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BURNS, ALLAN
 Alan Burns Photo courtesy of Alan Burns ALLAN
BURNS. Born in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., 18 May 1935. Attended
University of Oregon, 1953-57. Married Joan Bailey, 1964, children:
Eric C. and Matthew M. Screen and television writer from 1964. Recipient:
Emmy Awards, 1968, 1971, 1977, 1974, 1976, 1977; Writers Guild Award,
1970.
TELEVISION
SERIES
1964-66
The Munsters (co-creator)
1965-70 Get Smart (head writer)
1967-68 He and She (head writer)
1969-74 Room 222 (writer, director, and producer)
1970-77 The Mary Tyler Moore Show (creator and writer)
1974-75 Paul Sands In Friends and Lovers (creator and producer)
1974-78 Rhoda (creator and writer)
1977-82 Lou Grant (creator and writer)
1984 The Duck Factory (creator and writer)
1988 Eisenhower and Lutz (creator and writer)
FILMS
Butch
and Sundance: The Early Days, 1979; A Little Romance,
1979; I Won't Dance, 1983; Just the Way You Are, 1984;
Just Between Friends (also director and co-producer), 1986
U.S. Writer-Producer
Born in Baltimore
and educated at the University of Oregon, Allan Burns moved to Los
Angeles in 1956 intending to pursue a career as a cartoonist and/or
commercial artist. After being laid off from his job as a page at
NBC, he did begin earning a living as a cartoonist for greeting
cards. He soon moved to television, employed in 1962 by Jay Ward
on the cartoon series, Rocky and his Friends and The Bullwinkle
Show. Burns then formed a partnership with Chris Hayward and
they created The Munsters, perhaps an obvious next step for
a cartoonist. He then moved on to the comedy series, He and She,
where he won the first of six Emmy Awards for his writing. Of that
series Burns says, "That was my first great experience, creating
character rather than gimmicks." On He and She Burns met
Jay Sandrich who was directing the show.
Hayward and
Burns then became story editors for Get Smart where they
worked with Mel Brooks and Buck Henry and where Sandrich also worked
for a time as a producer. Following that experience the Burns-Hayward
partnership dissolved and in 1969 Burns saw the pilot of Room
222, created by James L. Brooks, liked it, and began to write
for the show. When Brooks took a leave to do a movie, Grant Tinker,
Fox executive in charge of programming, asked Burns to produce Room
222. "He did," Tinker reports, "and I couldn't tell the difference
between what he did and what Jim did. Both were obviously superior
talents."
At about this
same time Tinker received a 13 week commitment from CBS for an undeveloped
series starring Mary Tyler Moore to whom he was then married. CBS
agreed that the project was to be under the complete control of
Tinker and Moore; Tinker approached Burns and Brooks and asked them
to collaborate to develop a show. As Burns remembers, "We had this
remarkable situation where we had an office and an on-air commitment
and nothing else."
The group rejected
the idea of a domestic comedy and determined to portray a woman
who was 30 years old, unmarried, and employed "somewhere." Burns
recalls that they had to explain "30 and unmarried" to the network,
so "We thought, 'Ah! here is our chance to do a divorce.'" CBS would
have no part of that idea and the executives in New York sent word
to Tinker, "Get rid of those guys." He refused. Instead, the creators
changed the plot to begin with Mary having just ended a failed love
affair. The pilot was made with--Jay Sandrich directing--and one
of television's landmark series, The Mary Tyler Moore Show,
was on its way.
In 1977 when
the show concluded after 168 episodes most of the writing staff
moved to Paramount Studios with long term contracts. Burns, however,
decided to stay with Tinker and joined with Gene Reynolds to create
Lou Grant. Despite the fact that it essentially re-invented
the Lou Grant character, the series was a major success, and soon
became part of the CBS Monday night response to ABC football.
Burns also directed
his talent to the writing of feature films, one being the highly
praised A Little Romance, starring Laurence Olivier, for
which he received an Oscar nomination for Best Screenplay Adaptation.
Burns left MTM in 1991 after developing several other TV series.
Calm and persuasive,
Allan Burns combines outstanding talent with an ability to work
extremely well with a variety of competing personalities. Observing
him on the set of a series in production one senses that he quickly
commands both trust and respect from those with whom he collaborates.
Director Jay Sandrich sums it up well, "Allan is the best."
-Robert
S. Alley
FURTHER
READING
Newcomb,
Horace, and Robert S. Alley. The Producer's Medium: Conversations
with Creators of American TV. New York: Oxford University Press,
1983.
See
also Mary
Tyler Moore Show; Lou
Grant
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