in Last of the Mohicians.
TRIVIA
UNDER OATH
TELEVISION
VEGA$
- 1st season)..Buy the DVD
- "Centerfold" (September 20, 1978)
- "The Games Girls Play" September 27, 1978)
- "Mother Mishkin" (October 11, 1978)
- "Love, Laugh Or Die" (October18, 1978)
- "Yes, My Darling Daughter" (October 25, 1978)
- "Lady Ice" (November 1, 1978)
- "Milliken's Stash" (November 8, 1978)
- "The Pageant" (November 15, 1978)
- "Lost Women" (November 22, 1978)
- "Second Stanza" (December 6, 1978)
- "Serve, Volley And Kill" (December 20, 1978)
- "Yours Truly, Jack The Ripper" (January 10, 1979; AKA "Ghost Of The Ripper")
- "The Eleventh Event" (January 17, 1979; AKA "The Eleventh Planet")
- "Kill Dan Tanna" (January 24, 1979)
- "Death Mountain" (January 31, 1979)
- "Best Friends" (February 7, 1979)
- "Demand And Supply" (February 14, 1979)
- "Everything I Touch" (February 28, 1979)
- "Doubtful Target" (March 7, 1979)
- "Touch Of Death" (March 14, 1979)
- "The Way To Live" (May 2, 1979)
- "The Visitor" (May 9, 1979; AKA "An Eastern Princess")
.- 2nd season
- "Red Handed" (September 19, 1979)
- "The Usurper" (September 26, 1979)
- "Mixed Blessings" (October 3, 1979)
- "Runaway" (October 24, 1979)
- "Design For Death" (Or Designs) (October 31, 1979)
- "Shadow On A Star" (November 14, 1979)
- "Dan Tanna Is Dead" (November 21, 1979)
- "Macho Murders" (November 28, 1979)
- "Classic Connections" (December 19, 1979)
- "Night Of 1000 Eyes" (January 2, 1980; AKA "Private Eye Connection")
- "Lost Monday" (January 9, 1980)
- "Comeback" (January 16, 1980; AKA "Casualty Of War")
- "All Kinds Of Love" (January 23, 1980)
- "Magic Sister Slayings" (January 30, 1980)
- "The Lido Girls" (February 6, 1980)
- "Consortium" (February 27, 1980)
- "The Hunter Hunted" (March 5, 1980)
- "The Man Who Was Twice" (March 12, 1980)
- "Golden Gate Cop Killer" (March 19, 1980; 2-hour episode; AKA "Ladies In Blue')
- "Siege Of The Desert Inn" (April 30, 1980)
- "Vendetta" (May 7, 1980)
- "The Day The Gambling Stopped" (June 18, 1980)
.- 3rd season
- "Aloha, You're Dead" (November 5, 1980, 2-hour episode)
- "Black Cat Killer" (November 11, 1980)
- "Sudden Death" (November 19, 1980)
- "Love Affair" (November 26, 1980)
- "A Deadly Victim" (December 3, 1980)
- "Deadly Blessings" (December 10, 1980)
- "Christmas Story" (December 17, 1980)
- "The Andreas Addiction" (December 24, 1980)
- "Time Bomb" (January 9, 1981)
- "Sourdough Suite" (January 14, 1981)
- "Murder By Mirrors" (January 21, 1981)
- "Backlash" (February 18, 1981)
- "Heist" (February 25, 1981)
- "No Way To Treat A Victim" (March 4, 1981)
- "Nightmare Come True" (March 11, 1981)
- "Out Of Sight" (March 15, 1981)
- "Set Up" (March 25, 1981)
- "The Killing" (April 15, 1981)
- "Seek And Destroy" (April 22, 1981)
- "Dead Ringer" (April 29, 1981)
- "French Twist" (March 6, 1981)
- "Judgement Pronounced" (May 27, 1981)
NOVELIZATIONS
Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.
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