The actor, the father of 50 Shades of Grey actress Dakota Johnson, also starred on Nash Bridges and appeared on a season of Eastbound and Down.
Abel Ferrera, who went on to make Bad Lieutenant, directed a pair of episodes in 1985.Īnother key contributor was Czech composer Jan Hammer, who wrote the series’ theme song and all of the music for the first four seasons before he was replaced by Timothy Truman for the fifth.ĭon Johnson, who had struggled as a TV actor for many years, starring in multiple pilots that weren’t picked up, was cast in the lead role of Sonny Crockett and played it for all five seasons of the series. John Milius, the famed screenwriter of Apocalypse Now and director of Red Dawn and Conan the Barbarian, wrote a well-known fourth season episode called "Viking Bikers From Hell." Joel Surnow, who nine episodes of the series, went on to co-create 24, while Rob Cohen, who directed three episodes, went on to direct the original The Fast and the Furious movie. Wolf would go on to create the Law & Order franchise, and later the Chicago Fire/Chicago PD franchise, all for NBC.
The creative team of Miami Vice, in addition to Yerkovich and Mann, contained more than a few names you'll recognize.Dick Wolf, also a veteran of Hill Street Blues, was producer of Miami Vice in season 3 and executive producer starting in Season 4, and he wrote 15 episodes of the series himself.
13 The show had a creative team full of big names
Yerkovich, who also wrote for Starsky and Hutch, Hart to Hart, and the Ed O’Neill cop show Big Apple, appears to be retired from showbiz, although he did have a credit on the 2006 Miami Vice movie. If you associate the creative side of Miami Vice primarily with Michael Mann, that’s because the director of Manhunter, The Last of the Mohicans and The Insider, while not a creator, took over showrunning duties during the first season. Having visited Miami and spent time with undercover Vice cops, Yerkovich described his original vision for the series in a 1985 interview with Time magazine, as “ a modern-day American Casablanca,” taking into account the drug trade, large numbers of Cuban immigrants, and how they all came together at that time.
Yerkovich, a longtime writer for the most noted prestige cop show in the earlier part of the decade, Hill Street Blues, originally conceived Miami Vice as a movie, which was called Gold Coast at the time. But “MTV Cops” was far from the actual genesis of the series. Tartikoff, the legendary executive who died of cancer in 1997, does deserve some credit for shepherding Miami Vice into existence, along with other series from NBC’s 1980s run of success. That idea was also clearly in the ether of Hollywood at the time, with another Miami drug story, Brian De Palma’s Scarface, landing in 1983. However, Yerkovich, a former Hill Street Blues producer, had already been at work on a lot of the concepts that would eventually become Miami Vice, including telling a story about a pair of Miami cops taking on the drug trade. Tartikoff, according to various accounts, really did write “MTV Cops” on a napkin. The story is consistent with the 1980s ethos of basing popular TV shows and movies on a “high concept.” But it’s not really quite that simple. Miami Vice has an iconic, foundational myth: famed NBC entertainment executive Brandon Tartikoff, in a brainstorming meeting with series co-creator Anthony Yerkovich at some point in the early 1980s, wrote a brief phrase on a napkin: “ MTV Cops.” Yerkovich read it, it formed the basis for the show, and the rest was history. To commemorate the 10 year anniversary of the film and celebrate the series that inspired it, here are 15 Things You Didn’t Know About Miami Vice. The film, the result of a troubled production and bad word of mouth ahead of its release, was a modest box office hit, and has been defended by a small but passionate coterie of critics and other fans.
Years after Miami Vice went off the air, one of its executive producers, Michael Mann, directed a rebooted movie version, also called Miami Vice, which was released on July 28, 2006. Miami Vice also popularized the “five o’ clock shadow" beard stubble look, and featured Miami detectives in sunglasses years before Horacio Crane pulled it off on CSI: Miami. The characters favored pastel colors, white jackets over t-shirts, and other clothes from noted Italian designers. The series was very much a piece of its time, and it had a great influence on the fashion and culture of the late 1980s. Running five seasons on NBC, from 1984 to 1989, the show featured Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas as Crockett and Tubbs, a pair of Miami-Dade detectives, often working undercover on drug cases. No TV series defined the 1980s quite like Miami Vice.