Queens Supreme

Queens Supreme

The show's title card.
Genre Dramedy
Created by Dan and Peter Thomas
Developed by Kevin Fox
Written by Keith Samples
Christopher Ambrose
Marjorie David
Kevin Fox
Stephen Godchaux
Mona Mansour
Linda McGibney
James D. Solomon
Directed by Keith Samples
Jace Alexander
Adam Bernstein
Bill D'Elia
Michael Fields
Stuart Gillard
Jefery Levy
John Patterson
Matthew Penn
David Platt
Tim Robbins
Paul Shapiro
Rick Wallace
Starring Oliver Platt
Robert Loggia
Annabella Sciorra
L. Scott Caldwell
Marcy Harriell
James Madio
Composer(s) Douglas J. Cuomo
Chris Hajian
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 13 (10 unaired)
Production
Executive producer(s) Julia Roberts
Kevin Fox
Deborah Schindler
Aaron Spelling
Erwin Stoff
E. Duke Vincent
Marjorie David
Keith Samples
Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas
Producer(s) Stephen Godchaux
Steve Rose
Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas
Linda McGibney
Location(s) Flushing, Queens,
New York
Long Island City, Queens,
New York
Cinematography Ron Fortunato
Tony C. Jannelli
Editor(s) James Y. Kwei
Vanessa Procopio
Tom Swartwout
Camera setup Chaim Kantor
Peter Nolan
Running time 60 minutes
(with commercials)
Production company(s) Shoelace Productions
Spelling Television
Red Om Films
Revolution Studios
Shadowland Productions
CBS Productions
Distributor CBS Television Distribution
Release
Original network CBS
Original release January 10 – 24, 2003
External links
Website web.archive.org/web/20051229023646/http://www.cbs.com:80/primetime/queens_supreme/

Queens Supreme is an American courtroom dramedy television series which aired on CBS in January 2003. The series starred Oliver Platt as New York judge Jack Moran who, with his equally eccentric and colorful as colleagues, preside over court cases as the real-life Queens Supreme Court in Long Island City, Queens. The series had a strong cast and considerable financial backing, especially from Julia Roberts's Shoelace Productions, Spelling Television and Revolution Studios, however poor ratings forced its cancellation after three episodes.

Production

The idea for the series came about when two New York attorneys, twin brothers Dan and Peter Thomas, were discussing courtroom stories based on their shared experiences in Queens while on a plane flight to California in 2001. One of the passengers, a Hollywood producer, was sitting next to them and mentioned that they could be the basis for a television series. Indeed, the producer brought the idea to screenwriter Kevin Fox who later successfully pitched it to CBS. Fox was initially hesitant in becoming involved, feeling there were too many courtroom dramas already, but agreed after spending time at the New York Supreme Court himself.

The project was helped along by Dan's wife Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas, head of Red Om Films (a subsidiary of Julia Roberts' production company Shoelace Productions) and a partner in Joe Roth's Revolution Studios, who was then looking for film and television products to develop. Her involvement was partially responsible in bringing such a high-profile cast and crew to the series.

The television pilot was filmed at both the Long Island City and New York State Supreme Courthouses by actor Tim Robbins in mid-August 2002 and 12 episodes were eventually ordered by the network. A midseason replacement for Robbery Homicide Division, Queens Supreme premiered on January 10, 2003, alongside Presidio Med in the prime-time Friday night timeslot.

Characters

Episodes

No.TitleOriginal air dateProd.
code[1]
01"One Angry Man"January 10, 2003 (2003-01-10)#108
02"Pilot"January 17, 2003 (2003-01-17)#100
03"Flawed Heroes"January 24, 2003 (2003-01-24)#109
04"Supreme Heat"N/AN/A
05"Mad About You"N/AN/A
06"Permanent Markers"N/AN/A
07"Let's Make a Deal"N/AN/A
08"Things Change"N/AN/A
09"Case by Case"N/AN/A
10"The House Next Door"N/AN/A
11"Words That Wound"N/AN/A
12"That Voodoo That You Do"N/AN/A
13"The Eyes Have It"N/AN/A

References

  1. From the United States Copyright Office catalog: "Public Catalog - Copyright Catalog (1978 to present) - Basic Search". United States Copyright Office. Retrieved 2016-04-08.

Sources

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