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unusual facts about The Streets of San Francisco


Art Passarella

He is best known for portraying Sergeant Sekulovich on The Streets of San Francisco.


Cassie Yates

She appeared in various television series, including McMillan & Wife, Rich Man, Poor Man Book II, The Bionic Woman, The Streets of San Francisco, Vega$, Simon & Simon, Magnum, P.I., Hotel, Cagney & Lacey, Thirtysomething and Murder, She Wrote.

Ellen Geer

Television series on which she appeared during this time included Police Story, The Streets of San Francisco, Baretta, Barnaby Jones, Charlie's Angels, CHiPs and two episodes of Fantasy Island.

Gary Vinson

During the 1970s and 1980s, Vinson continued with guest roles on episodic television appearing again in Mod Squad, Love, American Style, McCloud, The Streets of San Francisco, The Waltons, S.W.A.T., Baa Baa Black Sheep, Battlestar Galactica, and Barnaby Jones.

Joseph V. Perry

In the 1970s his visibility peaked with guest appearances on shows of the day like Mannix, Emergency and The Streets of San Francisco and Kojak.

Kay Lenz

Lenz made guest appearances in The Streets of San Francisco, Gunsmoke, MacGyver, McCloud, Cannon, and Petrocelli, and played a lead role in the film White Line Fever (1975) before being cast in the miniseries Rich Man, Poor Man in 1976, for which she was nominated for an Emmy Award.

Laurie Heineman

She has also made periodic guest appearances on such primetime series as Kaz, Lou Grant, Hart to Hart, The Incredible Hulk, The Streets of San Francisco, Rafferty (TV Series), and Law & Order, She also co-starred in the TV miniseries Studs Lonigan, and in many TV movies including Terror on the 40th Floor.

Michael Gaffey

Quinn Martin recalled in 1971, The Lineup aka San Francisco Beat when he created The Streets of San Francisco.

Separate Vocations

The episode features cultural references to films such as Bullitt, The Wild One, and Beverly Hills Cop, and the television series The Streets of San Francisco.

Trish Stewart

She guest starred in numerous television shows in the 1970s including Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, Trapper John M.D., Barnaby Jones and The Streets of San Francisco, Sword of Justice, Project U.F.O., The Rookies, CHIPs, Most Wanted and Bert D'Angelo, Superstar.


see also

Kintaro Walks Japan

Unable to find a distributor for the documentary of the trek, MacNiven burned 1,000 DVDs and began hawking copies of the film on the streets of San Francisco and at a restaurant his father owns.