Lee Rich, Producer of 'The Waltons' and 'Dallas,' Dies
Rich, the Emmy-winning TV and film executive who produced
such shows as "The Waltons," "Eight Is Enough" and
"Dallas," has died. He was 85.
Rich, who was also the former chairman and chief
executive of MGM/UA Communications, said he considered his greatest
accomplishment to be co-founding Lorimar, which produced the shows. He went on
to produce "Family Matters," "Full House" and "Perfect
Strangers," among other series.
Rich started in television at the advertising agency
Benton & Bowles, where he helped package and sell both "The Dick Van
Dyke Show" and "The Danny Thomas Show." In 1965 he left to start
his own production company, Mirisch-Rich Productions, which produced such shows
as "The Rat Patrol" and one of the first Garry Marshall/Jerry Belson
shows, "Hey, Landlord."
He co-founded Lorimar in 1969, which also produced
television movies including "Sybil" and "Helter Skelter."
He talked about the company's early days in a 1999 interview for the Archive of
American Television.
Gesturing toward his wife, he said, "She and I took
it from the beginning and built it to ... the largest supplier of network
television that there was, just for a little independent company."
He said he saw it as a place where creative people could
be happy. "That gave me a great deal of joy," he said.
He was nominated for five Emmys and won for producing
"The Waltons" in 1973.
Rich left Lorimar in 1986 and presided over MGM-UA from
then until to 1988. He later produced films including "Passenger 57"
and "The Score."
RICH, Lee
Born: 12/10/1926, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.A.
Died: 5/24/2012, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Lee Rich’s westerns – executive producer:
Sheriff Who (TV) – 1967
Desperate Women (TV) – 1978
Mr. Horn (TV) – 1979

No comments:
Post a Comment