The Love Boat: The Next Wave

The Love Boat: The Next Wave
Created by Aaron Spelling
Starring Robert Urich
Phil Morris
Tim Maculan
Joan Severance
Corey Parker
Randy Vasquez
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 25
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) Spelling Television
Worldvision Enterprises
Distributor CBS Television Distribution
Release
Original network UPN
Original release April 13, 1998 (1998-04-13) – May 21, 1999 (1999-05-21)
Chronology
Related shows The Love Boat

The Love Boat: The Next Wave is an American television series and a revival of the original 1977–1986 ABC sitcom The Love Boat which aired on UPN from April 13, 1998 to May 21, 1999.

Plot

Set aboard the cruise liner Sun Princess, Robert Urich starred as Captain Jim Kennedy, a retired and divorced (with a teenage son) U.S. Navy officer. Heidi Mark was cast as the cruise director and Joan Severance was cast as Security Chief Camille Hunter.

"Reunion"

A reunion-themed episode guest-starred several cast members of the original show – Gavin MacLeod (Captain Stubing), Bernie Kopell (Dr. Adam "Doc" Bricker), Ted Lange (Isaac Washington), Jill Whelan (Vicki Stubing) and Lauren Tewes (Julie McCoy) – where it was revealed that Julie and "Doc" had been in love all along.[1]

Cast

Episode titles

Season 1: 1998

  1. Smooth Sailing — 1998.04.13
  2. Remember? — 1998.04.20
  3. I Can't Get No Satisfaction — 1998.04.27
  4. How Long Has This Been Going On? — 1998.05.04
  5. True Course — 1998.05.11
  6. Getting to Know You — 1998.05.18

Season 2: 1998–99

  1. All Aboard — 1998.10.09
  2. It Takes Two to Tango — 1998.10.16
  3. Captains Courageous — 1998.10.23
  4. Reunion — 1998.10.30
  5. All That Glitters — 1998.11.06
  6. Bermuda Triangle Episode — 1998.11.13
  7. Affairs to Remember — 1998.11.20
  8. Dust, Lust, Destiny — 1998.12.18
  9. Don't Judge a Book by Its Lover — 1999.01.01
  10. Blind Love — 1999.01.22
  11. Other People's Business — 1999.02.05
  12. Love Floats: The St. Valentine's Day Massacre — 1999.02.12
  13. Three Stages of Love — 1999.02.19
  14. Divorce, Downbeat and Distemper — 1999.02.26
  15. Such Sweet Dreams — 1999.03.19
  16. Trances of a Lifetime — 1999.04.30
  17. About Face — 1999.05.07
  18. Prom Queen — 1999.05.14
  19. Cuba — 1999.05.21

Reception

Carole Horst of Variety called it "a pleasant one-hour trip" that will appeal to fan of the original show.[2]

See also

References

  1. Mitchelmore, Pam (2005). "Reunion". Retrieved from http://epguides.com/LoveBoatTheNextWave/guide.shtml#ep010.
  2. Horst, Carole (1998-04-09). "Review: The Love Boat: The Next Wave". Variety. Retrieved 2016-11-04.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.