Hawk
Created by Robert B. Parker
(1932-2010)

'You push yourself till you can't stand the pain, then you push yourself a little bit more.''
-- Hawk counsels black youth

He's big, he's black and he's mean. And he knows you didn't watch his show!!!

It's generally agreed that the best part of the Spenser: For Hire television show was Avery Brooks' frosty portrayal of HAWK, the cold, emotionless mob leg breaker who seems to have given it all up to serve as Spenser's best friend and guardian angel. Brooks nailed the dead-eyed cool of the character right to the wall, and provided a sense of real menace and presence to a show that badly needed it. So, when the show bit the dust in 1989, after three seasons, it didn't take long for ABC tried to try to recoup their investment by spinning off Hawk into his own show.

But how to have Hawk running around Boston without everyone wondering what had happened to his ol' pal Spenser? That was easy. They had Hawk pack up his guns, his long leather pre-Columbine trenchcoat and his shades and got him the hell out of there, moving him back to his hometown of Washington, D.C., slipping him more "depth" along the way than Parker ever gave him: most notably a Vietnam background, the ability to play some "mean jazz piano" and a whole touchy feely spiritual side that we never saw when he was shooting people in the face.

I guess all Spenser's Dudley Do-Right routines rubbed off on Hawk, because once he was back in D.C., he used his considerable street skills for good, not evil. He wasn't exactly a private eye or anything, but he seemed to make himself available on a regular basis for those who might be in need of his particular hands-on version of justice. His main contact and confidant was an elderly black man/father figure he just called "Old Man".

But even as an alleged good guy, Hawk was pretty frightening. With a taste for flashy clothes, fine cuisine and large firearms, sporting a shaved head, a goatee that made him look slightly Satanic, and a pure, fierce hatred blazing from his eyes, he was not a man to get in the way of.

Hawk busted heads and scared evildoers shitless (or at least poopless) for thirteen episodes before ABC pulled the plug. It never really attracted much of a fanbase, and, truth to tell, it was never that good, anyway, but it did draw the ire of Mississippi's Reverend Donald Wildmon (that ignorant, cynical, Bible-thumping ass from Mississippi," as Tony Randall called him) who denounced it for being vile and violent and immoral.

My gripe was that it wasn't vile and violent and immoral enough. ABC tried too hard to make Hawk seem like a nice guy. And what was all this New Age baloney? The Old Man would spout some vague voodoo/hoodoo-type blather every now and then, and off Hawk would trot, like some sort of mystical, mythical black crusader. It just never really worked for me, and ended up coming off like a bad Equalizer rip-off, with windchimes.

Still, the show was set in D.C., not New York or L.A., so that must count for something. But Hawk, such a strong character in the novels, deserved better.

There were a few attempts to revive Spenser for Hire as a series of made-for-TV movies for Lifetime, but they never really caught on. Brooks eventually landed a good role on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, and when A&E began a new series of movies in 1999, starring Joe Mantegna as Spenser, Brooks wasn't invited back. Too bad. Somehow, I think there would have been a lot of chemistry between Mantegna and Brooks.

Coincidentally, in Deep Space Nine, Brooks' character had a female officer working for him named Dax, who was supposedly some sort of reincarnation of an old friend. Brooks called her "Old Man".

UNDER OATH

  • "I liked the few episodes of A Man Called Hawk I saw, but it didn't last very long. The show's page on www.imdb.com has one fan's theory on why that was, because America wasn't ready to see a Strong Black Man as the lead in a series. He makes a pretty good argument."
    -- Mark Sullivan

  • "A Man Called Hawk? Eeek! I hope you all missed that."
    -- Robert B. Parker to an audience in Washington, D.C., at the Library of Congress

NOVELS, SHORT STORIES

TELEVISION

  • See Spenser for Spenser For Hire series and TV movie listings.
    .
  • A MAN CALLED HAWK
    (1989, ABC)
    13 60-minute episodes
    Character created by Robert B. Parker
    Original music by Stanley Clarke
    A Warner Bros. Television production
    Starring Avery Brooks as HAWK
    and Moses Gunn as Old Man
    Guest stars:
    Vondie Curtis-Hall, William Aylward, Angela Bassett, Cynthia Bond, Keith David, Charles Dutton, Earle Hyman, Samuel L. Jackson, Delroy Lindo, Joseph C. Phillips, Joe Seneca, Wesley Snipes
  • "The Master's Mirror" "January 28, 1989)
  • "A Time and a Place" (February 4, 1989)
  • "Hear No Evil" (February 11, 1989)
  • "Passing the Bar" (February 18, 1989)
  • "The Divided Child" (February 25, 1989)
  • "Vendetta" (March 4, 1989)
  • "Choice of Chance" (March 11, 1989)
  • "Poison" (March 25, 1989)
  • "Never My Love" April 1, 1989)
  • "Intensive Care" (April 15, 1989)
  • "If Memory Serves" (April 29, 1989)
  • "Beautiful Are the Stars" (May 6, 1989)
  • "Life after Death" (May 13, 1989)

RELATED LINKS

  • Bullets and Beer: The Spenser Home Page
    Raise a glass to Bob Ames, who's has done us all a favour, and revived Mike Loux's missing-in-action web site, devoted to all things Spenserian. "Some of you may remember this site from its past incarnations on Mirkwood or NEKANet, Bob explains in the intro. "Mike fully intended to move it to his new server, and had in fact been in the process of converting it to a more exciting design when fate got in the way. The man went and got a life." A labour of love, Bob spent over half a year, re-reading every book, and spending countless hours tracking down the references Parker loves to sprinkle through the text. All of Mike's original pages, plus the results of Bob's research are here. Bob calls it "six months of total dedication." I just call it great.
    .
  • Spenser For Hire
    This page is the work of Scott Jentsch, a big fan of the TV show. He wants to produce a central location for information about the show, so if you have any information that you would like to share, please send it him.
    .
  • An Unofficial Robert B. Parker Fan Site
    A new Parker page by Dodd Vickers featuring a complete list of Parker'sbooks (including Jesse Stone and Sunny Randall). When complete, each book title will be linked to a synopsis and guide to Parker's literary allusions. Check it out.
    ..
  • Spensarium
    Founded recently by Dodd Vickers, this eGroups list features a virtual vault of Parker/Spenser material. Offers occasional live chats.
    ..
  • Robert B. Parker Interview
    Full text of Amazon.com's interview with Robert B. Parker, marking the release of Hush Money and Spenser's 25th Anniversary.
    .
  • The Beers of Spenser
    This site's valiant effort to trace the Spenser series through his brews of choice.

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks to Gerald So and Bob Ames for kicking up a bit of enlightenment on this one, and keeping me posted on all manner of things Spenserian. Also, much thanks to our automotive expert, Jason, for helping us spot the Mustang,.


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