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  1. Murphy Brown
    TV-PG1988 · Sitcom · 11 seasons

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  1. Episode Guide

    • 1. Respect
      1. Respect Nov 14, 1988
      • A TV journalist's professional success contrasts her personal failings.
      • Novice Corky finds a corporate Wunderkind is a drug smuggler.
    • 3. Nowhere to Run
      3. Nowhere to Run Nov 28, 1988
      • Murphy investigates a federal prosecutor linked to mob-run prostitution.
  2. The following is a list of episodes for the American television sitcom Murphy Brown. The series premiered on November 14, 1988, on CBS , and ended on May 18, 1998. A total of 260 episodes have aired, most recently airing its eleventh season.

    No. Overall
    No. In Season
    Title
    Written By
    1
    1
    "Respect"
    Diane English
    2
    2
    "Devil with a Blue Dress On"
    Korby Siamis
    3
    3
    "Nowhere to Run"
    Russ Woody
    4
    4
    "Signed, Sealed, Delivered"
    Diane English
  3. The Thrill of the Hunt: Directed by Barnet Kellman. With Candice Bergen, Pat Corley, Faith Ford, Charles Kimbrough. Peter is shot while covering a story in Sarajevo and returns stateside. Murphy and Peter confront their feelings and despite the difficulties of their professions, decide to begin a relationship.

    • (59)
    • Comedy
    • Barnet Kellman
    • 1994-01-10
  4. After spending months at the Betty Ford Center, TV reporter Murphy Brown tries to re-enter her life. The task is complicated by the addition to her show of a former Miss America as co-reporter, and a new Executive Producer who's half her age.

  5. Sep 20, 1993 · Episode 1. The More Things Change. Mon, Sep 20, 1993 30 mins. FYIers are unsettled when they get a new reporter (Scott Bakula), a hot-shot foreign correspondent. Kentilworth: Edward Conery....

    • Overview
    • Biography
    • Trivia
    • External links

    Scott Stewart Bakula (born October 9, 1954) is an American actor, director and producer who recently played as Peter Hunt in Murphy Brown. He is best known for his roles in the sci-fi television series Star Trek: Enterprise and Quantum Leap. He currently portrayed as Dwayne Pride on NCIS: New Orleans.

    Bakula moved to New York City in 1976, where he made his Broadway debut playing baseball legend Joe DiMaggio in Marilyn: An American Fable, and appeared in the well-received Off-Broadway production Three Guys Naked from the Waist Down; he would later appear in its Pasadena Playhouse production. The success of Three Guys Off-Broadway brought him attention, and when his next show, the musical Nightclub Confidential, which co-starred his wife Krista Neumann, moved to Los Angeles, he moved there at the urging of his California agent, Maggie Henderson, and his New York agent, Jerry Hogan.

    He was cast in two short-lived series: Gung Ho and Eisenhower & Lutz. During a Hollywood writers' strike, he returned to New York to star in Romance/Romance, and then afterward landed the lead role opposite co-star Dean Stockwell in the science fiction television series Quantum Leap (1989-1993). Bakula played time traveler Dr. Sam Beckett, who was trapped by a malfunction of his time machine to correct things gone wrong in the past. His performance in the show earned him a Golden Globe Award (along with three nominations) and four Emmy Award nominations for Best Actor, as well as five consecutive Viewers for Quality Television Awards for Best Actor in a Quality Drama Series.

    In 1995, Bakula appeared on the cover of Playgirl. He voiced Danny Cat in the animated film Cats Don't Dance (1997), singing in one number with Natalie Cole. He played the aging veteran pitcher Gus Cantrell in Major League: Back to the Minors (1998), the final movie in the Major League trilogy. He also played Jim Olmeyer, the same-sex partner of Sam Robards' Jim Berkley, in the film American Beauty (1999).

    As Jonathan Archer on Star Trek: Enterprise, Bakula played the captain of Earth's first long-range interstellar ship. In 2006, he reprised the role of Archer for the Star Trek: Legacy PC and Xbox 360 video games as a voice-over.

    Bakula starred in the musical Shenandoah, a play which also provided his first professional theatrical role in 1976, at Ford's Theatre, in 2006. Bakula is heard singing "Pig Island" on Sandra Boynton's children's CD Philadelphia Chickens, which is labeled as being "For all ages except 43." Scott Bakula said that he might be starring as Sam in a Quantum Leap film as stated in TV Guide Magazine along with Dean Stockwell. At Comic Con 2010, he announced that a script was being worked on and that while he would be in the movie, he would not have the main role.

    Bakula performed various songs from his career for a one-night-only performance entitled An Evening with Scott Bakula at Sidney Harman Hall on January 18, 2008, as a benefit for the restoration of the historic Ford's Theater. Bakula had three appearances in 2008. He appeared as Atty. Jack Ross in an episode of Boston Legal, "Glow in the Dark", which aired on February 12, 2008 on the ABC network. From March 4 – April 20, he starred as Tony Hunter in the world premiere of Dancing in the Dark at The Old Globe in San Diego, California. Dancing in the Dark is based on the movie The Band Wagon (1953), which starred Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse. Bakula appeared as the character Chris Fulbright in the five-episode run of the Tracey Ullman sketch comedy series State of the Union on Showtime.

    •He is recently dated to Chelsea Field before they were married in 2009.

    •He has four children including Chelsy (b. 1984), Cody (adopted, b. 1991), Wil (b. 1995) and Owen (b. 1999).

    •Scott Bakula on NCIS: New Orleans Fandom

  6. The More Things Change. Murphy asks Miles to cut back her hours and assignments, but then takes a dislike to Peter Hunt, the reporter hired to fill in. She fuels the outrage by the other correspondents, to the annoyance of Miles.

  7. The Thrill of the Hunt (TV Episode) Details. Full Cast and Crew; Release Dates; Official Sites; Company Credits; Filming & Production; Technical Specs

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