The first shot of the "China Beach" pilot finds nurse
Colleen McMurphy (Dana Delany) sitting on a beach alone with a
book. Suddenly, the whir of a helicopter blade splits the silence,
cutting through her carefully contrived tranquility. McMurphy's
integrity and her loneliness are already established. Throughout
the "China Beach" series, whether we see her caring
for dying patients or getting into a fistfight with the camp prostitute,
we know that where she would prefer to be is on the beach with
her book.
"China
Beach" landed on TV screens in 1988, just two years after
Oliver Stone's film "Platoon" had established a realistic
framework for dramatizing the Vietnam War. Although "China
Beach" was canceled in 1991, it has been brought back to
life on The History Channel. (Check historychannel.com for programming
schedule.)
The television
show added the soundtrack of the 1960s (songs by the Supremes,
the Troggs, etc.) and gallows humor to the more familiar re-created
war footage. The show was occasionally playful, such as when Pvt.
Samuel Beckett, played by Michael Boatman, talks to his charges
in the morgue. But it also was unsparing when it came to depicting
death, whether it was its portrayal of Vietnamese fighters in
mass graves or the death of a popular character.
In the first
episode, McMurphy explains the role of the nurse when she's arguing
with a doctor: "I'm the last one they see before they die;
I'm the one who's holding their hand."
McMurphy constantly
refers to herself as "one of the guys" and does a lot
of drinking to cope with tragedy. But she also puts herself in
harm's way. In one episode, she performs an intervention to save
K.C. Koloski (played by Marg Helgenberger) from heroin addition.
The other
characters have their own way of dealing with tragedy in a place
where everybody has lost their moral compass. One is a hostess,
a self-described "Doughnut Dolly" named Cherry White
(Nan Woods). She is an innocent when she arrives, hoping to find
her brother who is missing in action. By the end of the first
year, she has been killed herself. Another visitor is Laurette
Barber (Chloe Webb), a backup USO singer who comes to camp expecting
to meet a lot of men and instead attends to those who are dying.
But the show
doesn't leave out the men. Not only is there Beckett, but also
Sgt. Evan "Dodger" Winslow (played by Jeff Kober), a
soldier of few words save for some choice ones: "We're already
dead," he says during the Tet Offensive. "We were dead
when we got off the plane."
Then there's
physician Dick Richard (played by Robert Picardo), a choleric
surgeon and pragmatist who appeals to McMurphy to stay at the
hospital (she is supposed to go home after the first episode).
Eventually, she decides he is right and that the hospital is indeed
her home.