Genre: | Legal drama |
Opentheme: | "Philly Theme" by Mike Post |
Composer: | Mike Post |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 22 |
Runtime: | 50 minutes |
Network: | ABC |
Philly is an American legal drama television series created by Steven Bochco and Alison Cross, which starred Kim Delaney as defense attorney Kathleen Maguire. The series aired on ABC from September 25, 2001 to May 28, 2002, broadcasting 22 episodes before it was canceled due to low ratings.
Kathleen Maguire is a single mother and partner in a small Philadelphia law firm with Will Froman (Tom Everett Scott). She fights to get her clients out of trouble and deals with professional conflicts arising from her relationship with her ex-husband Dan Cavanaugh (Kyle Secor), the Deputy for Trials. She also starts to date Judge Augustus "Jack" Ripley (James Denton).
As Stephen Bochco had been developing a legal series, he was beginning to become weary of NYPD Blue. Feeling she was underutilized on the show, Bocho offered the lead role to cast member Delaney, who accepted.[1] In March 2001, Scott and Hoffman were cast beside Delaney.[2] ABC ordered the pilot to series in May, and Delaney officially departed NYPD Blue.[3] Based on strong ratings, ABC ordered a full season in November.[4] However, ratings declined over the season, and ABC officially canceled the series at its annual upfronts in May 2002.[5]
The complete series has not been released on DVD by CBS DVD, but is for purchase to stream by episode or the entire season on Amazon Prime. The series briefly aired in syndication on Universal HD in 2008.
The series received mixed reviews from critics. Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly gave the series a grade of "C", stating that the show "is like biting into a cold, stale version of the city's famous cheese steak — it gives you a lot to chew on, but it's pretty greasy, gummy fare."[6] Phil Gallo at Variety gave a lukewarm review of the series, positively reviewing Delaney, but noting the show "lacked a distinctive tone".[7]