- This article is about the television show. For
information about naval watches, see Watch system.
Third Watch is an
NBC television
drama set in New York City
that ran from September 23, 1999 to May 6,
2005.
Premise
The series followed the exploits of a group of
police officers,
firefighters, and
paramedics in the fictional 55th Precinct and Fire
Station 55 whose shifts fell between 3 p.m. and 11 p.m, the "third
watch." The precinct and fire station were located on the corner of
King Blvd and Arthur St.; hence the nickname "
Camelot." Exterior shots of the 55th Precinct and
the Firehouse were filmed in
Long Island City, Queens.
Third
Watch succeeded in presenting all three branches of New York
City's emergency services in the same show, reviving a failed
attempt to do so nine years prior with the similarly-themed
H.E.L.P. running for only one
season in 1990.
The show balanced numerous single-episode events with other,
ongoing storylines, some of which spanned multiple seasons. While
Third Watch was lauded for its emotional and honest
portrayal of the events surrounding the
9/11 terrorist attacks, it was
also criticized in some circles for extremely detailed
violence and prevalent (by network television
standards)
profane language. The show was
created, produced, and written by
John Wells and
Edward Allen Bernero. The theme song
for the show was "
Keep Hope Alive"
by
The Crystal Method, except for
the pilot episode when "
Right Here
Right Now" by
Fatboy Slim was played
during the opening sequence.
Third Watch was not renewed by
NBC in
the spring of 2005, making the sixth season the show's last. The
series' finale, "Goodbye to Camelot," was aired in the United
States on Friday, May 6, 2005. It was listed in the
Bergen Record, the
New York Times and other newspapers as a
TV show that was canceled too early.
Conception
Co-creator John Wells had wanted to do a show about paramedics for
some time before
Third Watch began, but did not think he
had enough material to make such a show. Ed Bernero, a former
Chicago cop, had wanted to do a police drama partly based on his
own experiences. The two worked together on the short lived show
Trinity, and after cancellation Wells asked Bernero if he
wanted to co-create a show with him.
Third Watch was a
combination of Wells' paramedics show and Bernero's police
show.
Originally the show was only going to be about the police and
paramedics, but firefighter
Jimmy
Doherty was added to the show after actor
Eddie Cibrian auditioned for the role of
police officer
Maurice
'Bosco' Boscorelli. Cibrian lost out to
Jason Wiles, but impressed the producers so much
that they decided to put him in the show as a new character.
Bernero said, "Well, we don't have any firefighters", and the fire
aspect of the show was added in to produce a show revolving around
all 3 emergency services.
Episodes
The series consists of six seasons with a total of 132 episodes
produced and broadcast from September 23, 1999 to May 6,
2005.
Main cast
Third Watch's original ensemble cast in the series' first
season consisted of
Michael Beach,
Coby Bell,
Bobby Cannavale,
Eddie Cibrian,
Molly
Price,
Kim Raver,
Anthony Ruivivar,
Skipp Sudduth, and
Jason Wiles.
In 2000,
Amy Carlson was added to the
cast as Paramedic/Firefighter Alex Taylor. In 2001, Series regular
Bobby Cannavale willingly left the series after he asked to be
written out due to lack of character usage and development.
At the start of Season 3,
Chris Bauer
was added to the main credits as Fred Yokas after being a recurring
guest star previously.
Tia Texada became
a recurring guest star, and later, a full cast member, in 2002.
Carlson left the show in 2003. Later that year,
Nia Long was introduced as Officer Sasha Monroe
(her rank was changed in season six in one of the show's most
shocking plot twists). Yvonne Jung became a recurring guest star
also in 2003 although she had been a guest in Season 3 episode "Act
Brave" as a lawyer defending Kim in her custody battle with Jimmy.
Also in 2003,
Bonnie Dennison was
added as Emily Yokas, previously being recurring.
In 2004, just after celebrating the show's 100th episode, Eddie
Cibrian and Michael Beach left the show. Cibrian's departure marked
the first time a main character was written out of the show without
dying. Series regular
Molly Price's
character, Faith Yokas, made very few appearances in season five of
the series because Price was pregnant throughout much of the
season. The writers for
Third Watch explained her absence
by her character being seriously injured in a shootout, and then
trying to recuperate at home. In the few scenes Price was in, her
growing belly was frequently hidden by blankets piled on top of her
while she lay in bed.
Cara Buono joined
the cast as Paramedic Grace Foster late in the show's fifth season
in 2004.
Kim Raver decided to leave the show after the show's sixth-season
opener and became a series regular on
24.
Josh
Stewart was introduced as a main cast member of Season 6 as
Probationary Officer
Brendan Finney.
After a several-month absence, Dennison reclaimed the role of Emily
Yokas for the rest of the final season, while Chris Bauer left the
show to pursue his new show
Tilt, which coincidentally
co-starred his former
Third Watch castmate, Eddie Cibrian,
but made sporadic guest-star appearances in season six. Beach,
Cibrian and Raver re-joined their former co-stars in the series
finale, "Goodbye To Camelot."
Main casts
| Actor |
Character |
Seasons as main cast |
Seasons as guest cast |
| Jason Wiles |
NYPD Officer Maurice
"Bosco" Boscorelli |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
NA |
| Tia Texada |
NYPD Sergeant Maritza Cruz |
4, 5, 6 |
4 |
| Coby Bell |
NYPD Officer Tyrone "Ty" Davis,
Jr. |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
NA |
| Skipp Sudduth |
NYPD Officer John "Sully"
Sullivan |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
NA |
| Anthony Ruivivar |
FDNY Paramedic Carlos Nieto |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
NA |
| Eddie Cibrian |
FDNY Firefighter/Lieutenant James "Jimmy" Doherty |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 |
6 |
| Bobby Cannavale |
FDNY Paramedic Roberto "Bobby"
Caffey |
1, 2 |
NA |
| Molly Price |
NYPD Officer/Detective Faith
Yokas |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
NA |
| Kim Raver |
FDNY Paramedic Kimberly "Kim"
Zambrano |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 |
6 |
| Michael Beach |
FDNY Paramedic Monte "Doc"
Parker |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 |
6 |
| Amy Carlson |
FDNY Paramedic/Firefighter Alexandra "Alex"
Taylor |
2, 3, 4 |
2 |
| Nia Long |
NYPD Officer/IAB Detective Sasha
Monroe |
5, 6 |
4 |
| Cara Buono |
FDNY Paramedic Grace Foster |
6 |
5 |
|
| Josh Stewart |
NYPD Officer Brendan Finney |
6 |
NA |
| Bonnie Dennison |
Emily Yokas |
5, 6 |
4* |
| Chris Bauer |
Frederick "Fred" Yokas |
3, 4, 5 |
1, 2, 6 |
- Emily Yokas was played by P J Morrison in Seasons 1–3.
Recurring cast
The following cast members are listed by the season in which they
were introduced. Recurring cast members Bill Walsh and Derek Kelly
are firefighters in real life.
| Actor |
Character |
Seasons as recurring cast |
| Derek Kelly |
FDNY Firefighter Derek
"DK" Kitson |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
| Bill Walsh |
FDNY Firefighter/Lieutenant William
"Billy" Walsh |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
| Patti D'Arbanville |
Rose Boscorelli |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
| Jeremy Bergman |
Charles "Charlie" Yokas |
1, 2, 3, 4 |
| Lonette McKee |
Maggie Davis |
1, 2, 3, 4 |
| James Rebhorn |
NYPD Captain "Stick" Elchisak |
1, 2, 3 |
| P.J. Morrison |
Emily Yokas |
1, 2, 3 |
| Kristopher Scott Fiedell |
Joseph "Joey" Doherty |
1, 2, 3 |
| Lisa Vidal |
Dr. Sarah Morales |
1, 2 |
| Wendell Pierce |
NYPD Officer Conrad "Candyman" Jones |
1 |
| Nick Chinlund |
NYPD Detective Tancredi |
1 |
| Ernest Mingione |
NYPD Lieutenant Kowalski |
1 |
| Jon Seda |
Mateo "Matty" Caffey |
1 |
| Saundra McClain |
Nurse Mary Proctor |
2, 3, 4, 5, 6 |
| John Michael Bolger |
FDNY Lieutenant
Johnson |
2, 3, 4 |
| Savannah Haske |
Tatiana Deschenko |
2, 3, 4 |
| Nick Sandow |
FDNY Firefighter Joseph
"Joe" Lombardo III |
2 |
| Carol Woods |
NYPD Lieutenant Rice |
2 |
| Eva LaRue |
NYPD Officer Brooke
Doherty |
1, 2 |
| Anne Twomey |
Catherine Zambrano |
2 |
| Joe Lisi |
NYPD Lieutenant Robert
"Bob" Swersky |
3, 4, 5, 6 |
| Charlie Day |
Michael "Mikey" Boscorelli |
3, 4, 5 |
| Brad Beyer |
NYPD Sergeant
Jason Christopher |
2,3 |
| Charlie McWade |
NYPD Officer Steven Gusler |
3 |
| Darien Sills-Evans |
Dr. Fields |
4, 5, 6 |
| Yvonne Jung |
FDNY Paramedic Holly Levine |
5, 6 |
| Joe Badalucco |
NYPD Detective "Jelly"
Grimaldi |
5, 6 |
| Charles Haid |
NYPD IAB Captain Cathal
"CT" Finney |
6 |
| Manny Perez |
NYPD Officer Manny
Santiago |
6 |
| Aidan Quinn |
NYPD Lieutenant John Miller |
6 |
| Jason Shaw |
FDNY Firefighter Stu
"Lotta Zs" Szczelaszczyk |
6 |
| James Remar |
NYPD Detective Madjanski |
4 |
| Sterling K. Brown |
NYPD Officer Edward Dade |
3, 4, 5 |
Notable guest stars
Notable guest stars include
Susan
Blackwell,
Jack Klugman,
Ossie Davis,
Roy
Scheider,
Helen Mirren,
Joseph Cross,
Mykelti Williamson,
Rosie O'Donnell,
Haylie Duff,
Corbin
Bleu,
Henry Winkler,
Lea Michele,
Kate
Jackson,
Nick Turturro,
Anson Mount,
Eve,
Gene Simmons,
DMX,
Method Man,
Paul Michael Glaser,
Wyclef Jean,
Veronica
Hamel,
Ethan Suplee,
Treach,
Adam Beach,
Mia Farrow,
Tom
Berenger,
Sherry Stringfield,
Chris Elliot,
Jason Sehorn,
Will
Arnett,
Lev Gorn and
Ann-Margret.
Crossover
The series exists in the same television setting as
ER and
Medical Investigation.
Molly Price,
Jason
Wiles,
Kim Raver and
Amy Carlson appeared in a two-part
crossover episode of
ER, while
Sherry Stringfield appeared in
the corresponding episode of
Third Watch. However,
ER was mentioned as a pop culture reference during season
two episode "Jimmy's Mountain."
A special two-part crossover event aired on February 18, 2005,
establishing the television-universe connection by featuring the
Third Watch and
Medical Investigation teams
working together.
Main Crew
Directors
Guy Norman Bee [82803]Peter Ellis (5
episodes, 2002–2003)
Jesús Salvador Treviño (4
episodes, 2001–2002)
Vincent Misiano
[82804]Christopher
Chulack (3 episodes, 1999–2004)
Charles
Haid (3 episodes, 2000–2005)
Félix Enríquez Alcalá
(3 episodes, 2003–2005)
Gloria Muzio (3
episodes, 2003–2005)
Skipp Sudduth (3
episodes, 2003–2005)
Edward Allen
Bernero (3 episodes, 2004–2005)
Nelson McCormick (3 episodes,
2004–2005)
Chris Misiano (2 episodes,
1999–2000)
Bryan Spicer (2 episodes,
1999–2000)
R.W. Goodwin (2 episodes, 1999)
Jace Alexander (2 episodes,
2000–2001)
Nick Gomez (2 episodes,
2000–2001)
Michael Fields (2 episodes,
2000)
Julie Hébert [82805]Stephen Cragg (2
episodes, 2004–2005)
John E.
Gallagher (2 episodes,
2004–2005)
Paul Michael Glaser (2
episodes, 2004–2005)
Rosemary
Rodriguez [82806]Matt Earl
Beesley (2 episodes, 2004)
Brooke
Kennedy [82807]
Writers
Edward Allen Bernero (132
episodes, 1999–2005)
John
Wells (132 episodes, 1999–2005)
Janine
Sherman (13 episodes, 2000–2005)
Scott
Williams (11 episodes, 2001–2004)
John
Ridley (6 episodes, 1999–2001)
Charles
Murray (5 episodes, 2003–2005)
Lance
Gentile (4 episodes, 1999–2000)
Bonnie
Mark (4 episodes, 2000–2001)
Angela
Amato (4 episodes, 2003–2005)
Terri
Kopp (3 episodes, 1999–2000)
John
Romano (3 episodes, 1999–2000)
Julie Hébert (2 episodes,
2000–2001)
Kyra Keene (2 episodes,
2000–2001)
Victor De Jesus (2
episodes, 2004)
Siobhan Byrne (unknown
episodes)
Paul Golding (unknown
episodes)
Brooke Kennedy (unknown
episodes)
Jorge Zamacona
Broadcast and ratings information
All six seasons of
Third Watch were originally broadcast
on
NBC in the United States.
| Season |
|
Premiere |
Finale |
Viewers (in millions) |
Rank |
| 1 |
Sunday 8:00 pm ET, Monday 10:00 pm ET |
September 23, 1999 |
May 22, 2000 |
11.179 |
- |
| 2 |
Monday 10:00 pm ET |
October 2, 2000 |
May 21, 2001 |
- |
- |
| 3 |
Monday 9:00 pm ET |
October 1, 2001 |
May 13, 2002 |
11.2 |
#38 |
| 4 |
Monday 9:00 pm ET |
September 22, 2002 |
April 28, 2003 |
11.55 |
#36 |
| 5 |
Monday 10:00 pm ET (2003)
Friday 10:00 pm ET (2004) |
September 29, 2003 |
May 7, 2004 |
9.42 |
#62 |
| 6 |
Friday 9:00 pm ET |
September 17, 2004 |
May 6, 2005 |
9.22 |
#55 |
Third Watch was also broadcast worldwide including Africa,
Europe, Latin America, Asia, Oceania and the Middle East.
DVD releases
Warner Home Video has released
Season 1 of
Third Watch on DVD in Regions 1, 2 and 4.
Season 2 was released in Region 1 on July 7, 2009.
[82808]
| Season |
Episodes |
Release dates |
| Region 1 |
Region 2 |
Region 4 |
| 1 |
22 |
February 5, 2008 |
May 22, 2006 |
May 3, 2006 |
| Third Watch: The Complete First Season
contains the 22 episodes of the series' first season in addition to
special features which include a behind-the-scenes featurette,
unaired scenes and a gag reel. Although the first season was
released on DVD relatively later in Region 1 than Regions 2 and 4,
special features are found in the Region 1 DVD box-set only. |
| 2 |
22 |
July 7, 2009 |
TBA |
TBA |
| Third Watch: The Complete Second Season
contains the 22 episodes of the series' second season. A gag reel
is included as a special feature. |
Reception
The hit
series won the prestigious Peabody Award for Season 3 episode "In
Their Own Words", in which series regulars Michael Beach, Coby
Bell, Amy Carlson, Eddie Cibrian, Kim
Raver, Anthony Ruivivar,
Skipp Sudduth, and Jason Wiles introduced clips of interviews with
the real-life NYPD and FDNY members who responded to the September
11th attacks on the World Trade Center
. Series regular
Molly
Price was interviewed in a segment because she is married to
FDNY firefighter and
Third Watch recurring guest star
Derek Kelly.
Many
Third Watch former cast members were nominated for
awards for their work on the show. Among them, both
Bobby Cannavale and
Anthony Ruivivar were nominated for ALMA
Awards for their positive portrayals of Latino characters.
Nia Long also won several NAACP Image Awards for
her portrayal of the African-American character Sasha Monroe. Other
cast members, including
Michael Beach,
Molly Price, and
Tia Texada also were nominated for various
awards. The show itself was nominated for several
Primetime Emmy Awards including
Outstanding Stunt Coordination and Outstanding Sound Editing for a
Series, which it won in 2000.
References
External links