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- Season 1 overviewSep 17, 1972-Mar 25, 197324 episodesSeason 1 episodes1. Pilot Sep 17, 1972
- Hawkeye's Korean houseboy needs money for medical school.
- 2. To Market, to Market Sep 24, 1972
- Hawkeye and Trapper attempt to retrieve a supply of hydrocortisone stolen by black marketeers.
- 3. Requiem for a Lightweight Oct 1, 1972
- Trapper enters the intercamp boxing tournament.
- 4. Chief Surgeon Who? Oct 8, 1972
- Frank complains to Gen. Barker when Hawkeye is appointed chief surgeon at the 4077th.
- 5. The Moose Oct 15, 1972
- Hawkeye, Trapper and Spearchucker try to save a Korean girl from bondage to an American sergeant.
- 6. Yankee Doodle Doctor Oct 22, 1972
- The surgeons at the 4077th decide to "rewrite" an Army documentary spotlighting their unit.
- 7. Bananas, Crackers and Nuts Nov 5, 1972
- Hawkeye feigns insanity to prove he needs a leave.
- 8. Cowboy Nov 12, 1972
- Henry won't allow a wounded helicopter pilot to go home.
- 9. Henry, Please Come Home Nov 19, 1972
- When Henry Blake is transferred to Tokyo, Hawkeye launches a wild campaign to get him back.
- 10. I Hate a Mystery Nov 26, 1972
- Hawkeye turns sleuth to solve a rash of robberies in which he is the prime suspect.
- 11. Germ Warfare Dec 10, 1972
- After a transfusion using a pint of Frank's blood, Hawkeye suspects him of having hepatitis.
- 12. Dear Dad Dec 17, 1972
- Hawkeye writes to his father about Christmas at the camp.
- 13. Edwina Dec 24, 1972
- The nurses enlist Hawkeye to cheer up a lonely colleague.
- 14. Love Story Jan 7, 1973
- The surgeons try to improve jilted Radar's love life.
- 15. Tuttle Jan 14, 1973
- Trapper, Hawkeye and Radar invent an imaginary officer.
- 16. The Ringbanger Jan 21, 1973
- Hawkeye and Trapper plot to retire an overzealous colonel.
- 17. Sometimes You Hear the Bullet Jan 28, 1973
- Hawkeye deals with a friend's death and an underage GI.
- 18. Dear Dad ... Again Feb 4, 1973
- An excellent new doctor confesses he's an impostor.
- 19. The Longjohn Flap Feb 18, 1973
- Hawkeye's long johns make the rounds of the camp.
- 20. The Army-Navy Game Feb 25, 1973
- An unexploded bomb lands in the middle of the compound.
- 21. Sticky Wicket Mar 4, 1973
- Frank taunts Hawkeye when his patient's condition worsens.
- 22. Major Fred C. Dobbs Mar 11, 1973
- Hawkeye and Trapper try to prevent Frank's transfer.
- 23. Ceasefire Mar 18, 1973
- News spreads throughout the camp that a cease-fire is imminent.
- 24. Showtime Mar 25, 1973
- Traveling entertainers put on a show for the 4077th.
The episodes were produced by 20th Century Fox Television for the CBS network and aired from September 17, 1972, to February 28, 1983. [2] The series, which covered a three-year military conflict, spanned 255 episodes and a 2 hour finale over 11 seasons.
S1.E1 ∙ Pilot. Sun, Sep 17, 1972. The Swamp's Korean houseboy, Ho-Jon, is accepted to attend school at Hawkeye's alma mater. The camp raises money to send Ho-Jon to Maine by raffling a weekend in Tokyo with a nurse, much to the chagrin of Hot Lips and Burns. 7.8/10 (1.3K)
Radar is now a real, honest to goodness mail order graduate. But, Captain Casey, the new boy genius of their surgical team, is not really a doctor; Hawkeye's failure to throw the book at him causes Casey to reassess his career choices: and an R.C. priest named Schwartz is born.
M*A*S*H: Created by Larry Gelbart. With Alan Alda, Loretta Swit, Jamie Farr, William Christopher. The staff of an Army hospital in the Korean War find that laughter is the best way to deal with their situation.
- (65K)
- 1972-09-17
- Comedy, Drama, War
- 25
- Original Cast
- Cast Changes
- Episodes
The regular cast originally consisted of Alan Alda as Captain Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce and Wayne Rogers as John Francis Xavier "Trapper" McIntyre, two surgeons; McLean Stevenson as Lt. Colonel Henry Blake, a surgeon and the base commander; Loretta Swit as Major Margaret "Hot Lips" Houlihan, the head nurse; Larry Linville as Major Frank Bu...
Several changes were made in the cast line up during the 11-year run. Ugly John and Spearchucker were dropped after the first season, while Klinger and Father Mulcahy were retained and became permanent cast members in, respectively, the fourth and fifth seasons. Wayne Rogers and McLean Stevenson both left the series at the end of the third season a...
The columns "Ep. #" and "# in Series" refer to the sequence of episodes as first broadcast. The tables show the broadcast order by default. Click on the header for the column "Prod. Code" to resort the episodes according to the production sequence.
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M*A*S*H (an acronym for Mobile Army Surgical Hospital) is an American war comedy drama television series that aired on CBS from September 17, 1972, to February 28, 1983.