Pavan
01-15-2004, 02:18 PM
"NYPD BLUE" RETURNS TO THE ABC TELEVISION NETWORK SCHEDULE TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10
"NYPD Blue," ABC's long-running, critically acclaimed police drama, will return to the ABC Television Network lineup on TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10 (10:00-11:00 p.m., ET). It had been previously announced that the series would return in the February sweep.
In the premiere episode, entitled "You Da Bomb," a man (guest star William Francis McGuire) who's been kidnapped and has had a bomb attached to his body cuffs himself to Detective McDowell (Charlotte Ross), threatening to blow everyone up, and Jennifer Devlin (guest star Chandra West) wants to break up with Detective Clark (Mark-Paul Gosselaar).
The series stars Dennis Franz as Detective Andy Sipowicz, Henry Simmons as Detective Baldwin Jones, Gordon Clapp as Detective John Medavoy, Bill Brochtrup as John Irvin, Garcelle Beauvais-Nilon as A.D.A. Valerie Haywood, Charlotte Ross as Detective Connie McDowell, Esai Morales as Lt. Tony Rodriguez, Mark-Paul Gosselaar as Detective John Clark, Jacqueline Obradors as Detective Rita Ortiz and Austin Majors as Theo Sipowicz.
Guest-starring are Chandra West as Jennifer Devlin, William Francis McGuire as Brad Cutshall, Mark Ivanir as Ilya Antropov, Richard Kline as Barry Driscoll, Andre Marcellous as desk sergeant, Ray La Tulipe as Josh Astrachan, Ray Proscia as Dan Markov, Allan Rich as Vasiliy Choushkin, Brooke Bloom as Katie Driscoll, Jane Lynch as Susanna Howe, Gina Morelli as Teresa, Brandon Keener as Tim Semple, Mark Bennington as Lowell, Joseph La Rocca as uniform captain, Joe Sabatino as uniform no. 2, Bob Jesser as bomb squad tech and Amanda Rose as Carrie Cutshall.
"You Da Bomb" story is by Bill Clark, Matt Olmstead and Nicholas Wootton, with teleplay by Matt Olmstead and Nicholas Wootton. The episode is directed by John Hyams.
"NYPD Blue" is a Steven Bochco Production, co-created by Steven Bochco and David Milch. Bochco also serves as executive producer with Mark Tinker and former New York City police detective Bill Clark. The series is broadcast in 720 Progressive (720P), ABC's selected HDTV format, with 5.1-channel surround sound.
"NYPD Blue," ABC's long-running, critically acclaimed police drama, will return to the ABC Television Network lineup on TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10 (10:00-11:00 p.m., ET). It had been previously announced that the series would return in the February sweep.
In the premiere episode, entitled "You Da Bomb," a man (guest star William Francis McGuire) who's been kidnapped and has had a bomb attached to his body cuffs himself to Detective McDowell (Charlotte Ross), threatening to blow everyone up, and Jennifer Devlin (guest star Chandra West) wants to break up with Detective Clark (Mark-Paul Gosselaar).
The series stars Dennis Franz as Detective Andy Sipowicz, Henry Simmons as Detective Baldwin Jones, Gordon Clapp as Detective John Medavoy, Bill Brochtrup as John Irvin, Garcelle Beauvais-Nilon as A.D.A. Valerie Haywood, Charlotte Ross as Detective Connie McDowell, Esai Morales as Lt. Tony Rodriguez, Mark-Paul Gosselaar as Detective John Clark, Jacqueline Obradors as Detective Rita Ortiz and Austin Majors as Theo Sipowicz.
Guest-starring are Chandra West as Jennifer Devlin, William Francis McGuire as Brad Cutshall, Mark Ivanir as Ilya Antropov, Richard Kline as Barry Driscoll, Andre Marcellous as desk sergeant, Ray La Tulipe as Josh Astrachan, Ray Proscia as Dan Markov, Allan Rich as Vasiliy Choushkin, Brooke Bloom as Katie Driscoll, Jane Lynch as Susanna Howe, Gina Morelli as Teresa, Brandon Keener as Tim Semple, Mark Bennington as Lowell, Joseph La Rocca as uniform captain, Joe Sabatino as uniform no. 2, Bob Jesser as bomb squad tech and Amanda Rose as Carrie Cutshall.
"You Da Bomb" story is by Bill Clark, Matt Olmstead and Nicholas Wootton, with teleplay by Matt Olmstead and Nicholas Wootton. The episode is directed by John Hyams.
"NYPD Blue" is a Steven Bochco Production, co-created by Steven Bochco and David Milch. Bochco also serves as executive producer with Mark Tinker and former New York City police detective Bill Clark. The series is broadcast in 720 Progressive (720P), ABC's selected HDTV format, with 5.1-channel surround sound.