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12[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/moonlighting.jpg]]
13[[caption-width-right:350:''We'll walk the night, we'll fly by day\
14Moonlighting strangers who just met on the way...'']]
15
16This 1985–89 series on Creator/{{ABC|US}} was arguably the coiner of the term {{Dramedy}}. It starred Creator/CybillShepherd as Maddie Hayes and a then-relatively unknown Creator/BruceWillis as the wisecracking David Addison.
17
18The premise was simple. Model Madelyn Hayes found out that her accountant had embezzled her fortune and run off with it. Her only remaining assets were a series of losing businesses maintained as tax write-offs. The worst of the lot was the City Of Angels Detective Agency. Maddie, with no prospects and not the first idea of how to run a detective agency, decided to close it down to pay off quickly rising debts. Visiting the agency to deliver the pink slips introduced her to the quirky Agnes [=DiPesto=], who answers the phone in rhyme, and the zany, wisecracking David Addison, who wasn't ready to let the agency go without a fight, even renaming it the Blue Moon Detective Agency in order to link it with Hayes' most famous role: the "Blue Moon Shampoo Girl". Despite their oil-and-water chemistry, David was able to persuade Maddie to keep Blue Moon on life support, insisting that it could be profitable if it was permitted to be; however, Maddie insisted on managing the firm directly.
19
20But what really made the show stand out was its penchant for BreakingTheFourthWall, where on occasion the characters would talk to the audience or otherwise show knowledge that they were characters in a television show ("Don't go much lower. They'll take us off the air."). This progressed in later seasons to become a pure NoFourthWall series.
21
22It's perhaps best known for being the classic example of how a show can fall apart when UnresolvedSexualTension is resolved (in fact, outside of this wiki, ShippingBedDeath will occasionally be known as the "''Moonlighting'' Curse",) or how a hit show collapses due to a perfect storm of behind the scenes chaos. When the fifth season was shortened due to a TV strike, ABC put the show down. It was also finally released on streaming for the very first time via Hulu in the fall of 2023, gaining it new and nostalgic viewers alike.
23
24(Not to be confused with ''Series/Moonlight2007'', a VampireDetectiveSeries.)
25----
26!!"Moonlighting tropers who just met on the way":
27
28* TheEighties: There are plenty of signs all over the place, but the easiest way to tell is Maddie's fashion. She has very teased up hair and wears nothing but pastels, which was a trend at the time, instead of solid, dark or primary colors.
29* AscendedExtra: For just the series finale, background office staffer Julie gets a couple of scenes with dialogue.
30* TheAlcoholic: David's basically a functional alcoholic. Almost every time in the series where he's down in the dumps, he goes out to a bar and gets blackout drunk and most of the time, Maddie finds him in his office with a hangover the next morning.
31* AlternateRealityEpisode / DeliberatelyMonochrome / RashomonStyle: "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice". Dave and Maddie hear of an old murder case (inspired by the notorious [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Snyder Ruth Snyder case]]) in which a wife and her lover kill the husband, and then blame each other after they're caught. The latter two-thirds of the episode, shot in black-and-white, consists of Dave and Maddie dreaming of the case from the perspective of (respectively) the man and woman involved. The episode featured a short introduction by Creator/OrsonWelles, in his very last job, as he died of a heart attack only a couple of days later.
32* AmateurSleuth: Maddie. Dave actually is a licensed private investigator.
33* AnimatedActors: Whenever they [[BreakingTheFourthWall break the fourth wall]], David and Maddie always refer to themselves as "David" and "Maddie," never Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd. At the end of one episode, they walk off the set and into the studio parking lot, but are still in character, meaning that they are fictional characters playing themselves in a show called ''Moonlighting''.
34** EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: In the earliest example of the show doing this, the second season premiere "Brother, Can You Spare A Blonde", Shepherd and Willis introduce themselves as "Maddie Hayes and David Addison" - but the offscreen director refers to them as "Cybill" and "Bruce". Later episodes would go to great lengths to maintain the fiction that Hayes and Addison were somehow real people (playing themselves in a fictional series).
35* AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther: Several instances between not only Dave and Maddie, but also Agnes and Herbert in later seasons.
36* BaitAndSwitchTimeSkip: In one episode, David is arrested. He begins marking the days on his cell wall. After he's made enough marks to indicate that he's been there for several months, a cop arrives to let him out, and comments that he's only been there about 20 minutes.
37* BeautyIsBad: In "The Bride Of Tupperman," a man looking for a bride asks David and Maddie for help; they each pick one (David's is ''much'' hotter than Maddie's) and he winds up picking both... only for one to die in an accident. [[spoiler:It's the hot one, and it turns out to be a BIG aversion, because the plain one is just as bad as... Tupperman himself.]]
38* BelligerentSexualTension: Dave and Maddie took this up to eleven.[[note]] In fact, it was more like "Belligerent Everything Tension".[[/note]]
39* BetaCouple: Agnes and Herbert in the later seasons.
40* TheBigDamnKiss: David and Maddie kiss several times in either dreams or fantasy sequences, but the first canon kiss between them is a big damn kiss. What's great is it's so abrupt that one probably wouldn't expect it to come in the scene and it's handled exactly how you'd think: they both go into immediate denial that it happened so they don't have to face the consequences.
41* ChivalrousPervert: David, especially towards Maddie.
42* ChristmasEpisode: "Twas the Episode Before Christmas"
43--> '''Dave''': [[NoFourthWall Do you think this is the Christmas episode?]]
44* ClipShow: "The Straight Poop", a NoFourthWall episode (although David and Maddie never broke character) dealing with the production delays that were widely reported in the media at the time. In the end David and Maddie promised the viewers a new episode next week and {{blooper}}s kept interrupting the credits, implying that all available footage had been used for this episode.
45* ComplexityAddiction: In the episode where David's first love returns, we find out [[spoiler: she shot her husband in the park and left his body in the car, then called David to meet up with her and then pretends to go to send her husband away, telling David that her husband pulled a gun and she grabbed it and shot him by accident in the struggle. The problem is...if she had lured her husband to the park, but not already killed him, ''then'' confronted him with the gun and shot him with David too far away to see the details, then she actually would've gotten away with the scheme. The way she does it in the show results in David only hearing one shot, not two, and when she tries to gaslight him about it, he realizes she's playing him. It was an overly complicated way to do it, frankly, and it gets her caught in the end.]]
46* ConvenientMiscarriage: [[spoiler:The Dave-Maddie baby is lost through miscarriage.]]
47* ContinuityCavalcade: In "Cool-Hand Dave (Part 2)," ABC is seen [[ItMakesSenseInContext auditioning new actors for David]]. The potential replacements are all quoting David's lines from previous episodes, and some are dressed as boxer David from "Symphony in Knocked Flat" and Shakespearean David from "Atomic Shakespeare."
48* {{Costumer}}: The FilmNoir pastiche "The DreamSequence Always Rings Twice"; the send-up of Creator/WilliamShakespeare's ''Taming of the Shrew'': "Atomic Shakespeare"
49* DayInTheLimelight: Agnes [=DiPesto=] got a number of episodes concentrating on her (and Herbert when he was on) including "Here's Living with You, Kid", the only episode Maddie and David don't appear ''at all''. ([[MedalOfDishonor The lowest-rated episode on the original run]].)
50* DefrostingIceQueen: The series is one long one for Maddie with this trope. She is repressed, rigid, and a prude when the show starts, but as the zany shenanigans happen and she falls for David, she starts to loosen up and have fun and not be so mean.
51* DestructoNookie: The last five minutes of the episode in which Dave and Maddie finally resolve their sexual tension.
52* {{Dramedy}}: The show veers between black comedy, regular humor, and drama at any given time.
53* DoubleStandardAbuseFemaleOnMale: Now, granted, this wasn't unusual for the 1980s, especially for screwball comedies, but Maddie slaps David ''in the face'' a startling number of times in the series. He usually does something to earn it, but modern audiences might get uncomfortable when they notice just how ''many'' times Maddie slaps David in the face. And hard, no less. But the show treats it as if it's not anything unfair or abusive. Note that one of the only times it's not simply glossed over is during an episode where Maddie and David have been arguing about a case where the client did something in a fit of passion--namely, bashing his wife in the head and killing her--and David argues he lost control while Maddie insists that's not true and everyone can regulate their own emotions. At one point, their argument about something separate gets so heated that Maddie slaps David, and ''hard'', enough to make him actually ''bleed,'' and she is instantly sorry and begs his forgiveness when she realizes that there ''is'' a such thing as losing your mind in the heat of the moment.
54* DreamSequence: Maddie and David both dream about an unsolved case about a jazz singer and a trumpet player who have an illicit affair that ends with the husband dead, but yet both of them insist the other person killed him. David's dream has Maddie as the killer and Maddie's has it vice versa. It's also notable for being the first kiss between them of the series, but it's naturally a dream with no real life consequences for their relationship.
55* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: The first season has none of the fourth wall breaking that eventually became a trademark of the series.
56* EndOfEpisodeSilliness: The fourth season finale ends with a completely unrelated sequence of Herbert Viola singing "Woolly Bully" because the [[UsefulNotes/TVStrikes 1988 Writer's Strike]] meant the script was too short.
57* EndOfSeriesAwareness: The last episode is interrupted by news that the series has been cancelled. Suddenly the characters have to deal with their reality falling apart, as sets are being dismantled all around them.
58* EtTuBrute: David's first love, played by Dana Delany, stumbles into his life again. She has been trying to leave her husband and comes across as a DamselInDistress to David, who suspects her husband is stalking her with plans to kill her. [[spoiler: Then we find out she was manipulating David the entire time; they meet at the park and she "sees" her husband's car across the clearing and goes over to send him away. She says he pulled a gun on her and she grabbed it and accidentally shot him, which David only sees at a distance. Then the police ask David about the fact that the corpse had ''two'' bullets in it, not one. David ''knows'' he only heard one (and so did the audience), but then she insists he misheard it. That triggers David into this trope and he finally realizes she just wanted a witness so she could kill her husband and get away with it.]]
59* {{Filler}}: In season four and five, with ABC demanding new episodes on schedule and Shepherd and Willis off-set due to pregnancy and injury/filming movies, the show's producers were forced to film filler episodes that focused solely on supporting cast members Allyce Beasley and Creator/CurtisArmstrong's characters Agnes and Herbert.
60* FramingDevice / SeparateSceneStorytelling: "Atomic Shakespeare", an AffectionateParody of Theatre/TheTamingOfTheShrew.
61* TheGadfly: Nothing makes David Addison happier than pestering everyone around him, but ''especially'' Maddie since she gives him grief constantly. He practically gets out of bed in the morning just to infuriate her as much as possible.
62* {{Gaslighting}}: In the episode mentioned above with David's former lover played by Dana Delany, after the cop tells David the body had two bullets in it but he only heard a single shot, she then gaslights him to try to get him to think he heard two shots. It doesn't work; the audience only hears a single shot as well, so David then realizes [[spoiler: she set the whole thing up to get away with killing her husband.]]
63* GaussianGirl:
64** When they showed Maddie in a solo close-up it was often very fuzzy in a 40's movie style. It can be very jarring when they switch between close-ups of Maddie (fuzzy) and close-ups of David (clear).
65** It should surprise no one to learn that the Director of Photography, Jerry Finnerman, also worked on ''[[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries Star Trek]]''.
66** True to form, the show [[LampshadeHanging lampshades]] this in "The Straight Poop", when Maddie is ambushed in her office by an InUniverse camera crew - she vanishes momentarily only to return holding a sheet of gauze over her face.
67* GratuitousIambicPentameter: Dave would randomly launch into a sort of Dave-only jivetalk, but in one episode, he had an entire conversation with a maître d'hôtel in rhyme invoking Dr. Seuss.
68* HaveAGayOldTime: The full version of the hit theme song recorded by Al Jarreau: "Charming and bright, laughing and gay/I'm just a stranger/Love the blues and the grays."
69* HeroicBSOD: Poor David has a complete emotional breakdown when an elderly man approaches them and asks for an assisted suicide and he finds that he just can't go through with it, but when he goes to stop the old man, he's too late and thinks ''he's'' the one that killed the old man. He stumbles into Maddie's place a complete wreck and she comforts him just before he goes on the run, as one person at the hospital saw him and thinks he killed the old man. It's genuinely one of the saddest moments of the series.
70* HollywoodAtheist: [[InvertedTrope Inverted]] by Dave and Maddie. Dave is deeply cynical with a pretty troubled past, but also a devout believer who prefers going to confession over psychotherapy. Maddie, who came from a more stable background and has a generally lighter outlook, is the one who's an atheist.
71* [[{{Tsundere}} Hot And Cold]]: Subverted with Maddie, who's just hot without the cold.
72* ImDyingPleaseTakeMyMacGuffin: The plot of the pilot episode is kicked off when a thief is stabbed in an elevator while he's trying to escape a professional killer with a stolen watch. When the elevator door opens, he faces Maddie, spits the watch out in her hand, then drops dead.
73* ItsAWonderfulPlot: "It's A Wonderful Job", the third season's ChristmasEpisode, in which Maddie wishes she'd never kept Blue Moon open and her guardian angel shows her exactly what would have happened if she hadn't. It's one of Cybill Shepherd's finest performances.
74* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: David does actually have a heart, but it's just buried under a thousand layers of sarcasm and faux-misogyny. He basically wears a facade to protect himself from emotionally investing in anything since it could turn out poorly for him. It's the main reason Maddie refuses to accept the romance--he hates being vulnerable or nice around her. The best example that David is a good person, but just pretends to be a misogynistic lech, is when an old man comes to them asking for an assisted suicide and while David passionately defends the old man's reasoning to Maddie, he ultimately finds that he can't go through with killing the old man. After the old man ends up dead anyway, David goes to Maddie's place and has a tearful breakdown about it.
75** You can also argue this for Maddie. She is repressed and often very moody and rude to her coworkers and she strings David along for a ''while'' during the later parts of season two and three before they finally have sex. She also flies right into denial after they consummate their relationship and David gets incredibly frustrated that she is fine sleeping with him in secret, but still acting like they're not together everywhere else. However, it is very apparent she tries to do the right thing most of the time, but her hot temper with David usually gets in the way.
76* KarmaHoudini: Maddie's accountant Ron Sawyer kicked off the events of the series by embezzling money from his clients and fleeing to South America, becoming a rich casino owner. By the end of the episode "Money Talks... Maddie Walks" she has confronted him and found some closure but he is still a rich casino owner who got away with robbing his clients.
77** To be brutally honest, David and Maddie count as well. There are several cases where their involvement meant that they did something illegal like breaking and entering, but worse still are episodes where a client asked them to do something, they didn't do it or they didn't do it right, and the ''client ends up dead.'' And since this is a dramedy, the show never really goes out of its way to remind you they got someone killed since it would get too dark. But anyone who's seen up to season three knows there are several people who wouldn't be dead had David and Maddie not been involved in their case.
78* {{Leitmotif}}: The Main theme of the show popped up rearranged according to the mood of different scenes, a technique used in old-time Hollywood movies.
79* LockedInARoom: After Maddie's miscarriage she and Dave are extremely awkward and distant to each other until they get trapped in an elevator overnight. They spend the night consoling each other and by the morning walk out with their arms around each other singing Gospel songs. Once they're gone, the audience learn Agnes and [=MacGillicudy=] sabotaged the elevator to force the duo to talk to each other.
80* LoveHurts: Dave, who admitted his feelings and denied them in turns (usually more than Maddie did; she could distract herself with her numerous suitors).
81* LoveMakesYouCrazy: The entire Blue Moon crew at one point or another.
82* LoveTriangle: Towards the end of the show's run, the writers decided to introduce a love triangle plotline to try and recapture the romantic tension between David and Maddie via having Maddie marry a stranger on a train.
83** To a lesser extent the rivalry between Herbert Viola and [=MacGillicudy=] for Agnes. In the end, Agnes marries Herbert and poor [=MacGillicudy=] got [[DroppedABridgeOnHim a bridge dropped on him]] because the series was ending.
84* MasculineGirlFeminineBoy: David and Maddie, for [[Main/TheEighties the 80's]] anyway. [[PlayingWithTropes Played with]], since they had very traditionally gendered attributes (David is more of a clown, Maddie is mature; he's strong and adventurous while she's delicate and down-to-earth), but also a basic personality more akin to the other gender, shown specially on the Season 3 finale: while [[spoiler:after sleeping together]] Maddie wants to pretend nothing happened and starts evading David, he wants to shout to the wind they're [[spoiler:in love]]. One would have expected ''the opposite'' situation, given Maddie is more of a traditionally feminine [[spoiler:prude]] and he's more of [[spoiler:TheCasanova]].
85* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: "Somewhere Under the Rainbow" deals with a woman claiming to be a leprechaun. Though David digs up a rational explanation for the existence of her pot of gold, [[spoiler:the two somehow end up with it by "capturing" her just after the bad guy seizes it, suggesting she may have had magical properties after all.]]
86* MysteryOfTheWeek: Of course, being a SpiritualSuccessor to Series/RemingtonSteele. Though the mystery got increasingly irrelevant once the romantic and personal plots of the characters started getting more convoluted (mostly during Season 3), and by then the show tended to [[DenserAndWackier change its format rather randomly]].
87** Most notably, almost every MysteryOfTheWeek has to do with a romantic story.
88* NoFourthWall: All the time, usually from Dave. As [[http://www.salon.com/2013/03/09/rewind_celebrating_the_brilliance_of_moonlighting/ this article notes]], ''Moonlighting'' laughed at the fourth wall.
89-->'''Guard:''' You can't burst in here like that!\
90'''Dave:''' Yeah? Tell it to the writers.
91* NoirEpisode: "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice". The episode was filmed in black and white to properly capture the feel of the genre.
92* NoOSHACompliance: In one episode Agnes ends up in an industrial laundry with large bags of laundry swinging around suspended from the ceiling. At some point she ends up inside on of the bags and is taken on a ConveyorBeltODoom ride where she gets lowered into first a tank of cold soapy water then almost lowered into a tank of boiling water when she is saved by her TemporaryLoveInterest who CutTheJuice after the villain throws the BigRedButton out of reach.
93* NoodleIncident / RunningGag: The mysterious Anselmo case, often mentioned (many times by David as an excuse for not being where he was supposed to be), but never explained. The final episode ended with the following message: "Blue Moon Investigations ceased operations on May 14, 1989. The Anselmo Case was never solved… and remains a mystery to this day."
94* PieInTheFace: The episode "The Murder's in the Mail" includes a pie fight in which both Maddie and Dave are creamed at the end. According to Cybill Shepherd's autobiography, the pieings were her own idea.
95* PlotHole: The pilot has one. The plot is centered around a watch that reveals the wheareabouts of some stolen Nazi diamonds, so there are two creepy Mooks after it. Maddie accidentally acquires the watch when another party who wanted it is running from one of the Mooks, but gets stabbed and shoves it onto her wrist before he drops dead. The Mooks track Maddie and David back to her place and tie them up, demanding the watch. Maddie says she gave it to the police, but it turns out David switched the watch out with his own so he could find out why it was being looked for. The plothole is that after the Mooks do all their scary threatening, they say they will leave and find out if the cops do indeed have the watch. After they're gone, David reveals ''he's been wearing it the entire time.'' The plot hole? ''The Mooks tied them up.'' That means they would've seen the watch on David's wrist! They seem to already know what it looks like, so it's a FailedASpotCheck of titanic proportions. What's also confusing is the Mooks are a single episode only adversary and don't come back after they confront the police about the watch, so it's kind of two plotholes in one.
96* PostKissCatatonia: In "Take My Wife, For Example," David tests out his kissing abilities on some of the female employees of Blue Moon. His first subject faints as a result of their kiss.
97* PrettyInMink: Maddie, being a former model, a handful of fur coats in her wardrobe, like a lynx coat, a crystal fox coat, and a white fox coat.
98* PreviouslyOn: Spoofed in season three, when (due to production delays) the third season suffered major gaps between new episodes, resulting in the show having to run a disclaimer at the start of one episode to remind viewers of what happened in previous episodes.
99* PromotedToOpeningCredits: Curtis Armstrong was added to the opening credits in season 4 after recurring in the previous season.
100* RealisticDictionIsUnrealistic: The show pioneered the use of overlapping dialogue, specifically when David and Maddie argue at each other without stopping to listen to the other one, or take a breath.
101* RhymesOnADime: Agnes, if her answering machine messages are any implication. Dave has proven he can do this as well. When Maddie asked how he's able to do so, he replied, "Gotta read a lot of Creator/DrSeuss".
102* RiddleForTheAges: What actually ''was'' the Anselmo case, anyway?
103* SchoolPlay: "Atomic Shakespeare"
104* ScoobyDoobyDoors: Happens in "Los Dos DiPestos"
105* SelfDeprecation: One opening scene took a jab at Bruce Willis's ill-fated singing career when Dave [[NoFourthWall attempts to sing the show's theme song.]] Maddie stops him abruptly claiming that [[HollywoodTonedeaf every dog in America was now howling.]]
106** The show took frequent jabs at itself for the lengthy delays between episodes. The PreviouslyOn segments often mentioned how long it had been since viewers last saw a new episode.
107** The FramingDevice for "Atomic Shakespeare" also took a massive swing at the show's own premise.
108--->'''Son:''' It's ''Moonlighting''! You know, the show about the two detectives: a man and a woman.\
109'''Mother:''' And they argue a lot and all they really wanna do is sleep together?\
110'''Son:''' Yeah!\
111'''Mother:''' [[WhoWritesthisCrap Sounds like trash to me]].
112* SlapSlapKiss: It immediately follows the most intense of the Dave-Maddy snarkfest and precedes definitively answering yes to WillTheyOrWontThey.
113* SoundtrackDissonance: An episode focused on an unborn child being prepared for birth by his guardian angel. When asked why he should ever leave the womb for [[PostHistoricalTrauma the big scary outside]], the angel shows him a completely straight "Wonderful World" montage of all the good things to expect in life.
114* SpeakInUnison: A David/Maddie ''classic'', and excellent demonstration of how similar they are under the surface. In one notable exchange:
115-->'''Agnes''': Ms. Hayes? Mr. Addison? There's a man here to see you.
116-->'''Dave and Maddie''': Not now, we're fighting!!
117* StockClockHandHang: The pilot episode has Maddie sliding off the clock hand and accidentally kicking the panel around 9 o'clock (containing some stolen diamonds) with her high heel.
118* ThemeTune: "Moonlighting" by Al Jarreau which was nominated for both Emmy and Grammy awards.
119-->''Some walk by night''\
120''Some fly by day''\
121''Nothing can change them''\
122''Set and sure of the way...''
123* ThrillerOnTheExpress: In "Next Stop Murder", Agnes wins a place on a train journey hosted by a famous murder mystery writer. David and Maddie (who got struck on board while dropping Agnes off) get roped in to investigate when the writer is found dead.
124* UnkemptBeauty: Drop her in a pool, cover her with dirt, or have her cry herself to sleep -- none of it will stop Maddie Hayes from being the most gorgeous human being in any given room.
125* UnresolvedSexualTension: Dave and Maddie for the first three seasons until a round of DestructoNookie resolved the situation (at least temporarily).
126* WillTheyOrWontThey: Dave and Maddie are possibly the TropeCodifier. Despite not waiting as many seasons as other couples that fall into this trope, they did this in droves, to the point where Willis and Shepherd appeared on the cover of the February 1987 issue of ''US'' Magazine, with the headline reading, ''"DO IT ALREADY!"''.
127* WunzaPlot: She's a model! He's a smart aleck! They fight crime![[note]]...and constantly argue every step of the way[[/note]]
128* YeOldeButcheredeEnglishe: PlayedForLaughs in "Atomic Shakespeare"

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