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The Love Boat

  • TV Series
  • 1977–1987
  • TV-G
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
15K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
709
101
Fred Grandy, Bernie Kopell, Ted Lange, Gavin MacLeod, and Lauren Tewes in The Love Boat (1977)
Feel-Good RomanceSitcomComedyDramaRomance

The romantic and comic tales of the passengers and crew of the cruise ship, Pacific Princess.The romantic and comic tales of the passengers and crew of the cruise ship, Pacific Princess.The romantic and comic tales of the passengers and crew of the cruise ship, Pacific Princess.

  • Creator
    • Wilford Lloyd Baumes
  • Stars
    • Gavin MacLeod
    • Bernie Kopell
    • Ted Lange
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    709
    101
    • Creator
      • Wilford Lloyd Baumes
    • Stars
      • Gavin MacLeod
      • Bernie Kopell
      • Ted Lange
    • 47User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 5 Primetime Emmys
      • 4 wins & 21 nominations total

    Episodes250

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated

    Videos4

    Million Dollar Invention
    Video 0:53
    Million Dollar Invention
    Pacific Princess Commercial
    Video 1:14
    Pacific Princess Commercial
    Pacific Princess Commercial
    Video 1:14
    Pacific Princess Commercial
    Swinging Singles
    Video 2:07
    Swinging Singles
    Opening Credits
    Video 1:46
    Opening Credits

    Photos830

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    + 823
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Gavin MacLeod
    Gavin MacLeod
    • Captain Merrill Stubing…
    • 1977–1987
    Bernie Kopell
    Bernie Kopell
    • Doctor Adam Bricker…
    • 1977–1987
    Ted Lange
    Ted Lange
    • Bartender Isaac Washington
    • 1977–1987
    Fred Grandy
    Fred Grandy
    • Ship's Purser 'Gopher' Smith…
    • 1977–1986
    Lauren Tewes
    Lauren Tewes
    • Cruise Director Julie McCoy…
    • 1977–1987
    Jill Whelan
    Jill Whelan
    • Vicki Stubing
    • 1978–1987
    Ted McGinley
    Ted McGinley
    • Ship's Photographer Ashley 'Ace' Covington Evans…
    • 1983–1987
    Pat Klous
    Pat Klous
    • Cruise Director Judy McCoy…
    • 1982–1986
    The Love Boat Mermaids
    • Themselves
    • 1985–1986
    Monty O'Grady
    Monty O'Grady
    • Waiter…
    • 1977–1985
    Debbie Bartlett
    Debbie Bartlett
    • Susie - Love Boat Mermaid…
    • 1985–1986
    Tori Brenno
    • Maria - Love Boat Mermaid…
    • 1985–1986
    Nanci L. Hammond
    • Jane - Love Boat Mermaid…
    • 1985–1986
    Teri Hatcher
    Teri Hatcher
    • Amy - Love Boat Mermaid…
    • 1985–1986
    Debra Johnson
    • Patti - Love Boat Mermaid…
    • 1985–1986
    Macarena
    • Sheila - Love Boat Mermaid…
    • 1985–1986
    Andrea Moen
    • Starlight - Love Boat Mermaid…
    • 1985–1986
    Beth Myatt
    • Mary Beth - Love Boat Mermaid…
    • 1985–1986
    • Creator
      • Wilford Lloyd Baumes
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.314.6K
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    Featured reviews

    5DKosty123

    Spin Off But Not The Same Company

    Spelling productions did not make Love, American Style. They took the basic concept of it, added places for the love to happen (on a Princess Cruise ship & in ports of call), a regular crew, & mass produced 10 years of the Love Boat. Part of the reason it worked was the ship as you could dream of being on a cruise & never leave your living room.

    Each episode usually had 2 or three plot lines with different guests involved. Each one would involve the crew interacting with the guests. Each one would usually have a happy ending. Sometimes, episodes would even go 2 hours. Princess Cruises definitely got a lot of valuable promo from this series.

    Like Love American Style, the love aspect would get by with a wink, a grin, & some subtle hints of the feelings that were really going on. The crew was a pretty talented ensemble. Gavin McCloud as your Captain became more of less the star of the show. Bernie Kopell as the ships playboy Doctor became a key factor a lot of times. Lauren Tewes was the supposed hot cruise director. Then there was Gopher & the bartender always around either when you need them or not around when you need them.

    The guest stars would read like a whose who of 1960's & 70's actors & actresses. It was amazing how many folks would get drawn on board this ship. Realism, this show has little. Bubble gum for the brain, that is where this show comes from. "Come Aboard, We're Expecting you!"
    7landrykkb

    It was what it was,for better or for worse

    I have read the previous reviews and while I do realize that every episode of The Love Boat was predictable and cheesy in hindsight,were most television shows of that era or some even since any different?You got to also realize that Aaron Spelling specialized in the fantasy genre realm(Starsky & Hutch was a lot more reality based in comparison to this and his other offerings,mind you).It was escapist entertainment at its finest and Fantasy Island following it Saturday nights on ABC made everybody's night home who decided not to venture out.I even remember when ABC aired the reruns on their daytime schedule.By that time,they were on the air long enough to justify showing them daily.One knock against the show to me is that at least Fantasy Island had that moral-of-the-story element that The Love Boat didn't.
    8TVholic

    Quintessential escapist fluff

    I admit it, I loved the '70s. It was such a fun decade. The Love Boat is a time capsule of the late '70s. Not just the guest stars and the fashions, but the basic mood of the era.

    It's very easy and even very trendy to put down this lightweight show from ultraprolific producer Aaron Spelling, the same way people denigrate disco music. But once put into context, it really wasn't all that bad. The period, after all, was the late '70s -- only three years after The Brady Bunch had left the air. TV's fabled last gasp of innocence had yet to be breathed. TV shows could still be expected to be fun and frivolous, like the Me Decade this was a part of.

    Spelling was at the peak of his TV power, having already scored hits with The Mod Squad, The Rookies, Starsky & Hutch and Charlie's Angels, among other shows. His shows alone were taking up more than a quarter of ABC's prime time hours by the turn of the decade and it was said that he had produced more hours of television than anyone else. For several years, Love Boat was teamed with Spelling stable mate Fantasy Island, forming a two-hour escapist block on Saturday nights when viewers could escape on a tropical cruise then to a lush tropical island.

    With The Love Boat, viewers could experience some of the better aspects of a cruise, without the drawbacks. Every day was sun-drenched and every night clear and crisp, sunsets were always brilliant, it never rained and we could all be home within a single hour. And heck, it didn't cost a cent! The Aloha, Lido, Fiesta and Riviera decks (or at least their names) become ingrained in memory through sheer repetition. Not to mention the ship's lobby where all the guest stars made their grand entrances. (The lobby of the real Pacific Princess, by the way, looked nearly the same but was in the center of the ship and had no such entrance doors.) And, of course, the Crystal Pool, which made an appearance in every episode, except when the crew took to other ships for cruises in the Caribbean, Alaska and even Australia. And what a crew it was. From fatherly Gavin MacLeod to pert and perky Cindy "Lauren" Tewes and everyone in between, there was a nice family vibe to the original cast, even if some fans felt it was disrupted by the addition of Jill Whelan. Just don't mention the subsequent cast additions and changes, by which time the show had overstayed its welcome.

    The stories were simple and, for the most part, uplifting. Still, they were repetitive. But how many different plot variations can one expect about love? And then there was the oh-so-'70s theme song. Charles Fox wrote the music, having already made his TV mark in several hit sitcoms including Happy Days, Laverne & Shirley and Love, American Style. Pity poor Paul Williams, who, despite other successes, once reportedly said even if he found the cure for cancer, he'd still be remembered only for penning the lyrics to this insidious ditty. As sung by Jack Jones, it was frothier than ocean whitecaps and a perfect match for the show. Both Williams and Jones, by the way, actually guest-starred on the show.

    There's a story that Peter Graves was once asked about his appearance on The Love Boat. Graves jokingly demurred that everyone in Hollywood at the time guest-starred on the show. That's not far from the truth. The show featured a never ending parade of television stars, stars to be, stars that once were and would-be stars. Singers, dancers and once, the then-popular Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders. All mingled with some rather distinguished company -- movie stars and Oscar winners past and future like Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Ginger Rogers, Olivia de Havilland, Debbie Reynolds, Tom Hanks and Don Ameche, among others, made appearances.

    The original Pacific Princess no longer plies her Pacific route on the Mexican Riviera, with ports of call at Mazatlan, Puerto Vallarta, Cabo San Lucas and Acapulco. She long since surrendered the area to her larger, newer, more luxurious sisters, one of which (the Sun Princess) couldn't carry the "Next Wave" revival in 1998. In the autumn of 2002, she was retired from the Princess fleet after 27 years of service, and the one, true Love Boat was no more. There's a new Pacific Princess now, but it just isn't the same. Thus I raise my glass in one final toast, "To absent friends and those at sea."
    karina1966

    Love, exciting and new.......................

    I loved "The Love Boat"!! It was so 70's and that's what was so appealing about it. OK the story lines were predictable but who cares. It was light hearted entertainment. I was a teenager when it was on and all I wanted to do when I grew up was go on the Pacific Princess!!! The only thing I found annoying was that everyone seemed to be in a suite on the ship!!! and when did the Captain ever have time to steer the ship ? he was always wandering around the deck!! or having dinner with all the guests. I have been on numerous cruises and have only ever seen the Captain once.!! I also loved how they used to bring back all the old Hollywood stars. Lots of these people were national treasures and we won't see the likes of them again. I would love for it to run again on TV, at least it's better than all the death and violence we always seem to get now.
    luke-31

    There's So Much More I Should Have Said!

    I just commented on "The Love Boat", but I just realized there is so much I forgot to say about it. There are so many great episodes that have touched my heart. I was reminded of this when one of my favorites came on TV Land tonight. In it, a young girl (Maureen "Marcia Brady" Mc Cormick) falls in love, and then learns she may only have monthes to live. It is exceptional, real entertaiment that has a wonderful life lesson attached to it. There is another one where the crew is critical of an apparent relationship between an older man and a younger woman that turns out to be not what they imagined at all. Also, there is an episode that features first love between a pair of teenagers (Scott Baio and Kristy Mc Nichol) that rings true. I also enjoy the episode where Vicki's T.V. idol (Alison "Nellie Oleson" Arngrim) comes on board,and turns out to be not what she appears, either.

    The series is exceptional in that it was able to deal with serious, sometimes even controversial themes, and balance it out with good, old fashioned screwball and sophisticated comedy. Contrary to many people's belief that the show's quality went down as it matured, I would have to disaggree. I have enjoyed every episode of this show I have ever seen, early or late in the series. And I find Charo to be adorable and funny.

    "The Love Boat" has a permanent place on my favorite shows list, and a permanent spot in my heart, as well.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This series was based upon (or "inspired by", as the end credits put it) Jeraldine Saunders 1974 novel "The Love Boats." She wrote the book from her personal observations while serving as a hostess on a cruise ship.
    • Goofs
      While it made for interesting stories during the run of the show, romantic and sexual liaisons between passengers and crew members were (and still are) forbidden aboard cruise ships for a host of reasons.
    • Crazy credits
      In the opening credits, the episode's guest stars are listed first in alphabetical order; then the show's regulars, who are referred to as "your Love Boat crew" (e.g. "Gavin MacLeod as your Captain", etc.).
    • Connections
      Edited into Intrepid (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      The Love Boat
      Written by Paul Williams and Charles Fox

      Sung by Jack Jones

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 5, 1977 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Love Boat
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles Harbor, San Pedro, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Aaron Spelling Productions
      • Douglas S. Cramer Company
      • The Love Boat Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 4:3

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