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One of the more torturous devices in the history of television
entertainment is the platonic relationship that looks as if it could
explode into romance any minute -- but somehow doesn't. At least not for a
good, long while to build maximum suspense.
We've all been there as TV viewers, feeling the bittersweet, delayed
gratification of seeing that first smooch between crime-fighting partners
or superficially combative neighbors. More often than not, several -- even
many -- seasons in the life of a show can go by before the dam breaks and
love is in the air.
Then it's a whole new ball game. Will love last? Was the original
relationship ruined by upping the ante? Television writers can always turn
the tables and create all kinds of mischief with an audience's emotions.
Here are 10 examples of chaste bonds that blossomed (or almost
blossomed, or which may yet blossom) into something more.
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Dr. Joel Fleischman and Maggie O'Connell, "Northern Exposure"
Rob Morrow's New York
City-born general practitioner was mightily vexed that the Alaskan
scholarship that put him through Columbia University Medical School
forced him to spend a few years as lone doctor in the 49th state's
tiny, eccentric Cicely instead of Anchorage. (Of course, what Joel
really wanted was to be back in Manhattan.)
It didn't help that his Cicely landlady, bush pilot Maggie (Janine Turner), rubbed
him the wrong way and was generally caustic about Joel's big city
airs. But anyone could see a spark of attraction between the two,
through all their verbal sparring and exchanged insults.
Eventually, tolerance grew as they got to know each other and, by
Season 5, Joel and Maggie were struggling to make a go of it. They
had a brief, unconventional romance (including a memorable flight on
a Russian jet to St. Petersburg), but in the end they were destined
to be not permanent lovers but great supports for one another's
unique destinies.
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Captain Janeway and Commander Chakotay, "Star Trek: Voyager"
While in pursuit of a Maquis ship under the command of Chakotay
(Robert Beltran),
Janeway's starship Voyager is thrown thousands of light years into
the galaxy's Delta Quadrant.
Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) loses much
of her crew, forcing her to declare a truce with the Maquis (rebels
seeking freedom from the heavy-handed Federation). Chakotay and his
people join Janeway's staff, and in an effort at diplomacy, the
captain appoints the Maquis leader her first officer.
During the series' seven seasons, Janeway and Chakotay enjoyed a
mutually respectful relationship on Voyager's long, long journey
home. But they also developed a great trust that brought them closer
as people, and "Trek" fans could certainly feel the show's writers
dangling the possibility of, say, a permanent cessation of
hostilities between at least one Maquis warrior and one Starfleet
regular.
Things came to a head in one of the show's best episodes,
"Resolutions," in which Janeway and Chakotay are left alone on a
planet after contracting an incurable virus. With no crew to worry
about, the pair drops formalities and starts to make a life for
themselves. (Chakotay even builds Janeway a bathhouse. Woo-hoo!) But
just before nature takes over entirely, those Voyager busybodies
return with a cure (gee, thanks, guys), and the near-lovers resume
their old close-but-no-cigar connection.
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Maddie Hayes and David Addison, "Moonlighting"
After ex-model Maddie (Cybill Shepherd) finds
herself the victim of a business manager's embezzling, she has
little left in her portfolio besides the Blue Moon Detective Agency.
Tempted to sell, Maddie changes her mind after meeting the
company's quirky employees, especially private eye David (Bruce Willis), who talks
her into keeping the sleuth shop.
Thus begins a taut and highly verbose relationship, with a tip of
the hat to Hollywood's screwball comedy era. The chemistry between
David and Maddie was classic love-hate: Maddie was icy and prone to
yelling, while David was flippant, constantly making sexual advances
and jokes.
"Moonlighting" creator Glenn Gordon Caron was
rewarded with high ratings for the show, and he tweaked the formula
in all sorts of creative ways, including blatant in-jokes and a
full-dress version of Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew."
The audience ate it up and waited through two seasons before
David and Maddie finally consummated their partnership. The episode
was awkward, however: Maddie thought she was about to bed down with
another man (Mark Harmon), but she
found David between the sheets instead.
Their romance was bumpy over the long haul, however. There were
other lovers and a miscarriage, but what really threw things off
were scheduling problems that kept Willis and Shepherd from
appearing in the same episodes.
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Matt Dillon and Miss Kitty Russell, "Gunsmoke"
Did they ever get it on? Well, they certainly knew each other
well over the series' two decades, and there were plenty of
indications of how Miss Kitty (Amanda Blake), who owned
the Long Branch saloon in Dodge City, felt about the lawman.
In the 1966 episode "The Jailer," for example, a vengeful and
observant Bette Davis kidnaps
Kitty draw Dillon (James Arness) into a
trap, and keeps referring to the marshal as her hostage's "man."
Dillon comes running, for sure.
CBS left it all to the viewer to decide, and "Gunsmoke" was
indeed the kind of show that takes root in the fertile ground of a
fan's imagination. So, yes, indeed, for some of us there had to be
more to Kitty and Matt's story than meets the eye. But it was
definitely offscreen and behind closed doors.
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