Setting
The series takes place in San Francisco, California, with parts of Los Angeles used as a stand-in for filming. However, no mention of San Francisco was made past the pilot episode and none of the city's landmarks are seen throughout the series, though the city name can be read on the police department building sign. The San Francisco newspaper used at the beginning of the pilot episode was censored during the show's initial broadcast, as the city wanted nothing to do with the series. Subsequent episodes showed newspapers that had no city name.Episodes
Cast and characters
Main
* David Rasche as Inspector Sledge Hammer: The titular character of the series, he is stubborn, sexist, and reactionary (all of this by his own admission), but also a serious and respectful detective from the San Francisco Police Department. Hammer's most prized possession is his Smith & Wesson Model 29 .44 Magnum with a customized grip, featuring an engraving of a sledgehammer. Hammer sleeps and showers with his gun (which has its own satin pillow), and even talks to it, referring to it as his "amigo." He believes in shooting and asking questions . Unlike other comic crime fighters, Hammer is a blunderbuss that is effective and even capable of humanity on rare occasions. Spencer chose Rasche, since he was someone who was not already known as a comedian, but "someone that could make you believe that this man really was having a relationship with his gun". * Anne-Marie Martin as Detective Dori Doreau: A sensitive, intelligent, and sophisticated police detective, she becomes Hammer's partner. In an interview with The A.V. Club, Spencer said he needed someone that the "audience would look up to, and adore, and like. And she was the validation for Sledge Hammer because Anne-Marie is such a wonderful actress—appealing person, sexy, with authority, and strong. And if she likes Sledge Hammer, that means he’s okay, so she was kind of the insurance on screen. No matter what he was doing, as long as she liked him, believed in him, and was his partner, he was going to be okay". In season 2, Spencer was asked to develop her relationship more with Hammer as with ABC's flagship '' Moonlighting'' but he preferred to have it be more like in '' Get Smart''. * Harrison Page as Captain Trunk: Hammer and Doreau's supervisor, he is regularly driven into fits of rage by Hammer's inconsiderate and brash attitude. Spencer related Page's portrayal to Louis Gossett's character in '' An Officer and a Gentlemen'' with regards to his yelling, and also Herbert Lom's character Inspector Dreyfus in ''Recurring
* Leslie Morris as Officer Fletcher Majoy: desk sergeant at the precinct. * Patti Tippo as Officer Daley: another officer at the precinct who is sometimes a gal pal to Doreau. * Kurt Paul as Norman Blates: the precinct's medical examiner, he specializes in the sudden deceased at crime scenes. According to executive producer Alan Spencer, the character is an homage to Norman Bates, the character from '' Alfred Hitchcock's ''Psycho''.'' * Diane Sainte-Marie as Lisa Ellerblub: a local news anchorwoman (a play on Linda Ellerbee), she is usually on the receiving end of Hammer's chauvinistic insults.Guest appearances
Some notable figures who made guest appearances on ''Sledge Hammer!'': * Adam Ant ("Icebreaker") * Lewis Arquette ("Witless") * Bill Bixby ("Hammer Hits the Rock") – Bixby also directed a number of episodes * Mark Blankfield ("State of Sledge", "Comrade Hammer", and "The Secret of My Excess") * Bud Cort ("Last of the Red Hot Vampires") * Bill Dana ("Haven't Gun, Will Travel") * John Densmore ("State of Sledge") * Michael Des Barres ("Sledgepoo") * Sarah Douglas ("Play It Again, Sledge") * Norman Fell ("They Call Me Mr. Trunk") * Conchata Ferrell ("Jagged Sledge") * Dennis Fimple ("They Shoot Hammers, Don't They?" and "If I Had a Little Hammer") * Kurt Fuller ("Hammer Hits the Rock") * Sid Haig ("Hammeroid") * Mark Holton ("The Secret of My Excess") * Clint Howard ("State of Sledge") * Brion James ("If I Had a Little Hammer" and "Model Dearest") * Davy Jones ("Sledge, Rattle & Roll") * Bernie Kopell ("Last of the Red Hot Vampires") * Dan Lauria ("A Clockwork Hammer") * Robin Leach ("The Spa Who Loved Me") * Beverly Leech ("Wild About Hammer" and "A Clockwork Hammer") * Lance LeGault ("The Spa Who Loved Me") * David Leisure ("Hammer Hits the Rock" and "Magnum Farce") * Peter Marshall ("To Live and Die on TV") * Richard Moll ("Hammeroid") * Ronnie Schell ("Hammer Gets Nailed") * Armin Shimerman ("Hammeroid") * Don Stark ("Under the Gun" and "Sledgepoo") * Brenda Strong ("Miss of the Spider Woman") * John Vernon ("Under the Gun" – parodying his role in the first ''Dirty Harry'' film) * Ray Walston ("Big Nazi on Campus") * Patrick Wayne ("Brother Can You Spare a Crime") * Duane Whitaker ("Hammer Gets Nailed") * Mary Woronov ("The Spa Who Loved Me") Actor and director Jackie Cooper directed a few episodes including "Witless", "All Shook Up" and the first-season finale, "The Spa Who Loved Me".Production history
Inspired byIntro and theme music
The introduction to the show features long, near sensual closeup shots of Hammer's .44 Magnum as it rests on a luxurious satin pillow. The show's ominous theme music, composed by Danny Elfman, plays in the background. Hammer then picks up his gun, spins it expertly like a cinematic Old West gunslinger, and utters his catch phrase ("Trust me, I know what I'm doing") just before firing into the screen, making a hole in it. According to the DVD release extras, the original version had Hammer firing at the viewer, but ABC executives feared this could be too shocking, possibly even causing heart attacks (and leaving the network liable). Thus, Hammer fires into the screen at a slight angle. According to the DVD release, Hammer's original catchphrase was "I'm crazy, but I know what I'm doing." ABC executives objected to a lead character being "crazy", so they insisted on a change. Spencer remarked that "it wound up working just as well and is probably funnier, because then he’s not self-aware". The DVD release uses an updated heavy metal version of the theme music by Baboon Rising on the main menus.Ratings and second season
Despite critical acclaim and garnering high ratings in a special time slot just for the debut, ''Sledge Hammer!'' struggled in the ratings partly due to being repeatedly bounced around ABC's fall schedule. During the same season ''Sledge Hammer!'' made its debut, ABC scheduled a high-profile comeback vehicle for a then 75-year-old Lucille Ball entitled '' Life with Lucy'' that was not well received by critics or audiences. After only eight episodes aired, Ball's show was canceled and ''Sledge Hammer!'' was given her timeslot. ''Sledge Hammer!'' attracted weekly viewership of nineteen million viewers who followed the show religiously through its many time slot shifts. The fact that the series appealed to key target demographics also kept it on the schedule. Because ABC intended to cancel the series, the last episode of the first season ends with Hammer accidentally destroying the city when he attempts to disarm a stolen nuclear warhead. This episode received much better than expected ratings, in large part because the network had moved the show to a better time slot. ABC changed its mind and renewed the show for a second season. The second-season premiere perfunctorily explained that it and following episodes were set "five years before" the explosion, though Doreau is Sledge's partner in the second season, despite being introduced to him in the pilot, and despite the presence of references to contemporary events, rather than those of five years earlier. The second season suffered from another extremely undesirable time slot (this time against '' The Cosby Show''), a reduced budget, and lowered filming standard (they went from 35 mm in season 1 to 16mm film in season 2). The cutbacks contributed to the show not being renewed for a third season.Home media
Anchor Bay Entertainment released the entire series on DVD in Region 1. The first season of ''Sledge Hammer!'' was released on DVD on July 27, 2004. The laugh track, which the network had insisted on including on the pilot and first 12 episodes, is removed on the DVD version. For this Spencer in part sourced copies of the episodes from collectors in the UK who had recorded the episodes where they aired without the laugh track and hired an experienced sound designer. These collectors are thanked on these DVDs. The DVD features a documentary on the series featuring interviews by Spencer, David Rasche, Anne-Marie Martin and Harrison Page. The DVD also includes an unaired version of the pilot that runs several minutes longer and has a different ending and theme music. AnAwards
''Sledge Hammer!'' was nominated for a 1987 People's Choice Award in the category of "Favorite New TV Comedy."Comics
New World's then-subsidiarySee also
* '' Police Squad!'', a similar American TV series from the 1980s that spawned the '' Naked Gun'' film series * '' Angie Tribeca'', a similar American TV series that satirizes American procedurals * '' A Touch of Cloth'', a similar British comedy (2012–2014)References
External links