Kate Brasher

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Kate Brasher
KateBrasher.jpg
Genre Drama
Created by Stephen Tolkin
Starring Mary Stuart Masterson
Rhea Perlman
Hector Elizondo
Theme music composer Nathan Barr
Lisbeth Scott [1]
No. of episodes 6
Production
Executive producer(s) Danny DeVito
John Landgraf
Stacey Sher
Stephen Tolkin
Producer(s) Mary Stuart Masterson
Cyrus I. Yavneh
Cinematography Gordon Lonsdale
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) Jersey Television
CBS Productions
20th Century Fox Television
Release
Original network CBS
Original release February 24 –
April 14, 2001

Kate Brasher is an American dramatic television series that was broadcast by CBS. It premiered at 9:00pm ET/PT on Saturday, February 24, 2001 and was cancelled after six episodes.

The title character was the single mother of teenaged sons Daniel and Elvis. Facing a financial crisis, she seeks legal advice at Brothers Keepers, an inner city community advocacy center, and is offered a job as a social worker. Her co-workers include attorney Abbie Schaeffer and Joe Almeida, the organization's street-smart director, who founded it after his daughter was killed in gang crossfire.

Series creator Stephen Tolkin based the character of Almeida on Rabbi Mark Borovitz, an ex-convict and alcoholic who became the spiritual leader of Gateways Beit T'Shuvah, a residential treatment center for Jews in recovery from alcohol and drug addiction. The two men met when Tolkin contacted the rabbi for help with a friend who was dealing with substance abuse.[2]

Although set in Santa Monica, the series was shot on location in San Diego, California.

Among those actors making guest appearances during the series' short run were K Callan, Dennis Christopher, Paul Dooley, Mariette Hartley, Josh Hopkins, Carl Lumbly, David Naughton, and Mackenzie Phillips.[1]

Principal cast

Critical reception

Anita Gates of the New York Times said the series "has an appealing cast and doesn't insult viewers' intelligence most of the time. But the main characters - who are 100 percent good and face off against people who are 100 percent bad - always seem to be making self-righteous speeches . . . There's nothing wrong with inspiring little speeches that make audiences cheer. It was always a pleasure to see Dixie Carter get carried away with one of hers on Designing Women. But the speeches have to say something in a fresh way, and even Ms. Carter's orations got old once the show's writers became so self-conscious about them.

Kate Brasher is trying too hard . . . to be quirky . . . to create a noisy ER-ish atmosphere of hustle, bustle, chaos and crisis, . . . [and] to be simultaneously uplifting and cynical." [3]

References

External links