September 22 (1976-09-22) – December 29, 1976 (1976-12-29)
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The Quest
The Quest is an American Western television series which aired on NBC from September to December 1976. The series stars Kurt Russell and Tim Matheson. The pilot episode aired as a television movie on May 13, 1976.
Overview
Two brothers Morgan and Quentin Beaudine are seeking the whereabouts of their long-lost sister, Patricia, thought to be held by the Cheyenne. The siblings were separated after their parents were killed during an "Indian massacre". Morgan, known as "Two Persons", was a captive of the Cheyenne for eight years until he was freed by the United States Army. Quentin was taken to San Francisco, where he was educated as a physician.
After their reunion, the pair journey together over thousands of miles across the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains in search of Patricia; hence, the title The Quest.
A pilot movie aired on May 13, 1976 as a preview of the upcoming series;[3] it received strong ratings, placing in the top 20 programs for the week.[4] The first regular series episode was broadcast on September 22 with an extended 90 minute runtime to recap events from the pilot.[5]
The Quest aired at the 9/10 p.m. Wednesday timeslot,[6] deliberately targeting an adult audience after the failure of the family-oriented western Sara earlier in 1976.[7] It ran opposite Charlie's Angels on ABC, also debuting that fall,[8][9] and The Blue Knight on CBS.[10]
List of episodes of the 1976 television series The Quest
The Beaudines are stranded in a town where a gambler and his pregnant wife are hiding from the father of a man killed by the gambler. Guest starring Julie Cobb, Scott Hylands, and Morgan Woodward.[15]
Background and production
Development
The series was created by Tracy Keenan Wynn,[31] son of Keenan Wynn, who also made two appearances on the series. David Gerber served as the executive producer. Gerber intended to duplicate the "gritty realism, ... attention to detail, character and authenticity" of Police Story in the first prime time western since the end of Gunsmoke.[17] It was the only western scheduled for the upcoming fall 1976 television season.[11]
Consistently low ratings,[32][33] coupled with the fact that Westerns had fallen out of favor with networks and audiences, contributed to the demise of the series. NBC confirmed reports that The Quest had been canceled during its first season on December 7, 1976,[34][35] and the final episode aired on December 29, 1976. Four of the fifteen episodes produced never aired in the US.
Release
Home media
While the entire series has not been released on DVD, a two-part episode, "The Longest Drive", was released on Region 1 DVD by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment in 2005.[36] The television film which served as the series' pilot episode was also released on DVD by Sony in 2011.[37]
Syndication
As of February 2021[update], The Quest airs on the classic TV network Get TV on Sunday afternoons, including the four episodes that were not originally aired.[15][38]
The series is currently available for streaming online on Crackle, while its two-part episode, "The Longest Drive" is currently available for streaming online on Tubi.
Reception
David Eden, reviewing the series for the Albuquerque Journal, compared the chemistry between Russell and Matheson to Starsky and Hutch and praised the acting, script, and production, but concluded the series was not refreshing because it repeated "too many tired story lines from old Westerns".[39]
^"Wednesday Preview". The Courier News. December 3, 1976. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
^"Wednesday". The Daily Item. December 17, 1976. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
^"Wednesday". The Emporia Gazette. December 18, 1976. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
^"Wednesday". The Emporia Gazette. December 24, 1976. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
^Witbeck, Charles (June 20, 1976). "How the Western was won". The Journal News. Gannett News Service. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
^Hanauer, Joan (October 6, 1976). "Nielsen Ratings Listed". Nashua Telegraph. UPI. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
^Deeb, Gary (November 9, 1976). "Hit serial hurts with Nolte gone". Akron Beacon Journal. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 19 May 2021. One of these years, westerns again will rule the TV roost. But apparently this isn't the season. TV's lone current sagebrusher, NBC's The Quest, is drawing consistently anemic ratings. It's a goner, boys ...