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One of the most popular and award-winning television series of the
sixties, ""I Spy"" was the first weekly broadcast to star both a
white and a black actor. In 1964, though, producer Sheldon Leonard
had, with heavy risk, financed the show himself, and his idea for a
racially incorporated cast had earned his show the moniker
""Sheldon's Folley."" Pairing established white actor Robert Culp
with Bill Cosby, a black comedian with barely an acting credit to
his name, certainly turned some heads at NBC, and many wondered
whether affiliates in the South would ever air the show. Only two
years later, Cosby accepted the Emmy for leading actor - and I Spy
cemented its role in history. This is a complete history of ""I
Spy"" and the profound change it evoked in broadcasting, social
ideals and racial equality. Rich with interviews and photographs,
it discusses ""I Spy's"" unique approach to race, co-starring
interracial actors as equals. It also describes how the show became
the template for popular ""buddy genre"" shows and films that
followed, covers the show's significance as the first series to
shoot episodes around the world, and puts ""I Spy"" in context with
other works within the spy genre at a time when spy books, shows
and films exploded in popularity. A complete episode guide includes
writers, directors, cast, crew, plot synopsis and commentary.
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