Neha Patil (Editor)

Mr. Dugan

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Created by
  
Norman Lear

Country of origin
  
United States

Number of episodes
  
3 (Never aired)

Director
  
Jeff Bleckner

Executive producer
  
Norman Lear

Directed by
  
Jeff Bleckner

Original language(s)
  
English

Program creator
  
Norman Lear

Genre
  
Sitcom

Written by
  
Rod Parker Charles Hauck

Starring
  
Cleavon Little Barbara Rhoades Nedra Volz Dennis Burkley Sarina Grant

Cast
  
Cleavon Little, Dennis Burkley, Nedra Volz

Similar
  
Maude, 704 Hauser, A Year at the Top, The Nancy Walker Show, All's Fair

Mr. Dugan is an American sitcom about a black Congressman that was scheduled to air in March 1979 on CBS, but was pulled at the last minute and never shown.

History

In early 1978, producer Norman Lear felt his long-running comedy Maude was getting stale, so he decided to enliven things by moving the show to Washington, D.C. and making the title character a Congresswoman. After two episodes in this new setting, star Beatrice Arthur decided not to continue, and the show abruptly left the air. Lear, however, still believed in the concept, and filmed a new pilot titled Onward and Upward, with essentially the same script and cast—except with John Amos (as a black former pro football star running for the United States Congress) replacing Arthur. Creative differences between Amos (who had co-starred in Lear's Good Times) and the producers led to Amos bowing out; the show was renamed Mr. Dooley and finally Mr. Dugan. Cleavon Little (best known as the sheriff in the classic movie comedy Blazing Saddles) was hired as the title character, a fledgling black Congressman. The supporting cast remained the same.

Mr. Dugan had been scheduled for a March 11, 1979 premiere, and was heavily promoted by its network, CBS. A special screening for black members of Congress led to much criticism from those in attendance. Lear subsequently pulled the plug on Mr. Dugan, saying "we have not yet totally fulfilled our intention for the series."

The series was eventually reworked into the short-lived series, Hanging In, which aired on CBS in the summer of 1979.

References

Mr. Dugan Wikipedia