July 27, 1922
Norman Milton Lear is born.
Writer and producer who produced such 1970s sitcoms as All in the Family, Sanford and Son, One Day at a Time, The Jeffersons, Good Times and Maude. As a political activist, he founded the civil liberties advocacy organization People For the American Way in 1981 and has supported First Amendment rights and liberal causes.
Lear was born in New Haven, Connecticut, the
son of Jeanette (née Seicol) and Herman Lear, who worked in sales. [1]
He grew up in a Jewish
home and had a Bar Mitzvah.[2]
Lear went to high school in Hartford, Connecticut and
subsequently attended Emerson College in Boston, but
dropped out in 1942 to join the United States Army Air
Forces. During World War II, he served in the
Mediterranean Theater as a radio operator/gunner on Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress bombers
with the 772nd Bombardment Squadron, 463rd Bombardment Group (Heavy) of the Fifteenth Air Force. He flew
52 combat missions, for which he was awarded the Air
Medal with four Oak Leaf Clusters. Lear was discharged from the Army
in 1945. He and his fellow WWII crew members are featured in the book
"Crew Umbriago" by Daniel P.Carroll (tail gunner), and also in
another book: 772nd Bomb Squadron: The Men, The Memories by Turner
Publishing Company.
In 1954, Lear was enlisted as a writer hoping to salvage the new Celeste
Holm CBS
sitcom,
Honestly, Celeste!, but
the program was canceled after eight episodes. In 1959, Lear created his first
television series starring Henry Fonda, a half-hour
western for Revue Studios called The Deputy. Starting out
as a comedy writer, then a film director (he wrote and produced the 1967 film Divorce American Style and
directed the 1971 film Cold Turkey, both starring
Dick
Van Dyke), Lear tried to sell a concept for a sitcom about a blue-collar
American family to ABC. They
rejected the show after two pilots were filmed. After a third pilot was shot,
CBS picked up the show, known as All
in the Family. It premiered January 12, 1971 to disappointing
ratings, but it took home several Emmy
Awards that year, including Outstanding Comedy Series. The show did
very well in summer reruns, and it flourished in the 1971-1972 season, becoming
the top-rated show on TV for the next five years. After falling from the #1
spot, All in the Family still remained in the top ten, well after it
transitioned into Archie Bunker's Place. The show was based on the British
sitcom Til Death Us Do Part,
about an irascible working-class Tory and his Socialist
son-in-law.
Lear's second big TV hit was also based on a British sitcom, Steptoe
and Son, about a West
London junk dealer and his son. Lear changed the setting to the Watts
section of Los Angeles and the characters
to African-Americans, and the NBC show Sanford
and Son was an instant hit. Numerous hit shows followed
thereafter, including Maude (the lead character
of which was reportedly based on Lear's then-wife Frances),
The
Jeffersons (both spin-offs of All in the
Family), and One Day at a Time.
What most of the Lear sitcoms had in common was that they were
character-driven, had sets that more resembled stage plays than common sitcom
sets, were shot on videotape in place of film, used a
live studio audience, and most importantly dealt with the social and political
issues of the day. Ironically, although Lear's shows are often considered
somewhat autobiographical and closely identified with his personal experiences,
his early hits were actually all adapted from someone else's creations: the two
aforementioned British adaptations and Maude, while reputedly based on
Lear's wife, was actually the brainchild of series producer Charlie Hauck.
Lear's longtime producing partner was Bud
Yorkin, who served as executive producer of Sanford and Son,
split with Lear in 1975. He started a production company with writer/producers Saul Turteltaub
and Bernie Orenstein,
but they had only two shows that ran more than a year: What's Happening!! and Carter
Country. The Lear/Yorkin company was known as Tandem
Productions. Lear and talent agent Jerry
Perenchio founded T.A.T. Communications (T.A.T. stood for
"Tuchus Affen Tisch", which is Yiddish for "Putting one's butt
on the line") in 1975, which co-existed with Tandem Productions and was
often referred to in periodicals as Tandem/T.A.T. The Lear organization was one
of the most successful independent TV producers of the 1970s.
He also developed the cult favorite TV series Mary Hartman, Mary
Hartman. Lear himself stepped down as production supervisor on
his shows in 1978 to work on a film dealing with his concerns about the growing
influence of radical right-wing evangelists. The film was never fully
developed, but the process stimulated his long engagement in political
activism.
In 1982, the company bought out Avco
Embassy Pictures from Avco Financial Corporation, and the Avco part
of its name was dropped. Embassy Pictures was led by (current Warner
Bros. President) Alan Horn and Martin
Schaeffer, later co-founders of Castle Rock Entertainment with
Rob
Reiner. In 1985, Lear sold all his film and television production
holdings to Columbia Pictures (then owned
by the Coca-Cola
Company) which acquired Embassy's film and television division (which included
Embassy's in-house television productions and the television rights to the
Embassy theatrical library) for $485 million in shares of The Coca-Cola
Company. Lear and his longtime partner Jerry Perenchio split the net proceeds
(about $250 mm). Coke later sold the film division to Dino De Laurentiis
and the home video arm to Nelson entertainment (led by Barry Spikings).
The brand Tandem Productions was abandoned in 1986 with the cancellation of Diff'rent Strokes, and
Embassy ceased to exist as a single entity in late 1987, having been split into
different components owned by different entities. The Embassy TV division became
ELP Communications in 1988, but shows originally produced by Embassy were now
under the Columbia Pictures Television
banner from 1988–1994 and the Columbia TriStar Television
banner from 1994-1998.
Lear attempted to return to TV production in the 1990s with the shows Sunday Dinner, The Powers That Be,
and 704
Hauser, the last one putting a different family in the house
from All in the Family. None of
the series proved successful, despite critical acclaim.
Today, Lear's TV library is owned by Sony Pictures
Television.
However, Lear was successful as a businessman, especially with his leveraged
acquisition vehicle Act III Communications, founded in 1986 and led initially
by Tom
McGrath (who met Lear while negotiating on behalf of Coca-Cola the
acquisition of Lear's old company) and later by Hal Gaba, a former Embassy
executive. This included: Act III Theatres, sold to KKR in 1997 at what is to
this day considered a record premium; Act III Broadcasting, sold to Abry
Communications; and Act III Publishing, sold to PriMedia. Lear is also the
owner of Concord Records and in 2005 consummated a 50% interest in the film
library and production assets of Village Roadshow Productions Pty Ltd.
Lear is unofficially credited with giving Rob
Reiner, son of Carl Reiner (and a star of All
in the Family) his start as a director by financing the mockumentary
This is Spinal Tap. Lear's
Act III Communications, founded in 1986 with Tom
McGrath as President, produced several notable films, including Rob
Reiner's next two films: Stand By Me, and The Princess Bride as well
as Fried Green Tomatoes.
Lear helped finance his then wife's magazine, Lear's
Magazine, started by Frances
Lear in the late 1980s. The magazine ceased publication in 1994.
In 1997, Lear teamed up with Jim George to produce the Kids'
WB cartoon series, Channel
Umptee-3. It premiered on Kids WB's Saturday morning lineup on
October 25, 1997. The cartoon made television history, as it was the first to
meet the Federal Communications
Commission's then-new educational/informal programming requirements.
Like Lear's other television works, it received positive reviews, but ratings
were low due to the network's focus on their core high-rated programming at the
time. A time switch from a concrete Saturday schedule to a revolving Friday
timeslot caused the show's ratings to dip even more, and it was eventually
canceled after one season. September 4, 1998 marked the last airing of Umptee-3
on the WB.
In 2003, Lear made an appearance on South
Park during the "I'm a Little Bit Country"
episode, providing the voice of Benjamin
Franklin. He also served as a consultant on the episodes "I'm a
Little Bit Country" and "Cancelled".
In 1967, Lear was nominated for an Academy
Award for writing Divorce, American Style. Lear was among the
first seven television pioneers inducted into the Television Academy Hall
of Fame in 1984. He received four Emmy
Awards (two in 1971, and one each in 1972 and 1973) and a Peabody
Award in 1978. He received the Humanist Arts Award from the American Humanist
Association in 1977. His star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame is
located at 6615 Hollywood Boulevard.
In 1999, President Bill Clinton awarded the National Medal of Arts to
Lear, noting that “Norman Lear has held up a mirror to American society and
changed the way we look at it.”
In addition to his success as a TV producer and businessman, Lear is an
outspoken supporter of First
Amendment and liberal causes. The only time
that he did not support the Democratic
candidate for President
was in 1980: he voted for John
Anderson because he considered the Carter
administration to be "a disaster".[citation needed]
In 1981, Lear founded People For the American Way, a
civil liberties advocacy organization. People For ran several advertising
campaigns opposing the interjection of religion in politics. In 1987, People
For campaigned against Robert Bork's nomination to
the Supreme Court of the
United States. The organization is still active.
in 1989, Lear founded the Business Enterprise Trust, an
educational program that used annual awards, business school case studies, and
videos to spotlight exemplary social innovations in American business. In 2000,
he established the Norman Lear Center, a
multidisciplinary research and public policy center for exploring the
convergence of entertainment, commerce, and society, at the University of Southern
California Annenberg School for
Communication.
Lear serves on the National Advisory Board of the Young Storytellers
Foundation. He has written articles for The Huffington Post.
Lear is a trustee emeritus at The Paley Center for Media.[3]
In 2001, Lear and his wife, Lyn, purchased a Dunlap
broadside—one of the first published copies of the United States
Declaration of Independence—for $8.1 million. Not a document
collector, Lear said in a press release and on the Today show that his intent
was to tour the document around the United States so that the country could
experience its "birth certificate" firsthand.[4]
Through the end of 2004, the document traveled throughout the United States in
the Declaration of Independence
Roadtrip, which Lear organized, visiting several presidential libraries, dozens
of museums, as well as the 2002 Olympics, Super
Bowl XXXVI, and the Live 8 concert in
Philadelphia.
Lear and Rob Reiner produced a filmed,
dramatic reading of the Declaration of Independence—the last project filmed by
famed cinematographer Conrad
Hall—on July 4, 2001, at Independence Hall
in Philadelphia. The film,
introduced by Morgan Freeman, features Kathy
Bates, Benicio del Toro, Michael
Douglas, Mel Gibson, Whoopi
Goldberg, Graham Greene, Ming-Na,
Edward
Norton, Winona Ryder, Kevin
Spacey, and Renée Zellweger as readers.
The film was directed by Arvin Brown and scored by John Williams.
In 2004, Lear established Declare Yourself, a national nonpartisan,
nonprofit campaign created to empower and encourage eligible 18-29 year-olds in
America to register and vote. Since then, it has registered almost 4 million
young people and contributed significantly to the unprecedented turnout of
young voters.
As part of the ongoing drive to promote active and thoughtful citizenship,
Lear premiered BornAgainAmerican.org at the Presidential Inauguration in 2009.
The BornAgainAmerican campaign includes a specially commissioned song and an
interactive website, reminding visitors of the American values expressed in the
Declaration of Independence.
July 29, 1957
Jack Paar becomes host of The Tonight Show.
NBC returned the program to a talk/variety show format once again, with Jack Paar becoming the new solo host of the show. Under Paar, most of the NBC affiliates which had dropped the show during the ill-fated run of America After Dark began airing the show once again. Paar's era began the practice of branding the series after the host, and as such the program, though officially still called The Tonight Show, was marketed as The Jack Paar Show. A combo band conducted by Paar's Army buddy pianist Jose Melis filled commercial breaks and backed musical entertainers. [See music and announcers below.] Paar also introduced the idea of having guest hosts; one of these early hosts was Johnny Carson. In the late 1950s, it was one of the first regularly scheduled shows to be videotaped in color.
On February 11, 1960, Jack Paar walked off his show for a month after NBC censors
edited out a segment, taped the night before, about a joke involving a
"W.C." (water closet, a polite term for a flush toilet) being
confused for a "wayside chapel." As he left his desk, he said,
"I am leaving The Tonight Show. There must be a better way of
making a living than this." Paar's abrupt departure left his startled
announcer, Hugh Downs, to finish the broadcast himself.
Paar returned to the show on March 7, 1960, strolled on stage, struck a pose, and said, "As I was saying before I was interrupted..." After the audience erupted in applause, Paar continued, "When I walked off, I said there must be a better way of making a living. Well, I've looked... and there isn't."
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