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Washington: Behind Closed Doors

Washington: Behind Closed Doors is a 1977 American television miniseries produced by Paramount Television, that was broadcast in six parts, airing across six consecutive nights on ABC, between September 6 to September 11, 1977.[1]

Washington: Behind Closed Doors

David W. Rintels

Dominic Frontiere (5 episodes)
Richard Markowitz (1 episode)

United States

English

6

Eric Bercovici
Frank Cardea
Stanley Kallis
Norman S. Powell
David W. Rintels

Joseph F. Biroc (6 episodes)
Jack Swain (5 episodes)

Gerard Wilson (6 episodes)
Harry Kaye (3 episodes)
Arthur Hilton

750 minutes

ABC

September 6 (1977-09-06) –
September 11, 1977 (1977-09-11)

The fictional story is loosely based on John Ehrlichman's 1976 book The Company, a novel inspired by the author's tenure as a top aide in the Nixon administration.

Plot[edit]

The film is a lavish fictionalized re-telling of the Watergate story (loosely based on ex-Nixon aide John Ehrlichman's novel The Company) mixing political intrigue and personal drama and centering on the rise of a power-hungry American president and the men with whom he surrounds himself in order to keep his grip on his office. The story builds from a soap-opera start into a trenchant study of power that corrupts.[2][3]

as William Martin (Richard Helms, Director of Central Intelligence)

Cliff Robertson

as President Richard Monckton (Richard M. Nixon, 37th President)

Jason Robards

as Sally Whalen

Stefanie Powers

as Frank Flaherty (Harry R. Haldeman, White House Chief of Staff)

Robert Vaughn

as Linda Martin

Lois Nettleton

as Bob Bailey

Barry Nelson

as Adam Gardiner (Jeb Stuart Magruder, Special Assistant to the President)

Tony Bill

as President Esker Scott Anderson (Lyndon B. Johnson, 36th President)

Andy Griffith

as Myron Dunn

John Houseman

as Roger Castle

David Selby

as Jenny Jamison

Meg Foster

as Eli McGinn

Peter Coffield

as Paula Stoner Gardiner

Frances Lee McCain

as Joe Wisnovsky

Barry Primus

as Kathy Ferris

Diana Ewing

as Wanda Elliott

Lara Parker

John Lehne as Tucker Tallford (, Assistant to the President for Domestic Affairs)

John Ehrlichman

as Simon Cappell

Alan Oppenheimer

as Hank Ferris (Ronald L. Ziegler, White House Press Secretary)

Nicholas Pryor

as Lawrence Allison

Frank Marth

as Brewster Perry

George Gaynes

as Jack Atherton

Linden Chiles

as Lars Haglund

Skip Homeier

as Bennett Lowman

John Randolph

as Joan Bailey

Bonnie Bartlett

Release[edit]

The 12 ½‐hour television miniseries was broadcast in 6 parts, airing across six consecutive nights on ABC from September 6 to September 11, 1977.[1] The DVD was released on June 5, 2012.[4]


The show did well in the Nielsen ratings. The last segment (Sunday September 11) was the third-highest rated prime time program of the week (23.6 rating, 17.2 million homes); the Thursday episode was fourth (23 rating, 16.7 million); and the debut Tuesday episode ranked eighth (22 rating, or 16 million). Other parts finished 16th (Friday), 17th (Wednesday), and 25th (Saturday; typically a low viewership night) for the same week.[5]

- Robert Vaughn (won)

Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

(nominated)

Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Miniseries

- Jason Robards (nominated)

Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie

Robert Vaughn received an Emmy Award for his performance as the President's Chief of Staff, with other nominations going to the show itself as Outstanding Series, to Jason Robards for his portrayal of President Richard Monckton with its overt Nixonian images, director Gary Nelson, cinematographers Joseph Biroc and Jack Swain, art directors Jack DeShields and Jamie Claytor and set decorator Barbara Kreiger.[2]

at IMDb

Washington: Behind Closed Doors