The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo

The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
Also known as Lobo
Genre
Created by Glen A. Larson
Directed by
Starring
Composers
Country of origin United States
Original language English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 38 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer Glen A. Larson
Producers
  • Richard M. Bluel
  • Joe Boston
  • Bill Dial
  • Frank Lupo
  • Richard Lindheim
  • Robert F. O'Neill
Running time 45–48 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Network NBC
Release September 18, 1979 –
May 5, 1981
Related
B. J. and the Bear

The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo is an American action comedy television series that ran on NBC from September 18, 1979, to May 5, 1981. For its second season the show was renamed Lobo. The program aired Tuesday nights, at 8:00 p.m. Eastern time. The lead character, Sheriff Elroy P. Lobo, played by Claude Akins, was a spin-off character from B. J. and the Bear, which also aired on NBC from 1979-1981.

Synopsis

In fictitious Orly County, Georgia, Sheriff Lobo is the lead enforcer of the law — as well as one of its leading offenders. The pilot of The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo aired as an episode of BJ and the Bear titled "Lobo", which set the premise for the show and introduced the main cast of characters that would be involved in the show.

The corrupt (but now somewhat reformed) sheriff is assisted in his schemes by Deputy Perkins (Mills Watson), whose buffoonery often upsets and exacerbates the situation. An honest but naive new deputy, Birdwell "Birdie" Hawkins (Brian Kerwin), who is unaware of Lobo's schemes, has joined the force and has become one of Lobo's deputies.

Birdie often refers to Lobo as his "Hero" and compares him to Wyatt Earp — "a little rough around the edges, but a good lawman." At first this baffles Lobo — to think that someone actually thinks highly of him in any way — but it begins to make Lobo feel proud and boosts his self-esteem. This always annoys and infuriates Deputy Perkins, who usually sneers at Birdie and mutters, "I'm gonna have to get that boy!"

Other characters in the show are Perkins' wife (and Lobo's sister) Rose Lobo Perkins (Cydney Crampton); waitress Margaret Ellen (Janet Lynn Curtis); resort owner Sarah Cumberland (Leann Hunley); bank president and Lobo's former "partner in crime" Harry Cunningham (Dennis Burkley); and district attorney Alexander Waverly (Ben Cooper).

The series premise was overhauled completely as Season 2 began in 1980. The governor of Georgia — impressed by Orly County's low crime rate (because Lobo forgot to send the crime data to the state capitol) — reassigns Lobo and Deputies Perkins and Birdie to his crime-fighting task force, the Special Crimes Action Team (SCAT) in Atlanta. Lobo now reports to Chief J.C. Carson (Nicolas Coster). Lobo is forced to contend with his new co-workers, Detectives Peaches (Amy Botwinick) and Brandy (Tara Buckman). The new format also included Nell Carter (billed as Nell Ruth Carter) as Sgt. Hildy Jones.

In a July 1980 interview with The New York Times, NBC president Fred Silverman said research showed the show performing well in rural areas but not as well in urban areas. Silverman had a history of preference for urban viewers over rural ones that dated all the way back to 1970. (See the rural purge for an example). For that reason, it had been decided to move the show from rural Orly County to urban Atlanta. But the series was less successful with the new format, and it was cancelled after the end of its second season.

The theme song for the show's first season was sung by Frankie Laine and was written in a western ballad style that depicted Lobo as more of a hero than an offender. During the second season, the theme song was a version of Georgia on My Mind.

Cast

Episodes

Season 1 (1979–80)

No.
overall
No. in
season
Title Directed by Written by Original air date
1 1 "The Day That Shark Ate Lobo" Dick Harwood S : Chris Bunch, Allan Cole & Glen A. Larson;
T : Glen A. Larson
September 18, 1979
2 2 "Dean Martin and the Moonshiners" James Sheldon S : Thomas E. Szollosi & Richard Christian;
S/T : Glen A. Larson & Frank Lupo
September 25, 1979
3 3 "The Panhandle Pussycats Come to Orly"
"The Big Game"
Charles R. Rondeau Harvey Bullock October 9, 1979
4 4 "Disco Fever Comes to Orly" Daniel Haller Richard H. Landau October 16, 1979
5 5 "The Mob Comes to Orly" Mel Ferber S : Chris Lucky;
T : Glen A. Larson & Michael Sloan
October 23, 1979
6
7
6
7
"Run for the Money: Part 2" Bruce Bilson S : Glen A. Larson & John Peyser;
T : Michael Sloan;
S/T : Sidney Ellis, Frank Lupo & Robert L. McCullough
November 6, 1979
Crossover story with B. J. and the Bear.
8 8 "Buttercup, Birdie and Buried Bucks" Daniel Haller Robert K. Baublitz November 27, 1979
9 9 "The Senator Votes Absentee" William P. D'Angelo Robert Wolterstorff & Paul M. Belous December 4, 1979
10 10 "The Boom Boom Lady" Daniel Haller Stephen Miller December 11, 1979
11 11 "First to Finish, Last to Show" Leslie H. Martinson Robert Wolterstorff & Paul M. Belous January 8, 1980
12 12 "Hail! Hail! the Gang's All Here" James Sheldon Stephen Miller January 15, 1980
13 13 "The Luck of the Irish" Leslie H. Martinson S : Thomas Joachim & Eugene Fournier;
S/T : Richard Bluel & Pat Fielder
January 22, 1980
14 14 "Double Take, Double Take" Daniel Haller Paul M. Belous & Robert Wolterstorff January 29, 1980
15 15 "Police Escort" James Sheldon S : Michael Russnow;
S/T : Robert E. Feinberg & Howard Liebling
February 5, 1980
16 16 "Who's the Sexiest Girl in the World?" Daniel Haller Glen A. Larson February 19, 1980
17 17 "The Martians Are Coming, the Martians Are Coming" James Sheldon S : Tom Chehak;
S/T : Stephen Miller
February 26, 1980
18 18 "The Treasure of Nature Beach" Daniel Haller Mark Jones March 5, 1980
19 19 "Birdie's Hot Wheels" James Sheldon Mark Fink March 11, 1980
20 20 "The Haunting of Orly Manor" Daniel Haller S : G.J. Young;
T : Mark Jones, Robert E. Feinberg & Howard Liebling
March 18, 1980
21 21 "Mystery on the Orly Express" Christian I. Nyby II Lloyd Turner March 25, 1980
22 22 "Orly's Hot Skates" Jack Arnold S : Richard Lindheim;
T : Robert E. Feinberg & Howard Liebling
May 6, 1980
23 23 "Perkins Bombs Out" Jack Arnold S : David Chase, Bruce Shelly & David Ketchum;
T : Mark Fink & Stephen Miller
May 13, 1980

Season 2 (1980–81)

No.
overall
No. in
season
Title Directed by Written by Original air date
24 1 "The Dirtiest Girls in Town" Corey Allen Glen A. Larson December 30, 1980
25 2 "The Girls with the Stolen Bodies" Dick Harwood S : Frank Lupo & Mark Jones;
T : Mark Jones
January 6, 1981
26 3 "The Fastest Women Around" Nicholas Colasanto S : Sy Salkowitz;
T : Bill Dial
January 20, 1981
27 4 "Macho Man" Gene Levitt Mark Jones & Glen A. Larson January 27, 1981
28 5 "Airsick: 1981" Bruce Kessler Frank Lupo February 3, 1981
29 6 "Coeds with Sticky Fingers" Dick Harwood Jeff Wilhelm February 10, 1981
30 7 "Sex and the Single Cop" Sidney Hayers Mark Jones February 17, 1981
31 8 "Another Day, Another Bomb" Dick Harwood Story by : Mark Jones & Glen A. Larson
Teleplay by : Mark Jones
February 24, 1981
32 9 "The French Follies Caper" Nicholas Colasanto Story by : Glen A. Larson & Lou Shaw
Teleplay by : Bill Dial
March 3, 1981
33 10 "Bang Bang, You're Dead" Sidney Hayers Jeffrey Scott March 24, 1981
34 11 "The Cowboy Connection" Harvey S. Laidman Cliff Ruby & Elana Lesser March 31, 1981
35 12 "What're Girls Like You Doing in a Bank Like This?" Dick Harwood Story by : Chris Bunch, Alan Cole & Mark Jones
Teleplay by : Mark Jones
April 7, 1981
36 13 "Lobo and the Pirates" Christian I. Nyby II Lou Shaw April 21, 1981
37 14 "The Roller Disco Karate Kaper" Sidney Hayers Frank Lupo & Mark Jones April 28, 1981
38 15 "Keep on Buckin'" Daniel Haller S : Warren Douglas, David Harmon, Frank Lupo, Lou Shaw & Mark Jones
T : Jeffrey Scott, Frank Lupo, Lou Shaw & Mark Jones
May 5, 1981

Syndication

The series was syndicated in the early 1980s, as "The B.J./Lobo Show". For syndication, Universal offered the show in two versions, one was the original 60 minute format and the other had episodes cut to fit a half-hour time slot from their original hour versions. What differentiated the half hour episodes from the hour long ones was the inclusion of a laugh track.