Jim Rockford 119 episodes, 1974-1980 Noah Beery Jr. ... Joseph 'Rocky' Rockford 118 episodes, 1974-1980 Joe Santos ... Dennis Becker 109 episodes, 1974-1980 Luis Delgado ... Officer Billings / ... 31 episodes, 1974-1979
Gretchen Corbett, Actress: The Rockford Files. Gretchen Corbett was born on August 13, 1945 in Portland, Oregon, USA. She is an actress, known for The Rockford Files (1974), Pig (2021) and Otherworld (1985).
Feb 01, 2020 · People still remember Gretchen Corbett’s performance as the villain Erica Belgard in “Wonder Woman,” in 1976. HER BIG BREAK In 1974, Corbett joined the cast of NBC's “The Rockford Files” as Beth Davenport, the lawyer and sometimes girlfriend of the main character Jim Rockford, portrayed by James Garner.
James Garner. Jim Rockford 124 Episodes 1980. Gretchen Corbett. Beth Davenport 35 Episodes 1979. Lindsay Wagner. Sara 3 Episodes 1975. Tom Atkins. Lt. …
The Rockford Files was an American detective drama television series starring James Garner that aired on the NBC network from September 13, 1974 to January 10, 1980, and has remained in syndication to the present day. Garner portrays Los Angeles–based private investigator Jim Rockford, with Noah Beery Jr. in the supporting role of his father, Joseph "Rocky" Rockford, a …
Winslow, who maintains a strikingly youthful appearance, built a name for herself in the theater community with her performance of Elaine Robinson in several stage versions of “The Graduate.”. She has an impressive resume in theater, with plays like “The Importance of Being Earnest,” “The Foreigner,” “Much Ado About Nothing,” “Amadeus” ...
Gretchen Corbett, better known for her role as attorney Beth Davenport on the NBC series “The Rockford Files,” is the proud mother of a grownup daughter who is now following her steps into the acting industry.
Later, Corbett moved to L.A as part of a contract with Universal Studios, and made appearances in series like “Kojak,” “ Columbo ,” “Gunsmoke,” and “Marcus Welby, M.D.”.
Remember Beth Davenport from 'The Rockford Files'? Here Is Her Grownup Daughter Winslow
People still remember Gretchen Corbett’ s performance as the villain Erica Belgard in “Wonder Woman,” in 1976.
Winslow Corbett, born in 1979, is also an actress. She grew up traveling in between Los Angeles and Portland with her mom and attended The Catlin Gabel School through middle and high school, followed by two years in the acting conservatory at SUNY Purchase. View this post on Instagram.
The show ran for six seasons from 1974 to 1980, but Corbett left after the fourth season after having a dispute over her contract with the series’ producers.
Garner portrays Los Angeles–based private investigator Jim Rockford, with Noah Beery Jr. in the supporting role of his father, Joseph Rockford, a retired truck driver nicknamed "Rocky". The show was created by Roy Huggins and Stephen J. Cannell.
In early episodes of the first season, Rockford's trailer is located in a parking lot alongside the highway at 2354 Beach Boulevard ( Pacific Coast Highway ), Malibu, and near the ocean; for the rest of the series, the trailer is at Paradise Cove (address 29 Cove Road), adjacent to a pier and a restaurant ("The Sand Castle", now known as the "Paradise Cove Beach Cafe"). In the television movies from 1994 to 1999, Rockford is still living and working at the same Paradise Cove location, but in a much newer trailer that has been extensively enlarged and remodeled.
Familiar to viewers was Jim Rockford's gold Pontiac Firebird Esprit car. One oft-recurring element of the show was the famous "Jim Rockford turn-around" (also known as a J-turn or a "moonshiner's turn" - commonly employed as an evasive driving technique taught to Secret Service ). Garner explained the move in his 2011 autobiography The Garner Files: "When you are going straight in reverse about 35 miles an hour, you come off the gas pedal, go hard left, and pull on the emergency brake. That locks the wheels and throws the front end around. Then you release everything, hit the gas, and off you go in the opposite direction." Garner stated in a Season One DVD interview that he performed this stunt for the duration of the series. The car's license plate was 853 OKG, although the plate in some early episodes displayed the number 835 OKG. Garner writes in his autobiography that he believes that the letters OKG stood for "Oklahoma Garner" but that he does not know the origin of the number 853.
The show went into hiatus late in 1979 when Garner was told by his doctors to take time off because of numerous knee injuries and back trouble, as well as an ulcer. He sustained the former conditions largely because of his insistence on performing most of his own stunts, especially those involving fist fights or car chases. Because of his physical pain, Garner eventually opted not to continue with the show some months later, and NBC cancelled the program in mid-season. It was alleged that Rockford had become very expensive to produce, mainly due to the location filming and use of high-end actors as guest stars. According to sources, NBC and Universal claimed the show was generating a deficit of several million dollars, a staggering amount for a nighttime show at the time, although Garner and his production team Cherokee Productions claimed the show turned a profit. Garner told a story to Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show that the studio once paid a carpenter $700 to build a shipping crate for a shoot-out on a boat dock, though there were shipping crates on the dock. The script often called for Garner to damage his car, so the car could be sold, repaired, and repurchased for each episode.
Starting with the 1974 model year, Rockford would get a new model-year Pontiac Firebird each year throughout the series. The Firebirds used had an identical "copper mist" color with the Esprit's exterior and interior. Although the Firebirds were badged as Esprits, they were actually the higher performance "Formula" model without the twin scoop hood. Garner needed Rockford's car to look like the lower tiered "Esprit" model, a car Rockford could afford, but have the performance necessary for the chase sequences in the show. To achieve this, the show featured Pontiac Firebird Formulas re-badged and re-hooded to look like the "Esprit" model. The "Formula" model was developed to provide the performance of the top-level "Trans Am" in a less ostentatious form. Formulas didn't have the Shaker hood scoop, side vents, graphics or lettering used on the Trans Am, but they had the same higher horsepower engines and drive trains, larger front and rear anti-roll bars, stiffer springs and shocks, and a twin scoop hood. (Sharp-eyed car connoisseurs can spot the twin exhausts and rear anti-roll bar on the cars used on the show, options that were not part of the "Esprit" package, as well as spot the different model year cars used in various chase scenes that differed from those in an actual episode, especially in later seasons.) Although the series ran until early 1980, no Firebird was used past the 1978 model year as Garner reportedly was displeased with the restyled front end of the 1979 and later Firebird models and as such did not wish them featured on the show (although an answering machine message in one episode in the final season indicated his car was a 1979 Firebird).
In doing so, Angel almost always gets Rockford in trouble, usually by involving him in hare-brained scams ... often without Jim's knowledge, and never with his consent. As often as not, Angel's antics result in Angel's, Jim's and/or others' arrests, and/or being placed on somebody's hit list. In spite of this, Jim considers Angel as one of his best, if most exasperating, pals. Towards the very end of the series, there is a noticeable cooling in Jim's attitude toward Angel in their often fractious relationship; however, the rift seems to have been repaired by the time of the reunion movies.
( 1980-01-10) The Rockford Files is an American detective drama television series starring James Garner that aired on the NBC network between September 13, 1974, and January 10, 1980, and has remained in syndication to the present day.
For six seasons (1974-'80), Garner was a fan favorite with audiences playing a P.I. But it was not the first time he had led his own TV series. The Rockford Files followed Garner as a Los Angeles based investigator. He was fresh off of starring in the western series Maverick, which was also created by showrunner Roy Huggins.
Garner and Universal entered a legal battle throughout the '80s, while the studio was running the show in syndication. They finally agreed to come together to bring Rockford back on the air in a series of 8 TV movies from 1994 to 1999, which were all released on CBS instead of its original network, NBC. Multiple recurring actors from the original series came back to accompany the main leads, including Rita Moreno, who had previously won an Emmy for her portrayal of Rita Capkovic, the girl (and call girl) who was a police informant.
Playing a private investigator throughout the '70s really took its toll on Garner physically. After performing his own stunts for so many years, he endured back issues and knee injuries from car chases, fistfights and more. After his doctors told him to rest up, Garner opted not to continue with the television series due to the amount of pain he was in on a daily basis. NBC decided to just axe the series after that. (Its slew of notable guest stars made the show fairly expensive to produce.)
Fans of the classic tv show know that each episode began with Rockford's answering machine. Across its six seasons, 122 messages were recorded. The funny thing was that most of the time they had nothing to do with the actual episode they were playing in. It was a fun way for viewers to tie in clues from previous episodes or get a deeper look into Rockford's depressing life. It started to get so hard for the writers (including future Sopranos creator David Chase) to come up with new ideas that they regularly invited suggestions from the crew.
Other noteworthy characters include Lance White (a different P.I. played by Selleck) and Elizabeth "Beth" Davenport (an attorney portrayed by Gretchen Corbett).
Bucky Dent, New York Yankee shortstop, center, raps for order on the set of ìRockford Filesî at Universal Studios, as he and his wife, Stormie Dent, visit with star of the series James Garner, right, Friday, Oct. 14, 1977, Los Angeles, Calif.
There was a spinoff series...kind of. Richie Brockelman, Private Eye wasn't an official spinoff of the show, but the character of Richie, played by Dennis Dugan, had appeared in the 1978 episode "The House on Willis Avenue.". The episode was used to launch Richie's own show, which ran for only five episodes on NBC.
8. “Rosendahl and Gilda Stern are Dead”. EGOT winner Rita Moreno had a recurring role in “The Rockford Files” as Rita Capkovic, a “professional escort” that crosses paths with Jim a few times. She actually won an Emmy for the role, but not for this episode.
Joan Van Ark, who played the woman trying to disappear in “Find Me if You Can,” returns as a different character in this season-three episode. That’s more old-time television than anything else. Back in the day sometimes they would just recast actors as different characters because they figured viewers would not notice, or at least not care. Anyway, this one involves a lot of action on the water, which is unusual for a show best remembered for its car chases.
19. “The Kirkoff Case”. This is the first true episode of “The Rockford Files” after a pilot that aired several months earlier (and featured a different actor as Rocky, Jim’s father). “The Kirkoff Case” establishes a lot of the recurring tropes of the show, including the fact the mob is heavily involved in the story.
Rockford doesn’t like White, and it’s mostly because White is the kind of guy who always solves the case, always gets his money, and always gets the woman at the end. Basically, Selleck was getting a chance to play the original version of Magnum alongside his personal inspiration for what he wanted Magnum to be.
1. “The Real Easy Red Dog”. The best episode of “The Rockford Files” is one of the episodes where Jim runs across another private eye. Although, at first he doesn’t know that. A woman approaches him to look into the alleged suicide of a family member, only it turns out they aren’t related at all.
Usually, when Rockford is asked to find somebody, it’s because they are missing. Not this time. A woman comes into Jim’s office (which is his mobile home) asking him to try and find her. We find out that she’s on the run from her mobster ex-boyfriend, and she figures if Jim can’t find her, she’s safe. Unfortunately, Jim does find her, and that’s just the beginning of their troubles.
There are suave private eyes, and then there is Jim Rockford. He doesn’t live in a mansion estate in Hawaii like Thomas Magnum. He lives in a mobile home by the beach in Los Angeles. Rockford takes as many punches as he gives and is usually getting hassled by the police, and that includes his friend Dennis Becker.
Gretchen Hoyt Corbett (born August 13, 1947 ) is an American actress and theater director. She is primarily known for her roles in television, particularly as attorney Beth Davenport on the NBC series The Rockford Files, but has also had a prolific career as a stage actress on Broadway as well as in regional theater.
A native of Oregon and the great-great-granddaughter of Oregon U.S. Senator He…
Gretchen Hoyt Corbett was born August 13, 1947. Corbett's year of birth is variously given as 1947 and 1945. in Portland, Oregon to Henry Ladd Corbett, Jr. and Katherine Minahen (née Coney) "Kay" Corbett. She is a great-great-granddaughter of Oregon pioneer, businessman, and Senator Henry Winslow Corbett, and granddaughter of Henry Ladd Corbett, a Portland civic leader, businessman, and politician. The community of Corbett, Oregonis named for her great-great-grandfather. Throu…
Corbett had a relationship with Robin Gammell. They had one child, Winslow Corbett.
• Gretchen Corbett at IMDb
• Gretchen Corbett at the Internet Broadway Database
• Gretchen Corbett at the Internet Off-Broadway Database