Stan Daniels

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Stan Daniels
Born
Stanley Edwin Daniels

(1934-07-31)July 31, 1934
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
DiedApril 6, 2007(2007-04-06) (aged 72)
Occupation(s)Screenwriter, producer and director
SpouseAlene Kamins (1957–2007; his death)
Children4

Stanley Edwin Daniels (July 31, 1934 – April 6, 2007) was a Canadian-American screenwriter, producer and director, who won eight Emmy Awards for his work on The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Taxi .

Contents

Early life

Born in Toronto to Jewish parents involved in vaudeville, Daniels earned a bachelor's degree and master's degree from the University of Toronto, then began studying for a doctorate from Oxford University. [1] His first television writing job was for The Dean Martin Show in 1965. There, he met his writing partner Ed. Weinberger.

Career

Daniels's influence in comedy is noted by the joke setup that is credited to him ("Stan Daniels turn") wherein "a character says something and then does an immediate 180-degree shift on what he just said," according to The Simpsons producer Al Jean. [2] Daniels composed the music and wrote the lyrics for the 1976 musical So Long, 174th Street .

Death

Daniels was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia a few years prior to his death. He died of a heart attack in Encino, California. [3]

Filmography

Director

Producer

Writer

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryTitleShared withResult
1975 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Comedy Series The Mary Tyler Moore Show James L. Brooks, Allan Burns, Ed. Weinberger Won
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series The Mary Tyler Moore Show: "Will Mary Richards Go to Jail?"Ed. WeinbergerWon
Writers Guild of America Awards Episodic Comedy Nominated
1976Primetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Comedy SeriesThe Mary Tyler Moore ShowJames L. Brooks, Allan Burns, Ed. WeinbergerWon
1977Won
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy SeriesThe Mary Tyler Moore Show: "The Last Show"James L. Brooks, Allan Burns, Bob Ellison, David Lloyd, Ed. WeinbergerWon
1978Writers Guild of America AwardsEpisodic ComedyNominated
1979Primetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Comedy Series Taxi James L. Brooks, Glen Charles, Les Charles, David Davis, Ed. WeinbergerWon
1980Won
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series The Associates : "The Censors"Ed. WeinbergerNominated
1981Primetime Emmy AwardOutstanding Comedy SeriesTaxiJames L. Brooks, Glen Charles, Les Charles, David Davis, Ed. WeinbergerWon
Writers Guild of America AwardsEpisodic ComedyThe Associates: "The Censors"Ed. WeinbergerNominated
1982Primetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Comedy SeriesTaxiJames L. Brooks, Glen Charles, Les Charles, Ken Estin, Howard Gewirtz, Ian Praiser, Richard Sakai, Ed. WeinbergerNominated
1983James L. Brooks, Ken Estin, Richard Sakai, Sam Simon, Ed. WeinbergerNominated
1989 Gemini Awards Best Dramatic Mini-SeriesGlory! Glory!Bonny Dore, Jonathan Goodwill, Michael MacMillan, Seaton McLean Nominated
Best Writing in a Dramatic Program or Mini-SeriesJacqueline LefèvreNominated
1992 CINE Competition CINE Golden EagleMonkey HouseBruce Campbell, Jonathan Goodwill, Allan King, Gordon Mark, Michael MacMillan, Harold Tichenor, Max E. YoungsteinWon
1993 CableACE Award Dramatic or Theatrical SpecialMonkey House: "Fortitude"Chris Bailey, Michael MacMillan, Jonathan Goodwill, Wayne TourellWon
Writing in a Dramatic SeriesWon
Gemini AwardsBest Writing in a Dramatic Program or Mini-SeriesMonkey HouseNominated

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References

  1. Nelson, Valerie J. (April 12, 2007). Stan Daniels, 72; TV writer and producer co-created "Taxi". Los Angeles Times
  2. Stewart, Susan (April 14, 2007). Stan Daniels, 72, a Writer of Emmy-Winning Sitcoms, Dies. The New York Times
  3. Associated Press (April 11, 2007). Heart Attack Kills TV Legend Stan Daniels.