Allan Burns | |
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Born | Allan Pennington Burns May 18, 1935 Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. |
Died | January 30, 2021 85) Los Angeles, California, U.S. | (aged
Occupations |
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Notable work | The Munsters The Mary Tyler Moore Show |
Spouse | Joan Bailey (m. 1964) |
Children | 2 |
Signature | |
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Allan Pennington Burns (May 18, 1935 –January 30, 2021) [1] was an American screenwriter and television producer. He was best known for co-creating and writing for the television sitcoms The Munsters and The Mary Tyler Moore Show .
Burns was born in Baltimore on May 18, 1935. [2] [3] His father died when he was nine years old. Three years later, he moved to Honolulu with his mother after his older brother was assigned to Naval Station Pearl Harbor. [1] He attended Punahou School and illustrated a cartoon that featured several times a week in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin. [4] He studied architecture at the University of Oregon starting in 1953, [2] [3] after being awarded a partial scholarship. He dropped out two years later and moved to Los Angeles, where he secured a job as a page for NBC. [4]
Before breaking into television and film, he started in animation, working for Jay Ward and collaborating on and animating The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show , Dudley Do-Right , and George of the Jungle . [2] Burns also created the Cap'n Crunch character for Quaker Oats. [3]
After his stint writing for Jay Ward, Burns formed a partnership with Chris Hayward. They created the series The Munsters (1964) and My Mother the Car (1965), and they were hired by producer Leonard Stern as story editors for the series He & She , for which they won an Emmy award for comedy writing. [2] The last project between Hayward and Burns was the sitcom Get Smart . [2] During this time, Burns co-wrote the unaired version of the 1965 pilot episode of The Smothers Brothers Show . [2]
Burns first met James L. Brooks in 1965, getting him a writing job on his show My Mother The Car . [5] After being impressed with the television pilot for Brooks's show Room 222 , Burns began a partnership with Brooks and joined the Room 222 writing staff and later produced the series. [2]
After Room 222, television executive Grant Tinker hired Brooks and Burns to develop a television series for CBS starring Mary Tyler Moore. [2] In 1970, The Mary Tyler Moore Show premiered and became a critically acclaimed series, spawning spin-off series such as Lou Grant and Rhoda . [3] Brooks and Burns also created the 1974 situation comedy Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers . [6] Burns also worked as a writer and producer on the shows FM , [3] The Duck Factory , [7] [8] Eisenhower and Lutz , and Cutters . [3]
Burns also worked in film, co-writing the film A Little Romance (1979), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. [9] He also wrote the screenplays Butch and Sundance: The Early Days , Just the Way You Are and wrote and directed Just Between Friends . [10]
Burns married Joan Bailey in 1964; the couple had two children: Eric and Matthew. [11]
Burns died at his home in Los Angeles on January 30, 2021, aged 85, from Parkinson's disease and Lewy body dementia. [1]
Year [lower-alpha 1] | Category | Work | Result | Ref. |
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1968 | Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series | He & She , "The Coming-Out Party" (with Chris Hayward) | Won | [12] |
1971 | The Mary Tyler Moore Show , "Support Your Local Mother," (with James L. Brooks) | Won | [13] | |
1973 | The Mary Tyler Moore Show , "The Good Time News" (with James L. Brooks) | Nominated | [14] | |
1975 | Rhoda , "Rhoda's Wedding" (with Norman Barasch, James L. Brooks, David Davis, David Lloyd, Carroll Moore, and Lorenzo Music) | Nominated | [15] | |
1977 | The Mary Tyler Moore Show , "The Last Show" (with James L. Brooks, Stan Daniels, Bob Ellison, David Lloyd, and Ed. Weinberger) | Won | [16] | |
1980 | Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series | Lou Grant , "Brushfire" (with Gene Reynolds) | Nominated | [17] |
Mary Tyler Moore was an American actress, producer, and social advocate. She is best known for her roles on The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961–1966) and especially The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970–1977), which "helped define a new vision of American womanhood" and "appealed to an audience facing the new trials of modern-day existence". Moore won seven Primetime Emmy Awards and three Golden Globe Awards. She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in Ordinary People. Moore had a supporting role in the musical film Thoroughly Modern Millie. Moore was an advocate for animal rights, vegetarianism and diabetes awareness and research.
The Mary Tyler Moore Show is an American television sitcom created by James L. Brooks and Allan Burns and starring actress Mary Tyler Moore. The show originally aired on CBS from September 19, 1970, to March 19, 1977. Moore portrayed Mary Richards, an unmarried, independent woman focused on her career as associate producer of a news show at the fictional local station WJM in Minneapolis. Ed Asner co-starred as Mary's boss Lou Grant, alongside Gavin MacLeod, Ted Knight, Georgia Engel, Betty White, Valerie Harper as friend and neighbor Rhoda Morgenstern, and Cloris Leachman as friend and landlady Phyllis Lindstrom.
Lou Grant is a fictional character played by Ed Asner in two television series produced by MTM Enterprises for CBS. The first was The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970–1977), a half-hour light-hearted situation comedy in which the character was the news director at fictional television station WJM-TV in Minneapolis. A spinoff series, entitled Lou Grant (1977–1982), was an hour-long serious dramatic series that frequently engaged in social commentary, featuring the same character as city editor of the fictional Los Angeles Tribune. Although spin-offs are common on American television, Lou Grant remains one of a very few characters played by the same actor to have a leading role on both a popular comedy and a popular dramatic series.
James Lawrence Brooks is an American director, producer, screenwriter and co-founder of Gracie Films. He co-created the sitcoms The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Taxi, and The Simpsons and directed the films Terms of Endearment (1983), Broadcast News (1987), and As Good as It Gets (1997). He received numerous accolades including three Academy Awards, 21 Emmy Awards, and a Golden Globe Award.
Cloris Leachman was an American actress and comedian whose career spanned nearly eight decades. She won many accolades, including eight Primetime Emmy Awards from 22 nominations, making her the most nominated and, along with Julia Louis-Dreyfus, most awarded performer in Emmy history. Leachman also won an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, and a Golden Globe Award.
Lou Grant is an American drama television series starring Ed Asner in the title role as a newspaper editor that aired on CBS from September 20, 1977, to September 13, 1982. The third spin-off of the American sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Lou Grant was created by James L. Brooks, Allan Burns, and Gene Reynolds.
My Mother the Car is an American fantasy comedy that aired for a single season on NBC between September 14, 1965, and April 5, 1966. Thirty episodes were produced by United Artists Television. The premise features a man whose deceased mother is reincarnated as an antique car, who communicates with him through the car radio.
Grant Almerin Tinker was an American television executive who served as chairman and CEO of NBC from 1981 to 1986. Additionally, he was a co-founder of MTM Enterprises and a television producer.
Robert Walden is an American television and motion picture actor. He is best known for his role as Joe Rossi on Lou Grant, which earned him three nominations for Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series; for his role as Joe Waters on Brothers; and as Glenn Newman on Happily Divorced. Walden is also well known for his roles in the films Blue Sunshine, The Hospital, All the President's Men, Audrey Rose, and Capricorn One.
Sue Ann Nivens is a fictional character portrayed by Betty White on situation comedy The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
Mary Richards, portrayed by Mary Tyler Moore, is the lead character of the television sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
He & She is an American sitcom that aired on CBS as part of its 1967–68 lineup, originally sponsored by General Foods and Lever Brothers.
Michael Allan Zinberg is an American television director, producer and writer.
Christopher Robert Hayward was an American television writer and producer. He was the co-creator, with Allan Burns, of the television shows The Munsters (1964) and My Mother the Car (1965), and the creator of Dudley Do-Right.
"The Last Show" is the 168th episode and series finale of the television sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and it was written by Allan Burns, James L. Brooks, Ed Weinberger, Stan Daniels, David Lloyd, and Bob Ellison. Internationally, it was first aired in Canada on CBC Television, March 18, 1977 at 8 p.m. In the U.S., it was one day later on Saturday, March 19, on CBS.
Robert James Ellison was an American consultant, screenwriter and television producer. He worked on television programs including Dear John, The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Wings.
Treva Silverman is an American screenwriter, best known for her work on the 1970s sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
Marilyn Suzanne Miller is an American television writer and producer. She was one of only three female writers on the original staff of Saturday Night Live and was also a writer for such 1970s sitcoms as The Odd Couple, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Rhoda, Maude, and Barney Miller.
Charlotte Sue Brown is an American television producer, writer, director, and showrunner who in 1977 was acclaimed to have become the first woman showrunner of a primetime network television series for her work on The Mary Tyler Moore Show spin-off Rhoda. However, Gertrude Berg, who created The Goldbergs, earned that title almost two decades earlier.