Police Woman

1974
Police Woman

Seasons & Episodes

  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 0

EP1 Do You Still Beat Your Wife? Oct 25, 1977

Undercover cop Pepper Anderson and partner Bill Crowley aid a battered wife who refuses to press charges against her brutal husband.

EP2 Guns Nov 01, 1977

Pepper sets herself up as a target by offering Congressional testimony against an international gun-running operation.

EP3 Means to an End Nov 08, 1977

Pepper infiltrates a college drug ring to learn who is supplying cheap but lethal downers to students.

EP4 The Inside Connection Nov 22, 1977

Pepper poses as a prisoner to find the killer of a rookie policewoman who was investigation a drug operation in the women's county jail.

EP5 Screams Dec 06, 1977

A demented rapist-murderer is preying on hitchhikers.

EP6 The Buttercup Killer Dec 13, 1977

A killer attired in a nun's habit is slaying members of a Greek family, leaving only a dried buttercup as a clue.

EP7 Merry Christmas, Waldo Dec 14, 1977

An elderly Santa Claus robs banks using trickery, to assure his indigent friends a merry Christmas.

EP8 Death Game Dec 21, 1977

Pepper is driven to the brink of a nervous collapse by an unidentified assailant threatening her life.

EP9 Ambition Dec 28, 1977

An overzealous detective becomes implicated in an extortion scam.

EP10 Blind Terror Jan 04, 1978

It is a case of mistaken identity when criminals kidnap Pepper, thinking she is the wife of an accountant who uncovered payoffs from a criminal syndicate.

EP11 Tigress Jan 11, 1978

Pepper resents her assignment to protect an unscrupulous former classmate who is now a political candidate.

EP12 Sunset Jan 18, 1978

In the midst of the investigation into the death of a race car driver, Crowley and his dying ex-wife seek reconciliation.

EP13 The Young and the Fair Jan 25, 1978

A local professor may be involved with a white slavery racket, so Pepper goes undercover as a college student.

EP14 The Human Rights of Tiki Kim Feb 01, 1978

A young girl from Korea is abducted and held to prevent her from talking about the murder she witnessed.

EP15 Sixth Sense Feb 08, 1978

Crowley discovers a woman near death in a car trunk, but the driver — her assailant — is freed on a technicality.

EP16 Sons Feb 15, 1978

A rookie cop is beaten and a man tells the police what he knows about it, only to have his son murdered.

EP17 Murder with Pretty People Feb 22, 1978

A model agency owner, who was not a popular person to begin with, is murdered, sending Pepper undercover as a fashion model to find the killer.

EP18 Battered Teachers Mar 01, 1978

Teachers are being terrorized at a high school by local area hoods, so Pepper goes back to school to go after them.

EP19 A Shadow on the Sea Mar 08, 1978

Pepper, a waterfront cop and an old sea dog go after two boat hijackers who murdered a honeymooning couple and seem willing to steal and kill more to set up a smuggling operation.

EP20 Sweet Kathleen Mar 15, 1978

A woman tells Crowley a story of how she knew the details about a robbery but was forced to keep those facts to herself or face the consequences.

EP21 Flip of a Coin Mar 23, 1978

Styles's wife is facing surgery and he's having trouble concentrating on a kidnapping case.

EP22 Good Old Uncle Ben Mar 30, 1978

An old friend of Pepper's gets drawn into a cattle stealing scheme.
6.6| 0h30m| TV-PG| en| More Info
Released: 13 September 1974 Ended
Producted By: Columbia Pictures Television
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Sergeant “Pepper"” Anderson, an undercover cop for the Criminal Conspiracy Unit of the Los Angeles Police Department, poses undercover from mob girl to prostitute.

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Columbia Pictures Television

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Reviews

TV TimesUSA This started a movement in TV crime shows where females weren't just the passive victims of male dominated fantasy crimes. This lady hit back. And what a punch she packed. An action packed series that introduced us to some great supporting characters and kept mums as well as dads on the edge of their seat. Angie Dickinson never camped it up (as much as you couldn't in the 1970's) It was as gritty as the execs would allow. Despite the pilot episode being called Police Story - it was obvious from the outset who the star of the show was.In its prime I had reached the grand old age of 10 - whereby this was the first adult TV series I was allowed to stay up and watch. Thanks Mom & Dad
BrownEyedAngel_712 In the Summer of 1975, not so long ago, this was the NUMBER ONE show on television, and was the TOP SHOW in many of the countries around the world in which it aired.How many people know this? Today, almost nobody... Younger audiences haven't even seen it, or, in many cases, haven't even heard of it, or know it's success essentially inspired the advent of "Charlies Angels". (It was also TV's first successful drama series to feature a woman in the title role). When "Police Woman" premiered in fall 1974 it was, admittedly, a quite different show than it would end up four seasons later. Angie Dickinson was the slinky undercover cop, sexy but tough-- convincing on both fronts-- and the show was produced (in the beginning) with the very obvious idea in mind of doing something "good" and distinctive, while tossing in a dash of T&A in their for "kick".Like with any show, in the very early episodes the series is trying to find it's identity, but by the last half of the first season, the show had taken on almost a cinematic sense of bigness that was REALLY working-- the show (at least for the standards of the day) had begun to feel like a movie, full of gravity and portend, decidedly not just another cop show and not just an undercover-hooker formula thing (although they didn't shy away from that). No wonder the show was, briefly, at the top of ratings at this time-- or in the summer reruns immediately following.But the feminists, Goddess bless 'em, put a lot of pressure on the network about "Police Woman", unhappy with the go-go dancer assignments and the "oooo-ain't-she-sexy!" dialogue that sometimes permeated the program. They wanted the character de-sexualized... Perhaps one can understand their point about that, but all they seemed to see was Angie in spandex and fishnets, and some of their demands were rather odd (prior to the second season, they even demanded that "Pepper" only be shot by female assailants in the future.... Huh?!?!?... Since 99% of most gun violence is perpetrated by guys, this seemed a tad strange). In any event, as sophisticated and intelligent as "Police Woman" was becoming by the end of it's first year, it didn't really need the "sex-crutch" anymore anyway, yet excess caution was taken with the second year to "reign in" Angie's natural effervescent demeanor. Curiously, what turned-out happening was that the energy was sucked out of the star and the show very quickly, her character weakened considerably... and yet, the hooker assignments continued.What?? Now we had the reverse of what should have happened.Within 6 months "Police Woman" went from Number One in the Nielsen Ratings to, maybe, Number 30 (an unwise timeslot change didn't help). In fact, NBC kept moving the show so much one wondered if it was one of those 'let's-try-and-lose-it' type of corporate decisions.Suffice it to say, the show never really recovered. Angie's confidence seemed surgically removed after the first year, and the scripts and direction followed suit; only about half the episodes from seasons 2 and 3 had enough energy and focus to really work, and even then there's a constant feeling of the program "holding back" --- or holding-back Angie. And season 4, the series' final, was largely a misfire... And in SUCH contrast to the dynamic, volatile first season--- well, it's like a completely different program.And ever since a brief rerun period after it's initial network run, the show has been utterly buried--- like it never even existed!
isisdawonder I am a huge Angie Dickinson fan. I was very young when Police Woman aired on NBC but I remember bits and pieces of it. I always thought Pepper was just tops. She had FAR more ability than the Angels did...IMO the Angels got made too easily...I have season one on DVD and I love every episode. I know that the quality of the show went down after s1...thanks to politics and idiotic big bosses...BUT...I've seen some eps of the later seasons and EVEN THOUGH Pepper was tamer than in season one...there are still scenes in these eps where Pepper shines...in fact it seems that the most important dialogue in said eps come from Pepper....so let's not dismiss the other seasons because the quality is not as good as the first season.Like someone else said...Police Woman covered MANY topics that were deemed risqué' or just weren't covered at that time in television. In the episode Bloody Nose, the subject is the battered husband...something we didn't hear about back then...and is REALLY just now getting news. And then I had forgotten the one with the battered wife that moves into Pepper's apartment complex.And I like the observation someone else wrote about the little things like Pepper's condo and I would add her wardrobe...both something you'd see someone with her salary living in and wearing.It really is a shame that this show doesn't get the props it deserves. Yes, it was flawed in the later seasons...but it doesn't take away from the fact that it was a good show with good topics...and it didn't have to get all sleazy like TV has become today.I hope SONY gets the point and releases the rest of the seasons on dvdsets.
Noir-It-All After I graduated from college, had a job, I'd sit in my single-girl's apartment, watching this show about a single woman working. In 1977-1978, the network would show Policewoman, Kojak and another cop show after the late night news. Angie was right up there with the boys. That pretty much sums up her image. Pepper liked being one of the guys. The media focused on her sexy qualities, especially the first half of the first season, but Pepper really evolved into a great character. The topics were often ahead of their time. I remember one episode that began with Pepper and her boss watching that French dance act where the man slaps the woman around. Pepper didn't like it. Darned if a new neighbor in her apartment complex stops by, showing signs of being slapped around. Spousal abuse! This was before Farrah Fawcett starred in the TV movie, "The Burning Bed", the TV movie that brought this issue to the mainstream. In two other episodes, Pepper supported the wife or ex-wife of one of her coworkers diagnosed with cancer. The '70's were a decade when women ceased to hide their medical ailments, including disfiguring ones like breast cancer. These episodes showed that the Police Woman supported women as well as men. Back to Pepper's apartment, it was one a city employee could afford, unlike the spectacular, designer decorated living quarters one usually sees like in Will & Grace, Living Single, etc.