Last weekend, while the sun was shining but it was bitterly cold, I decided to put on The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries (available on Peacock and DVD). I know I’ve seen a few episodes, back when TV Land would show something different every weekend, but it was never anything I was excited to see on the schedule. Maybe I was too into the books and frustrated by the changes to the characters or distracted by the swinging 70’s style.
Speaking of style, sometimes Nancy’s capri bell bottoms look like a skirt.
The show ran for two and a half seasons from 1977 to 1979, was produced by Glen A. Larson (who I will always associate with Knight Rider), and starred Parker Stevenson as Frank, Shaun Cassidy as Joe, and (initially) Pamela Sue Martin as Nancy. In the first season they alternated episodes, one being a Hardy Boys mystery, and the following week’s being Nancy Drew. Eventually they started doing crossovers, which would have almost been as exciting to me as an Avengers movie.
Eventually the Hardy Boys started getting more screen time, so Martin left and was replaced.
Posing for Playboy ("TV's Nancy Drew Undraped") probably sealed the deal.
I’ve continued putting on reruns and find that I really enjoy it. Despite the goofy fashion, it's still attractive people doing exciting things in beautiful places. The alternating format and standalone stories give it an old movie-of-the-week feel, and many familiar faces (some before they were stars) appear. Jamie Lee Curtis auditioned for Nancy, but only got a guest spot.
Little distracting seeing Bob Crane, given what we know about him now.
The mysteries themselves and general vibe of the show is a sort of Kolchak meets Scooby-Doo, where it’s heavy with atmosphere and a hint of the supernatural. Then it’s all revealed to be perfectly mundane. I like that we get to see what the bad guys are up to and aren’t locked into our sleuths' point of view, which is something you don’t see on TV anymore. This was long before prestige television, when it was just a given that people would be doing dishes or stoned and couldn’t take the time to notice every detail.
Reading ahead on Wikipedia, I can see that the show never really found its footing. In the first season Nancy’s boyfriend is a moron, and in the second he’s gone and a new character with the same name is the DA in town. Then they started doing crossovers, Martin quit and was replaced, before they phased out Nancy completely. Frankly, it’s surprising that the show lasted as long as it did.
And rumor has it ABC later wished they hadn’t pulled the plug.
I’m glad that it exists, though, and will probably keep watching for awhile. Even though Jimmy Carter was running the country into the ground back then, the show never bothers with politics and if it’s any reflection of real life, people adjusted and kept living their lives. And we recovered from that, so perhaps we can recover again. Time will tell. But 40 plus years from now, how much of our current network TV lineup will still be worth watching? My guess: not much.