M*A*S*H (season 9)
The ninth season of M*A*S*H aired Mondays at 9:00-9:30 pm on CBS.
M*A*S*H | |
---|---|
Season 9 | |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 20 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | November 17, 1980 – May 4, 1981 |
Season chronology | |
Cast
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Alan Alda | Capt. Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce |
Mike Farrell | Capt. B.J. Hunnicut |
Harry Morgan | Col. Sherman T. Potter |
Loretta Swit | Maj. Margaret Houlihan |
David Ogden Stiers | Maj. Charles Emerson Winchester III |
Jamie Farr | Cpl. Maxwell Q. Klinger |
William Christopher | Father Francis Mulcahy |
Episodes
No. overall | No. in season | Title [n 1] | Directed by [n 2] | Written by [n 2] | Original air date | Prod. code [n 3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
199 | 1 | "The Best of Enemies" | Charles S. Dubin | Sheldon Bull | November 17, 1980 | Z-404 |
On his way to Seoul, Hawkeye is captured by a North Korean (Mako) who forces him to save his comrade. Meanwhile, Potter and Charles compete to find out who is better at bridge. | ||||||
200 | 2 | "Letters" | Charles S. Dubin | Dennis Koenig | November 24, 1980 | Z-403 |
The camp answers letters from fourth-graders in Hawkeye's hometown, and Hawkeye struggles to respond to a boy who holds doctors accountable for the death of his soldier brother. | ||||||
201 | 3 | "Cementing Relationships" | Charles S. Dubin | David Pollock and Elias Davis | December 1, 1980 | Z-401 |
Klinger supervises the creation of a cement floor in the OR, while Margaret is wooed by an amorous patient (Joel Brooks) from Italy. | ||||||
202 | 4 | "Father's Day" | Alan Alda | Karen Hall | December 8, 1980 | Z-405 |
Margaret tries to whip the camp into shape before her father (Andrew Duggan) comes for a visit. Note: This episode contradicts the events of "Hot Lips and Empty Arms" (season 2), in which Margaret drunkenly comments that her father is dead. | ||||||
203 | 5 | "Death Takes a Holiday" | Mike Farrell | Story by : Thad Mumford & Dan Wilcox and Burt Metcalfe Teleplay by : Mike Farrell, John Rappaport and Dennis Koenig | December 15, 1980 | Z-408 |
The spirit of Christmas is felt at the 4077th during a truce as they throw a potluck party for the orphans, which reveals a surprising side of Charles. But when Hawkeye, B.J. and Margaret receive a mortally wounded soldier, they attempt to keep him alive until the day after Christmas for the sake of his wife and kids. | ||||||
204 | 6 | "A War for All Seasons" | Burt Metcalfe | Dan Wilcox & Thad Mumford | December 29, 1980 | Z-409 |
A survey of life at the 4077th during the year 1951, including the doctors' efforts to build an artificial kidney and camp-wide bets on whether the Brooklyn Dodgers will win the year's National League championship. Dan Wilcox and Thad Mumford received a Writers Guild Award nomination for this episode. | ||||||
205 | 7 | "Your Retention, Please" | Charles S. Dubin | Erik Tarloff | January 5, 1981 | Z-406 |
A retention officer (Barry Corbin) persuades a depressed Klinger to reenlist; a male nurse chafes over his low rank. | ||||||
206 | 8 | "Tell It to the Marines" | Harry Morgan | Hank Bradford | January 12, 1981 | Z-410 |
With Charles temporarily in command, Hawkeye fights for the cause of a soon-to-be-discharged Dutch immigrant marine whose mother is about to be deported. | ||||||
207 | 9 | "Taking the Fifth" | Charles S. Dubin | Elias Davis & David Pollock | January 19, 1981 | Z-407 |
Hawkeye uses a bottle of wine as bait for a date with a nurse, while Potter is mad at the Army for banning the use of curare as a surgical anesthetic. | ||||||
208 | 10 | "Operation Friendship" | Rena Down | Dennis Koenig | January 26, 1981 | Z-412 |
Charles looks after Klinger in gratitude for saving his life during an autoclave explosion, while a specialist (Tim O'Connor) is brought in to treat B.J. for a compartment hemorrhage injury to his right wrist. | ||||||
209 | 11 | "No Sweat" | Burt Metcalfe | John Rappaport | February 2, 1981 | Z-402 |
The 4077th deals with a sudden heat wave in their own personal ways: Klinger disassembles the P.A. system, Charles goes through all of his tax returns and bonds, B.J. stresses over a letter from Peg, Margaret develops a severe case of prickly heat, and Colonel Potter can't get a good night's sleep. John Rappaport received a Writers Guild Award nomination for this episode. | ||||||
210 | 12 | "Depressing News" | Alan Alda | Dan Wilcox & Thad Mumford | February 9, 1981 | Z-411 |
Klinger finds the perfect story to start his unit newspaper: Hawkeye's new craft project, inspired by a mistaken delivery of 500,000 tongue depressors. In one scene, Alan Alda can be seen still wearing his blue, 1980's-style sneakers. | ||||||
211 | 13 | "No Laughing Matter" | Burt Metcalfe | Elias Davis & David Pollock | February 16, 1981 | Z-413 |
B.J. challenges Hawkeye to go through one day without making any jokes, while Charles confronts the colonel who sent him to Korea. Robert Symonds reprises his role as the colonel after playing it in the season 6 episode "Fade Out, Fade In". | ||||||
212 | 14 | "Oh, How We Danced" | Burt Metcalfe | John Rappaport | February 23, 1981 | Z-414 |
Hawkeye plans a surprise for B.J.'s wedding anniversary, while Charles offends a hot-tempered frontline officer. Catherine Bergstrom plays B.J.'s wife Peg. | ||||||
213 | 15 | "Bottoms Up" | Alan Alda | Dennis Koenig | March 2, 1981 | Z-415 |
Margaret is worried that her friend and colleague (Gail Strickland) has been drinking, while Hawkeye is a social pariah for embarrassing Charles too much during surgery. | ||||||
214 | 16 | "The Red/White Blues" | Gabrielle Beaumont | Elias Davis & David Pollock | March 9, 1981 | Z-416 |
Potter is given too much kindness when word gets around about his blood pressure, while Klinger has an adverse reaction to medicine. | ||||||
215 | 17 | "Bless You, Hawkeye" | Nell Cox | Dan Wilcox & Thad Mumford | March 16, 1981 | Z-417 |
Potter calls Sidney for help when Hawkeye keeps sneezing nonstop. Dan Wilcox and Thad Mumford received a Writers Guild Award nomination for this episode. | ||||||
216 | 18 | "Blood Brothers" | Harry Morgan | David Pollock & Elias Davis | April 6, 1981 | Z-421 |
Hawkeye discovers troubling news regarding a patient's (Patrick Swayze) blood test, while Father Mulcahy works his heart out to prepare the camp for a visiting Cardinal. Harry Morgan received a Directors Guild Award for this episode. | ||||||
217 | 19 | "The Foresight Saga" | Charles S. Dubin | Dennis Koenig | April 13, 1981 | Z-422 |
Potter's feeling down when his eyeglasses break, while a letter from Radar and fresh vegetables make everyone else happy. | ||||||
218 | 20 | "The Life You Save" | Alan Alda | John Rappaport & Alan Alda | May 4, 1981 | Z-418 |
Charles becomes obsessed with death after surviving a near-fatal sniper attack. |
Notes
- Titles taken from DVD
- Credits from episode title cards
- Production Code from end credits
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.