Year of the Month
Action, adventure, and eye candy in several senses of the word.
The Rockford Files went off the air the same year Magnum, P.I. premiered, and Tom Selleck’s Magnum was its natural successor. I couldn’t ever verify that anyone copped to the inspiration, but it’s hard to miss.
Just like Jim Rockford, Thomas Magnum is a wisecracking detective with a difficult past (a wrongful conviction for Rockford, service in the Vietnam War for Magnum) who ekes out a living in a beautiful beachy paradise. He’s played by an attractive man with easy charisma (whatever you think of drek like Blue Bloods, there’s a reason Tom Selleck was an early pick for Indiana Jones). There are mysteries to be solved, old and new friends and lovers to contend with, and a car chase or two pretty much every episode. Usually things are wrapped up in the length of a one-hour episode. Both Rockford and Magnum establish a familiar, comforting formula.
But Magnum is much more comfortable with a gun, and the action sequences are faster-paced. The most visible change is probably the glitz. Instead of struggling to keep an older sedan afloat and living in a trailer on a Los Angeles beach, Magnum gets to drive a beautiful Ferrari and live in a split-level Colonial on the north shore of Oahu. Cleverly, this isn’t a “how the hell do the Friends friends afford their rent?” situation. Eccentric author Robin Masters1, something of a cross between Jackie Collins and Ian Fleming, took a liking to Magnum and invited him to live in the guest house on his Hawaiian estate. Magnum’s room, board and the use of that beautiful car are all covered, without having to make Magnum particularly rich or privileged. This was a pretty good trick; it gives us all the glamorous trappings of a Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous episode while still keeping the lead character’s everyman appeal.
Magnum is a born button-pusher, a Bugs Bunny who solves crimes.
Magnum is supported by two best friends from his service in Vietnam: T.C. (Roger E. Mosley), now a private helicopter pilot and tour guide, and Rick (Larry Manetti), who usually manages a luxe nightclub and has “business associates” with names like “Icepick.” They provide resources and plot devices as needed. T.C. and Rick were in the Marine Corps; Magnum was a Navy SEAL and intelligence officer. Rick’s nightclub provides convenient cover, free drinks, and sometimes mysteries to solve. T.C. is a reliable source of rescue, and his helicopter gives the showrunners the opportunity for some beautiful location shots. Their shared military service also fuels more than one plot.2
Rick is a bit of an eccentric who would really rather be Humphrey Bogart than a guy whose legal name is Orville; T.C. falls a bit more into the “one Black character” trap, but he still has a distinct personality, and the men’s shared military service makes it logical that they would stay in each other’s lives.
Then there’s Higgins.
Jonathan Quayle Higgins III is, when we first meet him, absolutely fucking done with Magnum. He’s the major-domo of Robin’s Nest, Robin Masters’ Hawaiian estate, and he treats Magnum as a continual thorn in his side. Higgins lives in the main house with two perfectly behaved Dobermans named Zeus and Apollo, who appear to have hated Magnum on sight and can be relied upon to growl or bark whenever the script decides it’s funniest. (Higgins calls them “lads” and is quite protective of them if they’re threatened. It’s adorable.) Higgins, an extremely British character played by extremely Texan Jonathan Hillerman3, is the button-down, straight-laced contrast to Magnum’s Hawaiian-shirted free spirit. Magnum is a born button-pusher, a Bugs Bunny who solves crimes, and Higgins has Elmer Fudd written all over him.
I’m an absolute sucker for a Worthy Adversary character; the kind who opposes the hero not because they’re a villain but because they’re a decent, well-intentioned person doing their best. Higgins is a stuffed shirt wearing a ludicrous uniform, but he’s also loyal, pragmatic and chivalrous. He runs Robin’s Nest like a well-oiled machine, and Magnum’s continued squeakiness throws him continually off-kilter…but he’s not always wrong about things, either. (Hillerman and Selleck each won an Emmy for their roles.)
Higgins becomes a good friend, but neither he nor Magnum ever fully let go of the push-and-pull dynamic that characterizes their relationship. (The seventh season devotes a full episode to an escalating and increasingly vicious prank war between Magnum and Higgins. It’s a fan favorite for good reason.) Both Higgins and Magnum are veterans (the Pacific theater of World War II for Higgins4, Vietnam for Magnum) and one of their early common areas of respect are for each other’s service.
Magnum was one of the first shows to represent Vietnam vets as series regulars, neither ignoring their service nor depicting them as barely-functional trainwrecks. Which was not to say that their service didn’t inform the plot: some of the show’s most famous episodes were about their military history. Did You See the Sunrise? might be Magnum, P.I.‘s most famous storyline. A two-hour opening that was split into two parts for syndication, it focuses on Magnum and T.C. facing off against Ivan, the Russian military officer who held them hostage in a Vietnamese P.O.W. camp.5
Its ending was shocking at the time, with Magnum confronting Ivan alone. Ivan has diplomatic immunity, and tells Magnum that he knows the detective better than his own mother.
“Your sense of honor and fair play. Oh, you could shoot me, if I was armed and coming after you. But like this, Thomas, never.”
And then Magnum lifts up his gun. The episode cuts to black, but the sound of a gunshot tells us what he’s chosen.6
Did You See the Sunrise? carries a lot of the best and worst of Magnum. It treats the veterans of the United States’ greatest military debacle7 with dignity and respect, but also dips into some of the silliest cliches about that war and its P.O.W.s. A lot of Magnum is one-step-forward, two-steps-back like that.
It recognizes the pan-Asian and Pacific Islander population of Hawaii in a way that’s not a given even now8, but is sometimes damn silly about it. (There’s an episode about a samurai, played by the legendary Mako, that makes me cringe a little to remember!)
Fun fact: I’m also pretty sure the first time I saw karaoke was on a Magnum episode. I’m mostly telling you this so you can watch Tom Selleck trying to sing “Misty.”
Magnum, P.I. wouldn’t work at all without Selleck; his wry voiceover carries us through every episode. Shows that followed it (Burn Notice is one great example) understood how much fun it is to have a strong narrator take you through his thought process and whatever tense or wacky shit he’s up to.
Selleck wears Thomas Magnum’s loud Hawaiian shirts naturally. He looks great behind the wheel of a Ferrari, and, honestly, everywhere else. He’s a handsome guy with a handsome shirtless torso. He looks back at the camera at the end of every credit sequence, inviting you into the next adventure, and millions of people wanted to join him.
Magnum, P.I. ran for seven seasons, and did well in syndication; but by 1987, the show was clearly nearing the end. The final episode of Season 7 was “Limbo.” Magnum, in a coma, tries to help his lost love Michelle and reach out and say goodbye to all his friends. In the final moments, he seems to walk into the afterlife. Magnum’s death was originally meant to finish off the series.
…and then they got renewed for a shortened real final season. They figured it out. Magnum gets out of the coma, the Season 8 opener features his friends dealing with the trauma of Magnum’s near-death, and they end the series on a brighter note, with Magnum re-activating his Navy commission and looking forward to a very different future.9
Honestly, even with the bits that aged badly, Magnum, P.I. is a blast. It understands the power of breaking the formula, with episodes ranging from serious to goofy (including a recurring role for Carol Burnett and a delightful crossover with Murder, She Wrote). The guest stars are incredible (Jessica Walter! Chuck Mangione! Richard Roundtree! Phil Hartman! Shannon Doherty! Dozens of Hawaiian singers and actors!) Little character notes like T.C. gently teasing Higgins for being too stiff are great. And it’s hard to beat the gorgeous landscape of Hawaii.
Magnum, P.I. was a step forward at the time, and an excellent time capsule now. And it’s hard to beat that theme song.
About the writer
Bridgett Taylor
Bridgett Taylor has a day job, but would rather talk about comic books. She lives in small-town Vermont (she has met Bernie; she has not met Noah Kahan), where she ushers at local theatrical productions and talks too much at Town Meeting.
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Conversation
Fun fact: Tom Selleck had previously appeared as private eye (and walking TV detective cliche) Lance White on The Rockford Files, a role that clearly helped open the door for Magnum. Only Selleck wasn’t particularly happy with the character as initially written, and talked with Jim Garner about things. Garner told Selleck to make his dissatisfaction known and stick to his guns, and the rest is history.
As a teen, I discovered Magnum first in syndicated reruns and then in its last three years on primetime. (Stuff was syndicated fast.) I remember enjoying it often but not always, finding a lot of its storytelling a bit too broad, And dear lord, I hated the ending to Did You Ever See the Sunrise? Just hated it. But i kept going to the end, and stuck with the reruns till I got bored. (It should have ended with his death.) As an adult, I have not revisited it yet, but having seen Rockford, I suspect my patience with it might be a bit thinner since the grit of Jim’s LA suits me better than the glitz of Honolulu.
Still, there is a lot to be said for Magnum. “I know what you’re thinking.” Magnum’s Tigers cap (Selleck’s favorite team as a native of Detroit). The show apparently taking place in the same continuity as Hawaii Five-O. Rick actually going to prison late in the series for his illegal collection of old guns. Elisha Cook as Icepick. Everything about Higgins. Really, outside of Magnum being a killer, the only thing I actively dislike is how little respect Jessica Fletcher showed Magnum. Not a very gracious guest.
I watched the syndicated episodes after school too! I was sort of glad that Magnum didn’t die at the end, it was certainly thematic and earned within the episode and all but I’m not sure that a fun weekly mystery show really earned that weight overall. It certainly wouldn’t have been as awful as Sam not going home, but I’m not sure it would have felt right, and I did actually like that the next season opener dealt with Magnum’s friends, particularly Higgins, not handling his near-death well at all. (The actual finale also has the dumbest/best Higgins as Robin Masters joke or the whole series.)
I lean more toward Magnum but I’m well aware that some of that is pure nostalgia. Having said that, when I started watching Rockford I kept kind of hoping for a Higgins type to show up. I love the acid and I love the buzzkills, especially when they start getting pulled into the nonsense (Karadec in High Potential scratches a similar itch.)
Should give this a shot sometime for fun. Tom Selleck is one of those actors where I couldn’t tell you another role he did outside of this, Blue Bloods, and Friends, but he is a perfect TV star: simply enjoyable to watch week in and week out.
I think you’d like it if you picked the right episode or two. The Carol Burnett episodes are really fun, in part because it’s always great to see the ‘free spirited’ character deal with someone even more insane than he is.
Was looking forward to this article (so I probably should have checked the date it was going up). One thing that strikes me about this show is how it’s from an era where television was very much professionalised – where writers could expect a clear chain-of-command and a ladder to their career that came with it, from writer to head writer to producer to making their own show. Not that this has entirely died – as you note, Burn Notice follows in the show’s footsteps in a lot of ways I’m about to elaborate on – but it’s something that I think people have been clamouring for after about ten years of Netflix style television Events with eight episodes of one story as opposed to the episodic storytelling this show engaged in.
The upshot of this being there was one person dedicated to making the one episode you’re about to watch into something entertaining on its own merits; someone was given the task of “I have to start the episode in its first minute and end it in its last and make sure people keep coming back after every commercial”. It gives TV episodes a sense of drive that movies don’t need as much. Magnum PI being very mu ch in that tradition of “we’re not going to waste your time here”.
Also: nuns don’t work on Sundays.
I think you’re right. It’s one of the reasons people started rediscovering shows like Cheers and Columbo, and it’s definitely key to Abbott Elementary’s breakout success. There’s a little serialization there, but it’s not necessary at all. You can just drop in, enjoy an episode, carry on. (It’s weird to see how many shows let themselves be dragged down by serialization, even as people clearly still want this model. The Pitt has good reason to be tightly serialized. Does High Potential?)
And yeah – you’re getting a story. There’s no Surf Dracula bullshit.
(Thank you, btw, you can comment any time you like <3)