Melrose Place | |
---|---|
Season 6 | |
Starring | Linden Ashby Thomas Calabro David Charvet Rob Estes Brooke Langton Jamie Luner Alyssa Milano Lisa Rinna Kelly Rutherford Doug Savant Andrew Shue Jack Wagner Heather Locklear |
No. of episodes | 27 |
Release | |
Original network | Fox |
Original release | September 8, 1997 – March 30, 1998 |
Season chronology | |
The sixth season of Melrose Place , an American television series, premiered on Fox on September 8, 1997. The season six finale aired on March 30, 1998, after 27 episodes.
The season was produced by Chip Hayes, supervising producer James Kahn, co-executive producers Carol Mendelsohn and Charles Pratt, Jr., and executive producers Aaron Spelling, E. Duke Vincent and Frank South.
The season was released on DVD as two-volume box sets under the title of Melrose Place - The Sixth Season: Volumes One and Two. The first volume being released on May 3, 2011 and the latter volume being released on July 19, 2011 by Paramount Home Video. [1]
At the beginning of the sixth season, the show's ratings steadily fell. During most of the first half of the season, Heather Locklear's pregnancy was hidden from viewers with most of Amanda's scenes showing her from the chest up or hidden by props.
The day after Sydney's death Craig blames Samantha, but he later apologizes. In the season opener, Michael recommends Matt for a job at an AIDS clinic and Matt moves to San Francisco with his niece Chelsea. Before leaving, he says that he wanted to say goodbye to everyone but "nobody's home".
Two new characters are violent, vindictive Dr. Brett "Coop" Cooper (Linden Ashby) and his seductive ex-wife, snobbish heiress Lexi Sterling (Jamie Luner). The season focuses on Kyle and Amanda's troubled relationship; Amanda returns to her nasty ways after starting her own agency, Amanda Woodward Advertising. With Jake Hanson gone after selling Shooters, Kyle (backed by Amanda) opens the Upstairs Jazz Club and the bar becomes the group's new hangout. Amanda and Kyle's ex-wife, Taylor, continue their rivalry over him.
Kyle ignores warnings from Jennifer, Michael and Taylor that Amanda is untrustworthy and incapable of love. Amanda's mentor from a New York advertising agency, Eric Baines (Jeffrey Nordling), arrives in Los Angeles for a visit and tries to seduce her. When Amanda spurns his advances, Eric purchases the building with Kyle's restaurant and the jazz club to shut them down. Amanda then agrees to Eric's proposition, keeping it a secret. When Kyle finds out, he attacks Eric and threatens to kill him; Eric then returns their property and leaves town. However, Kyle is angry with Amanda for keeping Eric's proposition a secret and agreeing to it.
Billy and Samantha become engaged, and he asks Craig to be his best man. The couple have a falling-out after Samantha's old friend, Connie (Megan Ward), arrives in town. Although they reconcile and marry, Billy soon cheats on Samantha with Jennifer. Despite the affair, Billy is committed to making his marriage work. Samantha begins an affair with Jeff Baylor (Dan Gauthier), a minor-league baseball player.
Jennifer tries to attract Craig, who is grieving for Sydney, and he agrees to a physical relationship. Craig enters a business partnership with Michael for a mechanical surgical glove, an idea Michael stole from Cooper. Michael betrays Craig, using Jennifer to break up with him so Michael could dissolve the partnership and keep all the profits.
Craig attacks Jennifer after Michael ruins him, but she is helped by Billy after Billy destroys Craig's new advertising company. Craig escapes, steals Jennifer's car and commits suicide.
Peter ends his romance with Taylor after learning that she cooperated with Michael to trick him into thinking he had epilepsy and unseat him at chief of staff at Wilshire Hospital. Taylor tries to win Kyle back, pretending to be pregnant with his baby and asking Michael to impregnate her to make her story believable. She becomes pregnant, has a change of heart and tries to attract Michael, her baby's father.
Kyle is confronted with the return of Christine, his former Gulf War partner who was reported missing in action (and presumed dead) in Iraq, and Amanda is jealous of their friendship. When Christine attempts suicide before Kyle and Amanda's wedding, he abandons Amanda to save her. It is later revealed that Christine is not actually Christine, but she is actually Tiffany Hart (Susan Walters), a woman who Nick hired to pretend to be Christine (telling Kyle she had reconstructive surgery). In the psychiatric ward of Wilshire Hospital Tiffany is manipulated by Nick (another war buddy of Kyle's) and the jealous Taylor. After "Christine" sends another suicide letter to Amanda, Amanda visits her and threatens to kill her.
Tiffany (as Christine) escapes from the hospital to find Kyle and Amanda and tell them the truth about Nick and Taylor. However, Nick runs Tiffany into Kyle's car, accidentally killing her, and he and Taylor bring her dead body to a railway line. After their wedding Kyle and Amanda receive a desperate letter from "Christine", and rush to the railway to rescue her. They are too late; she is "killed" by a train. Amanda, guilty about Tiffany/Christine's "suicide", breaks up with Kyle.
Peter begins a romance with Cooper's ex-wife, Lexi, who asks for his help getting more alimony from her ex-husband (who had a brief affair with Kimberly Shaw when she was recovering in Ohio years earlier). Lexi is addicted to antidepressants, and Peter saves her from a lethal overdose. Her father, who disapproves of her relationship with Peter, dies of a stroke during an argument with him. Blaming Peter, Lexi breaks up with him and reconciles with Cooper (who tries to help her run her late father's business).
Michael faces off with Cooper, who tried to ruin his life because of Kimberly's death. Megan divorces Michael over his manipulation in unseating Peter as the hospital's chief-of-staff and begins a relationship with Cooper. Fired from the hospital, Michael opens a clinic in a poor Los Angeles neighborhood and avenges Megan and Cooper by ruining their plans to move to Philadelphia. He reconciles with Peter after saving his life when they were fishing, regaining part of the Burns-Mancini practice and his job at Wilshire.
In alphabetical order
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | U.S. viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
165 | 1 | "A Brand New Day" | Frank South | Frank South | September 8, 1997 | 2397158 | 10.69 [3] |
166 | 2 | "The Trojan Stork" | Charles Correll | Charles Pratt, Jr. | September 15, 1997 | 2397159 | 10.27 [4] |
167 | 3 | "No Time for Sperm Banks" | Jefferson Kibbee | Carol Mendelsohn | September 22, 1997 | 2397160 | 10.16 [5] |
168 | 4 | "The Doctor Is In...Deep" | Anson Williams | James Kahn | September 29, 1997 | 2397161 | 10.62 [6] |
169 | 5 | "Desperately Seeking Samantha" | Chip Chalmers | Neil Landau | October 20, 1997 | 2397162 | 9.99 [7] |
170 | 6 | "The Light At the End of the Tumble" | Charles Correll | Cynthia J. Cohen | October 27, 1997 | 2397163 | 10.28 [8] |
171 | 7 | "Secrets and Wives" | Jefferson Kibbee | Antoinette Stella | November 3, 1997 | 2397164 | 9.88 [9] |
172 | 8 | "A Shot in the Dark" | Anson Williams | Frank South | November 10, 1997 | 2397165 | 10.55 [10] |
173 | 9 | "Attack of the Scalpel Woman" | Chip Chalmers | Charles Pratt, Jr. | November 17, 1997 | 2397166 | 10.24 [11] |
174 | 10 | "My Little Coma Girl" | Charles Correll | Carol Mendelsohn | November 24, 1997 | 2397167 | 10.70 [12] |
175 | 11 | "Everybody Comes to Kyle's" | Jefferson Kibbee | James Kahn | December 1, 1997 | 2397168 | 9.75 [13] |
176 | 12 | "A Bump in the Night" | Charles Correll | Cynthia J. Cohen | December 15, 1997 | 2397169 | 8.76 [14] |
177 | 13 | "A Tree Talks in Melrose" | Thomas Calabro | Antoinette Stella | December 22, 1997 | 2397170 | 8.25 [15] |
178 | 14 | "To Kill a Whirlybird" | Charles Correll | Frank South | January 5, 1998 | 2397171 | 10.31 [16] |
179 | 15 | "Amanda's Back" | Charles Correll | James Kahn | January 12, 1998 | 2397172 | 10.77 [17] |
180 | 16 | "Kyle of the Desert" | Charles Pratt, Jr. | Charles Pratt, Jr. | January 19, 1998 | 2397173 | 10.38 [18] |
181 | 17 | "Coop de Grace" | Chip Hayes | Chip Hayes | January 26, 1998 | 2397174 | 10.14 [19] |
182 | 18 | "Mama Mia" | Thomas Calabro | Carol Mendelsohn | February 2, 1998 | 2397175 | 9.90 [20] |
183 | 19 | "Last Train to Baghdad: Part 1 & 2" | Anson Williams | James Kahn & Frank South | February 9, 1998 | 2397176A | 10.39 [21] |
184 | 20 | 2397176B | |||||
185 | 21 | "A Swing and a Mrs." | Jefferson Kibbee | Antoinette Stella & Cynthia J. Cohen | February 16, 1998 | 2397177 | 9.77 [22] |
186 | 22 | "Blunt Drama" | Harvey Frost | Charles Pratt, Jr. | February 23, 1998 | 2397178 | 10.17 [23] |
187 | 23 | "A Christine Runs Through It" | Charles Correll | Carol Mendelsohn | March 2, 1998 | 2397179 | 10.43 [24] |
188 | 24 | "Too Romantic For Words" | Chip Chalmers | Frank South | March 9, 1998 | 2397180 | 10.75 [25] |
189 | 25 | "Four Affairs and a Pregnancy" | Jefferson Kibbee | James Kahn | March 16, 1998 | 2397181 | 10.15 [26] |
190 | 26 | "M.P. Confidential" | Robert J. Metoyer | Charles Pratt, Jr. | March 30, 1998 | 2397182 | 10.98 [27] |
191 | 27 | "The Nasty Minded Professor" | Charles Correll | Chip Hayes | March 30, 1998 | 2397183 | 10.98 [27] |
Melrose Place is an American prime time television soap opera that aired on Fox from July 8, 1992, to May 24, 1999, for seven seasons. The show follows the lives of a group of young adults living in an apartment complex on Melrose Place, in West Hollywood, California. The show was created by Darren Star for Fox and executive produced by Aaron Spelling for his company, Spelling Television. It was the second series in the Beverly Hills, 90210 franchise. Season one and season two were broadcast on Wednesday at 9 pm, after Beverly Hills, 90210. In 1994, for its third-season and for the rest of its run, the show moved to Monday at 8 p.m.
Suddenly Susan is an American television sitcom that aired on NBC from September 19, 1996, to December 26, 2000. The series was created by Clyde Phillips and starred Brooke Shields in her first regular series. Shields played Susan Keane, a glamorous San Francisco magazine writer who begins to adjust to being single, and who learns to be independent-minded after having been taken care of all her life. The series was developed by Gary Dontzig and Steven Peterman, who also served as executive producers during the first three seasons, and was produced by Warner Bros. Television.
Jesse is an American sitcom television series created by Ira Ungerleider and starring Christina Applegate, that ran on NBC from September 24, 1998, to May 25, 2000, for two seasons of a total 42 episodes.
Veronica's Closet is an American television sitcom created by David Crane and Marta Kauffman. It aired on NBC for three seasons, from September 25, 1997 to December 7, 2000.
Two of a Kind is an American sitcom that aired on ABC as part of the network's TGIF line-up, starring Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in their first television series since Full House ended in 1995. The show aired from September 25, 1998, to July 9, 1999.
Life with Bonnie is an ABC television sitcom that originally aired from September 17, 2002 to April 9, 2004. The show outlined the life of character Bonnie Malloy, who juggled her personal life and her job as a daytime TV talk show host. The series was created by Bonnie Hunt and Don Lake and produced by Bob & Alice Productions, in association with Touchstone Television. The series had fair ratings in the first season, but struggled in the second season, resulting in its cancellation. Life With Bonnie was also shown on Living TV during ABC's airings.
Sparks is an American sitcom that aired on UPN from August 26, 1996, to March 2, 1998. The series stars James Avery, Robin Givens, Terrence Howard, Miguel A. Núñez Jr., Kym Whitley and Arif S. Kinchen. The sitcom is set in Los Angeles, California, and is about the everyday lives of a family of lawyers running a family-owned law practice. Reruns of the show aired on BET in the late 1990s.
Union Square is an American sitcom television series created by Marco Pennette and Fred Barron, that was broadcast on NBC for one season from September 25, 1997, to January 22, 1998. The show was supposed to serve as a vehicle for actress Mel Gorham, using her life as its basis, but was retooled into an ensemble sitcom without Gorham after the original pilot was poorly received.
You Wish is an American fantasy sitcom television series created by Michael Jacobs, that ran from September 26, 1997, to June 19, 1998. It started as part of ABC's TGIF programming on Friday nights for the fall of 1997, along with Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, Boy Meets World, and Teen Angel.
Nick Freno: Licensed Teacher is an American sitcom television series starring comedian Mitch Mullany that aired on The WB from August 28, 1996, to May 3, 1998.
The fourth season of the American fictional drama television series ER first aired on September 25, 1997, and concluded on May 14, 1998. The fourth season consists of 22 episodes.
The fifth season of Frasier originally aired from September 23, 1997 to May 19, 1998 on NBC. The fifth episode is the only episode of the series to have scenes filmed on location in Seattle.
George and Leo is an American sitcom television series starring Bob Newhart and Judd Hirsch that aired on CBS from September 15, 1997 to March 16, 1998.
The fourth season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager commenced airing on UPN in the United States on September 3, 1997, and concluded on May 20, 1998, after airing 26 episodes. Set in the 24th century, the series followed the adventures of the Starfleet and Maquis crew of the starship USS Voyager after they were stranded in the Delta Quadrant, far from the rest of the Federation. Season Four featured the debut of new main cast member Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine, nicknamed Seven, and the departure of Jennifer Lien, who portrayed Kes during the first three seasons of the show. At the end of the season, co-creator and executive producer Jeri Taylor retired.
This is a list of episodes from the second season of King of the Hill, which aired on Fox from September 21, 1997 to May 17, 1998 for 23 episodes. Season 2 also saw the show net its highest ever Nielsen ranking at #15, and except for their broadcast of Super Bowl XXXI in 1997, it was the highest Nielsen rating for any Fox show up to that point, even beating The Simpsons at times.
Diagnosis: Murder's fifth season originally aired Thursdays at 9:00–10:00 pm (EST). The season includes the 100th episode of the series. This is the first season of the show that didn’t feature Michael Tucci in his role as Chief Hospital Administrator Norman Briggs.
The fifth season of Melrose Place, an American television series, premiered on Fox on September 9, 1996. The season five finale aired on May 19, 1997, after 34 episodes.
The seventh and final season of Melrose Place, an American television series, premiered on Fox on July 27, 1998. The series finale aired on May 24, 1999, after 35 episodes.