Northern Exposure


Northern Exposure is an American Northern comedy-drama television series about the eccentric residents of a fictional small town in Alaska, that ran on CBS from July 12, 1990, to July 26, 1995, with a total of 110 episodes. It received a total of 57 award nominations during its five-year run and won 27, including the 1992 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series, two additional Primetime Emmy Awards, four Creative Arts Emmy Awards, and two Golden Globes. Critic John Leonard called Northern Exposure "the best of the best television in the past 10 years".

History

The series was created by Joshua Brand and John Falsey, who also created the award-winning shows St. Elsewhere and I'll Fly Away. The show started as an eight-episode summer midseason replacement series on CBS in 1990. It returned for seven more episodes in spring 1991, then became a regular part of the network's schedule in 1991-1992. It ranked among the top 10 viewed by 18- to 49-year-olds, and was part of the network's 1992-1993 and 1993-1994 schedules. Its last season, 1994-1995, included a gap during the May 1995 sweeps when CBS broadcast other programming. "The show had a lot of life in it, and the move killed it," says executive producer Andrew Schneider. "This piddling out is sad."
In 1994 writer Sandy Veith won a suit in a jury trial against Universal, alleging that the series was based on his idea, yet he received no credit or compensation. Veith won $10,000,000 in damages and legal fees on appeal in 1997. His suit was against the studio, not the credited creators of the show, Brand and Falsey. In 1994 the LA Times reported that jurors seemed to believe the studio came to Brand and Falsey with the basic concept for the show, rather than that the latter knowingly stole his idea. Some Universal executives had worked with Veith and Brand and Falsey. Veith's script was about an Italian-American doctor who moves to a small town in the South.
Rob Morrow and his representatives spent much of Seasons 4 and 5 lobbying for an improved contract, and intermittently threatened to leave the show. The producers responded by reducing Fleischman's role in the storylines, and introducing characters such as Mike Monroe and Dr. Phil Capra to partially compensate for the absence of Morrow.

Premise

native Joel Fleischman is a adjusting to Alaska. A recently graduated physician, Fleischman is sent to practice in Anchorage for several years to repay the state of Alaska for underwriting his medical education. However, much to his chagrin, he is assigned to the much smaller, remote, fictional town of Cicely, which is in need of a general practitioner.

Cast and characters

In the show's last season, two new characters were introduced to try to fill the void left by Morrow's departure:
Major recurring characters include Apesanahkwat as Lester Haines, Anthony Edwards as Mike Monroe, Richard Cummings Jr. as Bernard Stevens, Graham Greene as Leonard, Diane Delano as Officer Barbara Semanski, Adam Arkin as mysterious, obnoxious master chef Adam, and Valerie Mahaffey as his hypochondriac and very wealthy wife Eve; Mahaffey was the only actor from the series to win an Emmy Award.

Production

Although the town of Cicely is widely thought to be patterned after the real town of Talkeetna, Alaska, the main street of Cicely and the filming location was that of Roslyn, Washington, located in the Cascade Mountains. "Northern Exposure II" was located in Redmond, Washington, in what is now the headquarters of Genie Industries, behind a business park.
According to The Northern Exposure Book, the moose in the opening titles was named Mort and was provided by Washington State University, where he was part of a captive herd. To film the opening sequence, the crew fenced off Roslyn, set Mort loose, and lured him around with food.

Episodes

Notable episodes in the series include the pilot, the third season's last episode, "Cicely", and the fifth-season episode "I Feel the Earth Move", which featured the second same-sex marriage story arc on U.S. prime-time television.

Reception

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the first season of Northern Exposure has a score of 100% based on six reviews, with an average rating of 7.0/10. On Metacritic, which uses a weighted score, the first season is rated 80 based on seven reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews," while the second season received an 83 based on nine, indicating "universal acclaim".
Entertainment Weekly’s Ken Tucker gave the first episode a B+, writing that the show “may well prove to be summer television’s most likably eccentric series”.

Ratings

Over the course of Northern Exposure's run, the series was nominated for over fifty Emmy Awards and multiple Golden Globe awards. The series won a pair of consecutive Peabody Awards: in 1991–92 for the show's "depict in a comedic and often poetic way, the cultural clash between a transplanted New York City doctor and the townspeople of fictional Cicely, Alaska" and its stories of "people of different backgrounds and experiences" clashing but who ultimately "strive to accept their differences and co-exist".
The show's other awards include:
Emmy Award:
Golden Globe:
;1995
;1994
;1993
;1992
;1991
Northern Exposure: Music From The Television Series

MCA Records, Inc. MCAD-10685
  1. "Theme from Northern Exposure" - David Schwartz
  2. "Jolie Louise" - Daniel Lanois
  3. "Hip Hug-Her" - Booker T. and the MG's
  4. "At Last" - Etta James
  5. "Everybody Be Yoself" - Chic Street Man
  6. "Alaskan Nights" - David Schwartz
  7. "Don Quichotte" - Magazine 60
  8. "When I Grow Too Old to Dream" - Nat 'King' Cole and His Trio
  9. "Emabhaceni" - Miriam Makeba
  10. "Gimme Three Steps" - Lynyrd Skynyrd
  11. "Bailero" from Chants d'Auvergne - F. VonStade, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Antonio de Almeda, conductor
  12. David Schwartz Medley:
More Music From Northern Exposure

MCA Records, Inc. MCAD-11077
  1. Ojibway Square Dance - Georgia Wettlin-Larsen
  2. Theme from Northern Exposure - David Schwartz
  3. Stir It Up - Johnny Nash
  4. Mambo Baby - Ruth Brown
  5. Someone Loves You - Simon Bonney
  6. The Ladder - David Schwartz
  7. If You Take Me Back - Big Joe & His Washboard Band
  8. Un Casse - Basin Brothers
  9. There I Go Again - Vinx
  10. Lay My Love - Brian Eno/John Cale
  11. Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams - Les Paul & Mary Ford
  12. Mooseburger Stomp - David Schwartz
  13. I May Want a Man - Joanne Shenandoah
  14. Our Town—played during the closing scene of the last episode - Iris Dement
Ausgerechnet Alaska,

Distributed by IDEAL Vertrieb, Wichmannstr. 4, 2000 Hamburg 52
  1. The Moose - Northern Exposure Theme-Mix
  2. The Kingsmen - Louie Louie
  3. Little Milton - Stand by Me
  4. Lee Dorsey - Ya Ya
  5. Billy Stewart - Summertime
  6. Little Richard - Good Golly Miss Molly
  7. Coasters - Little Egypt
  8. The Drifters - On Broadway
  9. Dolly Parton - It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels
  10. Guy Mitchell - Singing The Blues
  11. Patsy Cline - Crazy
  12. Paul Anka - My Way
  13. The Marcels - Blue Moon
  14. Showaddywaddy - Who Put The Bomp
  15. Trini Lopez - This Is Your Land
  16. Jerry Butler - Moon River
  17. Andy Williams - Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing

    Home media

DVD releases

has released all six seasons on DVD in Regions 1, 2 and 4. The Region 1 DVD releases have caused controversy among the show's fans due to their high prices and the changes to the soundtrack introduced in order to lower their costs. The release of Season 1 contained the original music, but retailed for $60 due to the cost of music licensing. Subsequent seasons replaced most of the music with generic elevator-style music, resulting in a lower-cost release. The first and second seasons were also re-released together in packaging that matches the third through sixth seasons.

Blu-Ray releases

On March 19, 2018, Fabulous Films released the entire series on Blu-Ray in the UK. Unlike the DVD releases, all of the original music is intact. This Blu-Ray release is a Region "B" release and a Region-Free Blu-Ray player is required to play it in the United States .

Potential revival

In 2016, Darren Burrows and his production company, Film Farms, held a crowdfunding campaign to fund a development project with the goal of creating more episodes of Northern Exposure. The working title for this project is "Northern Exposure: Home Again" according to the "More Northern Exposure Now" website. Despite not meeting the original $100,000 goal, Darren decided to continue with the project.
On June 17, 2016, Film Farms announced on their Facebook page that writer David Assael had been hired to write for the project. He previously wrote several episodes of Northern Exposure, including "Russian Flu," "Spring Break," and "It Happened in Juneau," among others. Originally envisioned as a two-hour "visit to Cicely," a 10 episode format is currently being pitched for network, cable, or streaming venues.
On November 20, 2018, it was reported that a revival series is in development at CBS, with Joshua Brand, John Falsey and Rob Morrow executive producing. Falsey died in January 2019. Morrow would return as Dr. Joel Fleischman. John Corbett was named as producer but his appearance as performer was not confirmed.
On May 19, 2019, Josef Adalian, an editor from the New York City-based magazine that several studio sources of his let him know that plans for the revival were cancelled by CBS. Although Adalian subsequently tweeted that the rights holder, Universal Studios, could pitch the revival elsewhere no subsequent report ever surfaced about the studio attempting to do so much less being successful in any re-pitch effort.
On November 15, 2019, Rob Morrow revealed in an interview on the radio station WGN 720AM in Chicago that revivial efforts were ongoing and presumably being undertaken by Joshua Brand and Morrow himself in light of Falsey's passing.