Total Security (TV series)
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Jim Belushi
Debrah Farentino
Tracey Needham
Bill Brochtrup
Flex Alexander
Tony Plana
Kristin Bauer
| Total Security | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Drama |
| Created by | Steven Bochco David Milch Charles H. Eglee Theresa Rebeck |
| Starring | James Remar Jim Belushi Debrah Farentino Tracey Needham Bill Brochtrup Flex Alexander Tony Plana Kristin Bauer |
| Composer | Mike Post |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 13 (7 unaired) |
| Production | |
| Executive producers | Steven Bochco Charles H. Eglee Michael Fresco |
| Producers | Joe Ann Fogle Dayna Flanagan |
| Cinematography | Anthony R. Palmieri |
| Running time | 42 minutes |
| Production companies | 20th Century Fox Television Steven Bochco Productions |
| Original release | |
| Network | ABC |
| Release | September 27 – November 8, 1997 |
Total Security is an American drama television series created by Steven Bochco, David Milch, Charles H. Eglee and Theresa Rebeck. The series stars James Remar, Jim Belushi, Debrah Farentino, Tracey Needham, Bill Brochtrup, Flex Alexander, Tony Plana and Kristin Bauer. The series aired on ABC from September 27 to November 8, 1997.[1][2]
- James Remar as Frank Cisco
- Jim Belushi as Steve Wegman
- Debrah Farentino as Jody Kiplinger
- Tracey Needham as Ellie Jones
- Bill Brochtrup as George LaSalle
- Flex Alexander as Neville Watson
- Tony Plana as Luis Escobar
- Kristin Bauer as Geneva Renault
- Jason Biggs as Robbie Rosenfeld
- Michael MacRae as Michael Miller
- George Wyner as Norman Rosenfeld
Production
In February 1997, it was announced ABC had ordered a pilot from Steven Bochco called Total Security which would follow a team of private security specialists.[3] The following month, it was announced Jim Belushi and James Remar would be starring as the leads for the series.[4] Belushi opted for Private Security after his dissatisfaction with the creative direction of a sitcom project for ABC from Chuck Lorre titled It's Good To Be King, that would've featured him as a Chicago bar owner.[4]