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I Just Jump to: navigation, search In the Heat of the Night is a mystery / police-procedural novel by John Ball  published in 1965. It is set in the fictional community of Wells, located in the Carolinas, and the main characters are an African American  police detective named Virgil Tibbs  who is passing through a small town in the Southern United States  during a time of bigotry and the civil rights movement, who agrees to help the local police force, commanded by Chief Bill Gillespie, investigate a murder . Virgil Tibbs, is an experienced Pasadena, CA  homicide investigator ... however, when the local police first meet him, he was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was taken into custody and questioned solely because he was African American. This, in the opening chapter of the novel sets the mood for the story and tells the reader of the struggle and the prejudice he experiences in the south. The novel is also the basis of the 1967 award-winning film In the Heat of the Night . The novel is followed by The Cool Cottontail (1966), Johnny Get Your Gun (1969), Five Pieces Of Jade (1972), The Eyes Of Buddha (1976), Then Came Violence (1980) and Singapore (1986). In the Heat of the Night (film) For other uses, see In the Heat of the Night (disambiguation) . In the Heat of the Night-is a 1967  film , based on the John Ball  novel published in 1965  of the same name , which tells the story of a Northern Black  police detective  who becomes involved in a murder investigation in a racist  small town in Mississippi </wiki/Mississippi>. In 2002 </wiki/2002> the United States Library of Congress </wiki/Library_of_Congress> deemed the original film "culturally significant" and selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry </wiki/National_Film_Registry>. The quote, "They call me Mister Tibbs!", was listed as #16 on the American Film Institute </wiki/American_Film_Institute>'s AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes </wiki/AFI%27s_100_Years..._100_Movie_Quotes>, a list of top movie quotes. The film was followed by two sequels, They Call Me MISTER Tibbs! </wiki/They_Call_Me_MISTER_Tibbs%21> in 1970 </wiki/1970>, and The Organization </w/index.php?title=The_Organization_%28film%29&action=edit> in 1971 </wiki/1971>. It also became the basis of a television series entitled In the Heat of the Night </wiki/In_the_Heat_of_the_Night_%28TV_series%29>, starring Carroll O'Connor </wiki/Carroll_O%27Connor>, Howard Rollins </wiki/Howard_Rollins>, Alan Autry </wiki/Alan_Autry>, David Hart </wiki/David_Hart_%28actor%29>, Anne-Marie Johnson </wiki/Anne-Marie_Johnson> and Hugh O'Connor </wiki/Hugh_O%27Connor>. Part of the movie was filmed in Sparta, Illinois </wiki/Sparta%2C_Illinois>, where many of the film's landmarks can still be seen. In the Heat of the Night (TV series) For other things named In the Heat of the Night, see In the Heat of the Night (disambiguation) </wiki/In_the_Heat_of_the_Night_%28disambiguation%29>.

In the Heat of the Night is a television series based on the motion picture </wiki/Motion_picture>, In the Heat of the Night </wiki/In_the_Heat_of_the_Night_%28film%29> that ran from 1988 to 1995. It starred Carroll O'Connor > as William Gillespie and /Howard_Rollins> as Virgil Tibbs. Tibbs had traveled to the Sparta area for his mother's funeral. He was persuaded to remain by the city government, who had felt the need to make the city's police department more diverse. William "Bill" Champlin of the band Chicago sings the opening theme song