Posted on 07/27/2018 12:43:32 PM PDT by EdnaMode
Norman Lear continues to defy convention about career longevity and age. The TV icon, who today celebrates his 96th birthday, and his Act III production company have signed a two-year first look deal with Sony Pictures TV. The pact includes the option to re-imagine titles from Lears extensive library including All In The Family, The Jeffersons, Good Times, Maude and Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, among others.
I couldnt be prouder and more excited about joining Sony Pictures Television, who has the guts to go with a kid, Lear quipped.
Sony Pictures TV, which owns the Norman Lear library, has been his partner for the past few years. The studio produces the reboot of Lears classic series One Day At A Time on Netflix. Executive produced by Lear, the comedy is currently filming its third season. And it was Sony TV that last year took in Lears passion project, Guess Who Died, a retirement home comedy script he had unsuccessfully tried to sell for more than seven years. Partnering him with Peter Tolan, the studio sold the project to NBC where it went to pilot. When the pilot did not make the cut to series, the studio tried actively to find another home for it.
We couldnt be more thrilled to be expanding our relationship with Brent and Norman. Norman is an icon in our industry and its a dream come true to be working with him. Were excited to create more magic with Norman and Brent, said SPT President Jeff Frost and Co-Presidents, Chris Parnell and Jason Clodfelter.
One Day At A Time was inspired by Lears series of the same name which aired on CBS from 1975-1984. Developed and executive produced by Gloria Calderon Kellet and Mike Royce, the reboot is praised for tackling important issues. It follows the life of Penelope (Justina Machado), a newly single Army veteran, and her Cuban-American family, as they navigate the ups and downs of life.
Over Lears vast career, the World War II veteran and Kennedy Center honoree has won four Emmy Awards and two Peabody Awards. As the founder of People For the American Way, he has been recognized for his passion in politics and has been a force behind social change, climate change, womens rights and overall humanitarian efforts.
Ratings gold!
Norman Lear continues to defy convention about career longevity and age. The TV icon, who today celebrates his 96th birthday,
...
Those liberals are so young and hip. And Murphy Brown, who is coming back, looks like she’s 96.
Considering he ripped most of those off from the BBC and ITV anyway...
I want to see a new version of George Jefferson talking about zebra-striped babies!
No thanks. More free advertising for the Democrap party. I hate sit-coms. Never watched them then...won’t watch them now.
Everyone will be transsexual, Hispanic Muslims...
Lear would never admit it, but if he was serious about ‘reviving’ anything like those old shows, The Roseanne Show
WITH Roseanne Barr was very close to what he would need to make it all happen. He ought to write a new show just for her, but the Norman Lear of today has drank way too much Kool-Aid. His ‘inner-Mel Brooks style’ funnybone may be fully destroyed by now.
He was an old man when I met him in the studio snack bar in 1974 where my mom and her friend were vying to get on New Treasure Hunt.
IOW, he has no new ideas........................
Why don’t they go ahead and remake the Golden Girls and Grumpy Old Men?
Oh yeah. She was too much. Bouncing that basket ball, oh boy.
Lear, Ginsberg, Soros, the good die young.
I’d watch a remake of “Combat” or “Dragnet” if they’d do it right, but they wouldn’t.
Just remember: the tree did not make the orange for you.
the pic on the left is a more recent picture.
The original George Jefferson was a Republican.
Archie was an old-school Democrat.
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