Courthouse is an American drama television series that ran on CBS from September 13 to November 15, 1995. The series was created and executive-produced by Deborah Joy LeVine. The Courthouse plot centered on a tough female judge, and was partially inspired by NYPD Blue and the television coverage of the O. J. Simpson murder case. Patricia Wettig led the cast which also included Bob Gunton and Robin Givens. Wettig intended to leave the show due to "creative differences", with sources saying that she wanted the show to be more of a star vehicle for her, rather than an ensemble cast, but the show was cancelled before her character could be written out. The show included Jenifer Lewis and Cree Summer as the first recurring African American lesbian characters on TV, but the role was ordered to be toned down for broadcast. Lewis played Juvenile Court judge Rosetta Reide, who was having a relationship with her housekeeper Danny Gates. The show failed to catch on with audiences, the pilot ranked 47 out of 108 shows, according to the Nielsen ratings for that week, with 9.2 million viewers, and it was cancelled two months after it premiered. One critic described the show as "a hopeless amalgam that strains the senses".
Synopsis
Courthouse is a TV drama with lots of sex and violence; it follows the lives of the judges and lawyers and all the staff at a big-city courthouse in fictional Clark County. The court has a limited budget and an overcrowded case load, and the courthouse itself is falling into disrepair. The court is led by the no-nonsense presiding judge, Justine Parkes. Then, amid all the turmoil, Wyatt Jackson, a hunky new judge, arrives from Montana. He gets off to a shaky start with Parkes as he is not used to the way big-city courts are run, but there is a hint of romantic tension between the two. There are several romantic couplings among the staff, including an interracial coupling of two prosecutors in Moore and Graham and a lesbian affair between Judge Reide and her housekeeper. New York magazine described the show as follows:
"Ready to believe in Robin Givens as a tireless defender of public justice? Courthouse's idea of gritty moral realism is to divide the world into the good and the bad: Bad judges go to the opera while their charges die in jail; good judges have interracial affairs with members of their own gender; and the best judge of all rolls in from Montana looking like he just shot a 501 commercial".
Characters
Judge Justine Parkes – the no-nonsense presiding judge
Judge Homer Conklin – an autocratic "hanging judge" and a by-the-book traditionalist
Judge Wyatt E. Jackson – a hunky, non-conformist recently arrived from Montana
Judge Myron Winkleman – a neurotic Family Court judge
Judge Rosetta Reide – a struggling, gay single mother presiding over Juvenile Court
Jonathan Mitchell – conceited prosecutor, was dating public defender Gilbert
Veronica Gilbert – public defender, dating Mitchell
Edison Moore – hard-charging young prosecutor in a secret inter-racial affair with Graham
Suzanne Graham – an investigator for the D.A.'s office
Lenore Laderman – a naive young prosecutor just reassigned to the sex crimes unit
Danny Gates – housekeeper and lesbian girlfriend of Judge Reide