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Columbia Pictures Television

Columbia Pictures Television, Inc. (abbreviated as CPT) was launched on May 6, 1974, by Columbia Pictures as an American television production and distribution studio. It is the second name of the Columbia Pictures television division Screen Gems (SG) and the third name of Pioneer Telefilms. For 26 years, the company was active from 1974 until New Year's Day 2001, when it was folded into Columbia TriStar Television (which is currently known as Sony Pictures Television), a merger between Columbia Pictures Television and TriStar Television. A separate entity of CPT continues to exist on paper as an intellectual property holder, and under the moniker CPT Holdings (the initials standing for Columbia Pictures Television) to hold the copyright for the TV show The Young and the Restless, as well as old incarnations from the company's television library such as What's Happening!!

Columbia Pictures Television, Inc.
TypeDivision
IndustryTelevision production
Television syndication
PredecessorsScreen Gems
FoundedMay 6, 1974; 48 years ago (1974-05-06) Burbank, California, United States
DefunctJanuary 1, 2001; 22 years ago (2001-01-01)
FateMerged with TriStar Television and folded into Columbia TriStar Television
SuccessorsColumbia TriStar Television
Headquarters,
United States
Area served
Worldwide
OwnerSony Corporation
ParentSony Pictures Entertainment

History

Screen Gems (1948–1974)

Screen Gems was a television production company that was owned by Columbia Pictures from 1948 to May 6, 1974, best known for shows like Bewitched, The Partridge Family and I Dream of Jeannie. It was one of the largest television producers in history, and it was around that time, one of the few TV subsidiaries of a major movie studio that didn't carry the film studio's name. It was highly profitable until 1974, when it was changed its name to Columbia Pictures Television.[1]

Re-incorporation as CPT and early years (1974–1982)

The studio changed its name from Screen Gems to Columbia Pictures Television on May 6, 1974, and was suggested by David Gerber, who was producer on such CPT/Screen Gems shows, and now executive vice president of the studio, displacing Art Frankel when he was at Screen Gems. He announced plans to launch a separate unit to concentrate on movie-of-the-week titles. John H. Mitchell, who was president of the studio since 1958 when the studio was Screen Gems, said that they would take the division more closely to the parent company and to help achieve an interrelationship among all of its divisions.[1]

As the successor in interest to Screen Gems, it assumed productions of the daytime soap operas Days of Our Lives and The Young and the Restless, as well as the NBC police show Police Story. Its first produced series is the sitcom That's My Mama and was originally slated to be a Screen Gems production.[1] Other new productions that were slated to be Screen Gems productions were Nakia, Born Free and Police Woman.[2]

On May 27, 1974, Columbia Pictures Television is planning on to syndicate as early as 1975, ten one-hour musical specials that was set to be taped in Las Vegas nightclubs, and the programs will be simulcast on FM Radio to be set up by Yuri Zabran.[3] In September 1974, Columbia had signed Abby Mann to develop long-form television projects, and the first project to came out of the deal was Medical Story.[4]

In 1975, Carl Reiner joined Columbia Pictures Television to serve as executive producer and host of the show Good Heavens, which was for the ABC television network.[5] Also, on July 1, 1975, former NBC vice president Larry White had set up his own production company Larry White Productions with a deal at Columbia Pictures Television.[6] On May 10, 1976, White then joined the studio to displace Gerber as his program chief, who subsequently restarted plans to launch its own CPT-based production company.[7]

On June 13, 1977, CPT acquired worldwide distribution rights to Barney Miller and Fish from Danny Arnold, Quinn Martin's Barnaby Jones, and Soap from Witt/Thomas/Harris Productions.[8] On June 27, CPT bought domestic distribution rights to four series made by Spelling-Goldberg Productions including S.W.A.T., Starsky & Hutch, Charlie's Angels, and Family from Metromedia.[9] Later on in 1977, former MGM Television president Harris Katleman and Universal Television producer Harve Bennett joined forces to form Bennett/Katleman Productions with a deal at the studio.[10] Also in 1978, Larry White was then promoted to president of the studio.[11]

From 1978 to 1986, CPT co-produced series with Spelling-Goldberg including Fantasy Island, Hart to Hart, and T. J. Hooker. On February 19, 1979, CPT acquired TOY Productions, whose output included What's Happening!! and Carter Country.[12] In 1981, Richard Dawson has signed a joint development contract with Rastar Television and Columbia Pictures Television to produce TV shows.[13] On August 13, 1981, CPT acquired the television assets of Time Life.[14] A year later, Columbia (which Time-Life Television became a part of its sisters television company) joined with HBO and CBS to form TriStar Pictures.

On May 17, 1982, Columbia Pictures acquired Spelling-Goldberg Productions for more than $40 million.[15][16] Around the same year, former ABC executive Barbara Corday started a new Columbia-affiliated production company Can't Sing Can't Dance Productions.[17]

The Coca-Cola Years (1982–1989)

The 1980s brought significant changes to CPT. On June 22, 1982, beverage company The Coca-Cola Company bought Columbia Pictures for $750 million.[18] In 1983, Coca-Cola formed CPT Holdings and demerged CPT from Columbia Pictures Industries in 1984 and transferred CPT to CPT Holdings. In 1983, actress Suzanne Somers through Hamel/Somers Productions had signed a deal with the studio.[19] Also that same year that producer Roy Huggins struck a deal with the studio.[20] Also that year, Columbia Pictures Television entered into an agreement with producer Centerpoint to co-produce two miniseries Sadat and The Last Days of Pompeii.[21]

On January 30, 1984, CPT joined forces with Lexington Broadcast Services Company by creating a joint venture between the two companies called Colex Enterprises to distribute library shows such as Father Knows Best and The Monkees,[22] while throughout the 1980s and 1990s, other shows such as Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, and The Partridge Family were licensed to The Program Exchange. The same year, CPT acquired distribution rights to Benson. In late 1984, Barbara Corday took over as president of the studio.[23] Another high-profile deal at CPT arrived in August 1984 when two of the high-profile independent producers North Ave. Productions (backed by Michael S. Baser and Kim Weiskopf) signed with CPT after leaving 20th Century Fox Television,[24] while George Schenck and Frank Cardea through Schenck/Cardea Productions reupped its contract with CPT.[25]

On June 18, 1985, Norman Lear and Jerry Perenchio sold their company, Embassy Communications, Inc. (Embassy Pictures, Tandem Productions, and Embassy Home Entertainment) to Coca-Cola. The company gained the rights to such shows as All in the Family, Sanford and Son, The Jeffersons, Good Times, Maude, Diff'rent Strokes, Archie Bunker's Place, The Facts of Life, One Day at a Time, Who's the Boss?, and Silver Spoons, among others. AITF at the time however, was still distributed by Viacom Enterprises but under license by Embassy. Coke also made plans to spin-off Embassy Pictures and Embassy Home Entertainment.[26] Under Coca-Cola's ownership, Embassy saw success with 227 and Married... with Children. The same year, Columbia and LBS Communications launched What's Happening Now!! in first-run syndication. The show was a sequel to the 1970s ABC sitcom What's Happening!!. Also that year, Barney Rosenzweig via his The Rosenzweig Company banner had inked a three-year, distribution deal with the studio to distribute their own projects.[27]

Major changes took place in 1986. On May 5, Coke acquired Merv Griffin Enterprises, producer of the popular series, Dance Fever, The Merv Griffin Show, and the two game shows, Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune; (the nighttime versions were distributed by King World, which is now handled by successor CBS Media Ventures).[28] However, Sony Pictures Television handles off-net syndication reruns by broadcasting them on Game Show Network, while sister company Sony Pictures Home Entertainment owns DVD rights, though, as game shows, are unlikely to get a proper release). On May 21, 1986, Joe Indelli was resigned as president of Columbia Pictures Television Distribution, in order to launch a new company that was owned by MTM Enterprises to syndicate its own programs and Robert King, who was partner of The Television Program Source, would replace it as CPTD's president of the studio.[29]

Also in 1986, the former Lear units (Embassy Television, Embassy Telecommunications, and Tandem Productions) were merged to become Embassy Communications; the Tandem unit ceased production to be used after the cancellation of Diff'rent Strokes but remained in-name-only, while the Columbia and Embassy units continued to exist separately. Also on the same year on August 28, CPT acquired Danny Arnold's Four D Productions, Inc. for $50 million.[30][31][32] On November 24, 1986, Coca-Cola regrouped CPT, Embassy Communications, and Merv Griffin Enterprises into Coca-Cola Television, which was a division of the entertainment sector of The Coca-Cola Company,[33] and Coke formed a new first-run syndication unit; Coca-Cola Telecommunications due to Coca-Cola merging the distribution unit of Columbia Pictures Television and The Television Program Source (a syndicator that was a joint venture between Alan Bennett, former King World president Robert King, and CPT that was created on October 15, 1984, which Coca-Cola had a small investment in originally, and notably distributed the 1985–1986 nighttime syndicated version of The Price Is Right and was slated to distribute a new version of Match Game for syndication in 1987).[34] It was headed by Gary Rosenthal, who was leading Embassy Telecommunications, and also inserted was a new subsidiary Coca-Cola Television Operations.[35] On September 9, 1986, Columbia Pictures Television's European division is expanding its branch, producing programming for ITV franchisee holders, such as HTV, and added new co-productions from other ITV franchisees such as Anglia Television and Yorkshire Television.[36]

Coca-Cola Telecommunications also took some programs that were or slated to be distributed under the Columbia Pictures Television banner including What's Happening Now!!, The Real Ghostbusters, Dinosaucers, and Punky Brewster as well as taking the US distribution rights of Hardcastle and McCormick from Colex. Columbia acquired the rights to Punky, a former NBC in-house production, because Financial Interest and Syndication Rules prevented the network from producing more episodes for syndication after they cancelled it. During the fall of 1986, the sitcom Designing Women began a successful seven-year run on CBS. The same year, Tri-Star Pictures formed Tri-Star Television and produced the short-lived series Downtown. Tri-Star produced more series in 1987, Take Five, Nothing in Common, My Two Dads, Werewolf, and Buck James. Also that same year, Clyde Phillips joined the studio as an independent television producer.[37]

In 1987, a major reorganization shook up at Columbia/Embassy Television, whereas Embassy employee Glenn Patrick resigned to start his own film and television production company, and Barbara Corday was appointed president at the organized studio. The Columbia name would now be used for dramatic shows, while the Embassy name would be used for comedic output.[38] Owing to the association with Castle Rock Entertainment with the movie studio, CPT signed on to handle international distribution and off-net syndication of Castle Rock's programs, because Columbia had a 40% interest in the studio.[39]

Columbia Pictures Entertainment (1987–1989)

On December 21, 1987, Coca-Cola spun off their entertainment holdings and sold it to Tri-Star Pictures, Inc. for $3.1 billion.[40] Tri-Star was renamed as Columbia Pictures Entertainment (which they partially owned)[41] after the film Ishtar turned out to be a notorious failure both critically and financially. CPT Holdings then became a stand-alone division from CPT.

In January 1988, Columbia/Embassy Television and Tri-Star Television were formed to create the new Columbia Pictures Television and Embassy Communications was reduced as in-name-only and was renamed as ELP Communications as the copyright holder for the shows by Embassy. Meanwhile, Coca-Cola Telecommunications and Embassy Communications (the distributor arm) were merged into the new Columbia Pictures Television Distribution. All shows in the era ended with the Columbia logo between 1988 and 1991.

As a result, many of the staff, including Barbara Corday, who had been as president of the studio since 1984 has been laid off, as well as former Coca-Cola Telecommunications presidents Herman Rush and Peter Seale, who had also been laid off and replaced mostly by Tri-Star alumnus, such as Scott Siegler, who was president of the studio, and former Columbia/Embassy executives were assigned to the new unit, namely Gary Lieberthal, who had the same title as Columbia/Embassy, would assume the position of the new CPT, and Barry Thurston, president of CET, will have the same title for the new CPT.[42][43] Other executives retained by CPE were Arnold Mesnser, who was previously president of Tri-Star Telecommunications, who took over the responsibilities of Rush and Seale will have still have an unspecified corporate operation at CPE's headquarters for the New York area, allowing Herman Rush and Peter Seale had plans to set up a new syndicated company to handle the former CCT product.[44] On February 2, 1988, Barry Thurston; vice-president of Columbia/Embassy Television, became president of Columbia Pictures Television Distribution.[45] On December 26, 1988, writer Pamela Pettler signed a deal with the studio.[46]

On February 2, 1989, Columbia Pictures Television formed a joint-venture with Norman Lear's Act III Communications called Act III Television to produce television series instead of managing.[47][48]

The Sony years to the end (1989–2001)

On November 8, 1989, Sony bought Columbia Pictures Entertainment for $3.4 billion and the next day, Sony acquired The Guber-Peters Entertainment Company (formerly game show production company Barris Industries with the library of game shows including The Newlywed Game, The Dating Game, and The Gong Show) for $200 million after hiring film producers Peter Guber and Jon Peters to run the company. On November 5, 1990, CPE folded its first-run syndication unit Guber-Peters Television into Columbia Pictures Television Distribution.[49] On August 7, 1991, CPE changed its name to Sony Pictures Entertainment[50] and TriStar Television was relaunched on October 10.

Throughout the 1990s, the studio launched such successful shows as Beakman's World on TLC and CBS in 1992, Mad About You on NBC in 1992, Ricki Lake in syndication which lasted 11 years, The Nanny on CBS in 1993, Party of Five on Fox, NewsRadio on NBC, Malcolm & Eddie on UPN in 1996, and the short-lived cult following animated series The Critic on ABC and Fox in 1994. One of the most successful by far was Seinfeld, a Castle Rock Entertainment production which Columbia distributed in off-net syndication years later.

On August 21, 1992, Columbia's subsidiary CAT Holdings, Inc. (Columbia Act III Television) and Franklin/Waterman Entertainment created a joint venture called Franklin/Waterman 2.[51] On December 7, 1992, Sony Pictures acquired the Barry & Enright Productions game show library. In 1992, CPT has the potential by possibly going off-net syndication rights to a company backed by a joint venture between RHI Entertainment and Trilogy Entertainment Group.[52] Later that year, director Jonathan Lynn had signed a deal with the studio to develop their own television projects, including an NBC series commitment.[53]

On May 10, 1993, CPT and MCA TV formed their barter divisions. CPT's barter division was called Columbia Pictures Television Advertising Sales (a.k.a. "Columbia Television Advertising Sales"). The sales division handled series by TriStar Television and Merv Griffin Enterprises; as well as off-net series by Castle Rock Entertainment, HBO Independent Productions, and Brillstein-Grey Entertainment. CPT used other companies such as Group W Productions for Beakman's World, MTV's One World Entertainment for Married... with Children, and Tribune Entertainment for Designing Women.[54]

Merger with TriStar Television, restructuring, and expansion (1994–2001)

On February 21, 1994, after takeover by Sony Pictures Entertainment, Columbia Pictures Television and TriStar Television merged under the leadership of Jon Feltheimer and the two combined studios became Columbia TriStar Television. After the merger, Columbia Pictures Television Distribution was renamed as Columbia TriStar Television Distribution.[55][56]

During that year, SPE acquired a vast back catalog of independently produced game shows with the acquisition of Stewart Television. Along with the Merv Griffin, Chuck Barris, Barry & Enright, and CPT game shows they've already owned, these were part of the basis of the Game Show Network, launched on December 1, 1994. In 1998, ELP Communications became an in-name unit of Columbia TriStar Television. In 1997, most new shows, as well as some existing CPT shows like Party of Five, dropped the CPT logo and begin putting the CTT logo in its place, and also in January 1997, changed monikers from Sony Television Entertainment to Columbia TriStar Television Group.[57]

On July 1, 2000, Barry Thurston stepped down as president of Columbia TriStar Television Distribution after 17 years and was succeeded by then-current president, Steve Mosko.[58] On January 1, 2001, Columbia Pictures Television officially dropped its separate logo and it was replaced by that of Columbia TriStar Television, with Days of Our Lives being the last known show to feature the separate CPT logo, just in time when NBC started doing split-screen credits. On October 25, 2001, CTT and CTTD merged to form Columbia TriStar Domestic Television.[59]

On September 16, 2002, Sony Pictures changed the name of its TV division as Sony Pictures Television.[60]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c "Remodeling at Screen Gems". Broadcasting. 1974-05-06. pp. 39–40.
  2. ^ "A man for all seasons: CPT's David Gerber" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1974-10-07. Retrieved 2021-10-31.
  3. ^ "Program Briefs" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1974-05-27. Retrieved 2021-10-31.
  4. ^ "Program Briefs" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1974-09-09. Retrieved 2021-10-31.
  5. ^ "Program Briefs" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1975-03-24. Retrieved 2021-10-30.
  6. ^ "In Brief" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1975-06-30. Retrieved 2021-10-30.
  7. ^ "NBC alumnus gets CPT production reins" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1976-05-10. Retrieved 2021-10-30.
  8. ^ "Universal goes abroad with largest portfolio from fall line-ups". Broadcasting. 1977-06-13. p. 50.
  9. ^ "Spelling-Goldberg puts four ABC hits in syndication". Broadcasting. 1977-06-27. p. 58.
  10. ^ "Montanus succeeds Katleman as MGM TV president" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1977-08-01. Retrieved 2021-09-05.
  11. ^ "Fates & Fortunes" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1978-06-12. Retrieved 2021-10-30.
  12. ^ "New TOY". Broadcasting. 1979-02-19. p. 39.
  13. ^ "Monitor" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1981-06-01. Retrieved 2021-08-20.
  14. ^ "New York Times" Time's Film Unit Sold to Columbia nytimes.com, Retrieved on August 14, 2013
  15. ^ Perry, pp. 28
  16. ^ "Columbia buys Spelling-Goldberg". Broadcasting. 1982-05-17. p. 42.
  17. ^ "Fates & Fortunes" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1982-06-28. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  18. ^ "Coke Completes Columbia Merger". The New York Times. June 23, 1982. Retrieved 2010-03-14.
  19. ^ "Fates & Fortunes" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1983-09-05. Retrieved 2021-09-26.
  20. ^ "Fates & Fortunes" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1983-02-21. Retrieved 2021-10-12.
  21. ^ "CPT Links with Centerpoint for 'Pompeii' & 'Sadat' Minis". Variety. 1983-05-18. p. 50.
  22. ^ "Sale in the works for 'Eden' mini-series". Broadcasting. 1984-01-30. p. 45.
  23. ^ "Fates & Fortunes" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1984-07-02. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  24. ^ "Making deals" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1984-08-06. Retrieved 2021-10-01.
  25. ^ "Making deals" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1984-08-06. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  26. ^ Coke buys Embassy: 485 million. 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine, normanlear.com
  27. ^ "Making deals" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1985-10-21. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  28. ^ "Structuring and restructuring". Broadcasting. 1986-05-12. p. 66.
  29. ^ "Indelli Leaves Columbia Pic TV To Honcho A New MTM Distrib; Will Be Replaced By Bob King". Variety. 1986-05-21. p. 59.
  30. ^ "COKE TO BUY FILM CONCERN TO SETTLE SUITS". AP News Archive. August 29, 1986. Retrieved November 30, 2013.
  31. ^ "COMPANY NEWS; Coke Suit Pact". The New York Times. August 30, 1986. Retrieved 2011-05-17.
  32. ^ Eugene Register-Guard "Google News" Coke Gets 'Barney Miller' news.google.com, Retrieved on November 30, 2013
  33. ^ KATHRYN HARRIS "Los Angeles Times" November 25, 1986 Nation articles.latimes.com, Retrieved on May 31, 2013
  34. ^ "In Brief". Broadcasting. 1984-10-15. p. 96.
  35. ^ "Coke Revamps TV Subsidiary; Ups Lieberthal". Variety. 1986-11-26. pp. 105, 126.
  36. ^ Guider, Elizabeth (1986-09-03). "ITV Companies' Coprod Barriers Coming Down, Sez Columbia Exec". Variety. p. 68.
  37. ^ "'Lewis' and Phillips renewed" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1992-12-07. Retrieved 2021-09-19.
  38. ^ "Corday to top restructured Columbia/Embassy Television" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1987-03-23. Retrieved 2021-09-09.
  39. ^ "In Brief" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1987-10-19. Retrieved 2021-10-06.
  40. ^ KATHRYN HARRIS (September 2, 1987) Coke, Tri-Star Confirm Plans for $3.1-Billion Deal Los Angeles Times, Retrieved on August 8, 2013
  41. ^ Dick, p. 46.
  42. ^ "Coca -Cola Entertainment and Tri-Star to merge TV units" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1987-10-19. Retrieved 2021-09-08.
  43. ^ "Coke's EBS & Tri-Star Merge TV Biz, Forming Col Pictures TV". Variety. 1987-10-21. pp. 512, 528.
  44. ^ "Coke Reorganizing TV Division After Merging It With Tri-Star; Two Execs Seek Syndie Rights". Variety. 1987-10-28. pp. 43, 72.
  45. ^ "CPT's Barry Thurston: Supplying the demand". Broadcasting. 1988-02-08. p. 133.
  46. ^ "Program Notes" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1988-12-26. Retrieved 2021-09-27.
  47. ^ WILLIAM K. KNOEDELSEDER Jr. "Los Angeles Times" February 2, 1989 Norman Lear, Columbia Form Joint TV Venture articles.latimes.com, Retrieved on June 19, 2013
  48. ^ RICHARD W. STEVENSON "New York Times" February 2, 1989 Lear Joins With Columbia To Produce TV, Not Manage nytimes.com, Retrieved on June 19, 2013
  49. ^ "Swallowed Up?". Broadcasting. 1990-11-05. p. 10.
  50. ^ She Holds Torch for Sony Pictures Entertainment, latimes.com
  51. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-10-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  52. ^ "Trilogy links with RHI" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1992-02-10. Retrieved 2021-10-06.
  53. ^ "Lynn signs deal with Columbia" (PDF). Broadcasting. 1992-12-14. Retrieved 2021-11-01.
  54. ^ "Columbia and MCA both form barter units". Broadcasting. 1993-05-10. p. 15.
  55. ^ "Los Angeles Times" http://articles.latimes.com/1994-02-11/business/fi-21622_1_vice-president latimes.com February 11, 1994, Retrieved on June 28, 2012
  56. ^ Coe, Steve (February 1994). "Feltheimer heads new Columbia TriStar TV". Broadcasting & Cable. Vol. 124, no. 8. p. 20.
  57. ^ Cox, Dan (1997-01-30). "SONY STREAMLINING". Variety. Retrieved 2021-08-29.
  58. ^ Joe Schlosser "Broadcasting & Cable" 5/14/2000 Barry Thurston is a firm go nexttv.com, Retrieved on October 11, 2013
  59. ^ "The Free Library" Sony Pictures Entertainment Unveils Realignment of Columbia TriStar Domestic Television Operations. thefreelibrary.com, Retrieved on July 3, 2012
  60. ^ Sony Pictures Entertainment Renames Television Operations; Domestic and International Divisions Take Sony Name, prnewswire.com

Bibliography

  • Perry, Jeb H. (1991). Screen Gems: A History of Columbia Pictures Television from Cohn to Coke, 1948-1983. ISBN 0-8108-2487-6.

columbia, pictures, television, abbreviated, launched, 1974, columbia, pictures, american, television, production, distribution, studio, second, name, columbia, pictures, television, division, screen, gems, third, name, pioneer, telefilms, years, company, acti. Columbia Pictures Television Inc abbreviated as CPT was launched on May 6 1974 by Columbia Pictures as an American television production and distribution studio It is the second name of the Columbia Pictures television division Screen Gems SG and the third name of Pioneer Telefilms For 26 years the company was active from 1974 until New Year s Day 2001 when it was folded into Columbia TriStar Television which is currently known as Sony Pictures Television a merger between Columbia Pictures Television and TriStar Television A separate entity of CPT continues to exist on paper as an intellectual property holder and under the moniker CPT Holdings the initials standing for Columbia Pictures Television to hold the copyright for the TV show The Young and the Restless as well as old incarnations from the company s television library such as What s Happening Columbia Pictures Television Inc TypeDivisionIndustryTelevision productionTelevision syndicationPredecessorsScreen GemsFoundedMay 6 1974 48 years ago 1974 05 06 Burbank California United StatesDefunctJanuary 1 2001 22 years ago 2001 01 01 FateMerged with TriStar Television and folded into Columbia TriStar TelevisionSuccessorsColumbia TriStar TelevisionHeadquarters10202 West Washington Boulevard Culver City California United StatesArea servedWorldwideOwnerSony CorporationParentSony Pictures Entertainment Contents 1 History 1 1 Screen Gems 1948 1974 1 2 Re incorporation as CPT and early years 1974 1982 1 3 The Coca Cola Years 1982 1989 1 3 1 Columbia Pictures Entertainment 1987 1989 1 4 The Sony years to the end 1989 2001 1 4 1 Merger with TriStar Television restructuring and expansion 1994 2001 2 See also 3 Notes and references 3 1 BibliographyHistory EditScreen Gems 1948 1974 Edit Main article Screen Gems Television subsidiary 1948 1974Screen Gems was a television production company that was owned by Columbia Pictures from 1948 to May 6 1974 best known for shows like Bewitched The Partridge Family and I Dream of Jeannie It was one of the largest television producers in history and it was around that time one of the few TV subsidiaries of a major movie studio that didn t carry the film studio s name It was highly profitable until 1974 when it was changed its name to Columbia Pictures Television 1 Re incorporation as CPT and early years 1974 1982 Edit The studio changed its name from Screen Gems to Columbia Pictures Television on May 6 1974 and was suggested by David Gerber who was producer on such CPT Screen Gems shows and now executive vice president of the studio displacing Art Frankel when he was at Screen Gems He announced plans to launch a separate unit to concentrate on movie of the week titles John H Mitchell who was president of the studio since 1958 when the studio was Screen Gems said that they would take the division more closely to the parent company and to help achieve an interrelationship among all of its divisions 1 As the successor in interest to Screen Gems it assumed productions of the daytime soap operas Days of Our Lives and The Young and the Restless as well as the NBC police show Police Story Its first produced series is the sitcom That s My Mama and was originally slated to be a Screen Gems production 1 Other new productions that were slated to be Screen Gems productions were Nakia Born Free and Police Woman 2 On May 27 1974 Columbia Pictures Television is planning on to syndicate as early as 1975 ten one hour musical specials that was set to be taped in Las Vegas nightclubs and the programs will be simulcast on FM Radio to be set up by Yuri Zabran 3 In September 1974 Columbia had signed Abby Mann to develop long form television projects and the first project to came out of the deal was Medical Story 4 In 1975 Carl Reiner joined Columbia Pictures Television to serve as executive producer and host of the show Good Heavens which was for the ABC television network 5 Also on July 1 1975 former NBC vice president Larry White had set up his own production company Larry White Productions with a deal at Columbia Pictures Television 6 On May 10 1976 White then joined the studio to displace Gerber as his program chief who subsequently restarted plans to launch its own CPT based production company 7 On June 13 1977 CPT acquired worldwide distribution rights to Barney Miller and Fish from Danny Arnold Quinn Martin s Barnaby Jones and Soap from Witt Thomas Harris Productions 8 On June 27 CPT bought domestic distribution rights to four series made by Spelling Goldberg Productions including S W A T Starsky amp Hutch Charlie s Angels and Family from Metromedia 9 Later on in 1977 former MGM Television president Harris Katleman and Universal Television producer Harve Bennett joined forces to form Bennett Katleman Productions with a deal at the studio 10 Also in 1978 Larry White was then promoted to president of the studio 11 From 1978 to 1986 CPT co produced series with Spelling Goldberg including Fantasy Island Hart to Hart and T J Hooker On February 19 1979 CPT acquired TOY Productions whose output included What s Happening and Carter Country 12 In 1981 Richard Dawson has signed a joint development contract with Rastar Television and Columbia Pictures Television to produce TV shows 13 On August 13 1981 CPT acquired the television assets of Time Life 14 A year later Columbia which Time Life Television became a part of its sisters television company joined with HBO and CBS to form TriStar Pictures On May 17 1982 Columbia Pictures acquired Spelling Goldberg Productions for more than 40 million 15 16 Around the same year former ABC executive Barbara Corday started a new Columbia affiliated production company Can t Sing Can t Dance Productions 17 The Coca Cola Years 1982 1989 Edit The 1980s brought significant changes to CPT On June 22 1982 beverage company The Coca Cola Company bought Columbia Pictures for 750 million 18 In 1983 Coca Cola formed CPT Holdings and demerged CPT from Columbia Pictures Industries in 1984 and transferred CPT to CPT Holdings In 1983 actress Suzanne Somers through Hamel Somers Productions had signed a deal with the studio 19 Also that same year that producer Roy Huggins struck a deal with the studio 20 Also that year Columbia Pictures Television entered into an agreement with producer Centerpoint to co produce two miniseries Sadat and The Last Days of Pompeii 21 On January 30 1984 CPT joined forces with Lexington Broadcast Services Company by creating a joint venture between the two companies called Colex Enterprises to distribute library shows such as Father Knows Best and The Monkees 22 while throughout the 1980s and 1990s other shows such as Bewitched I Dream of Jeannie and The Partridge Family were licensed to The Program Exchange The same year CPT acquired distribution rights to Benson In late 1984 Barbara Corday took over as president of the studio 23 Another high profile deal at CPT arrived in August 1984 when two of the high profile independent producers North Ave Productions backed by Michael S Baser and Kim Weiskopf signed with CPT after leaving 20th Century Fox Television 24 while George Schenck and Frank Cardea through Schenck Cardea Productions reupped its contract with CPT 25 On June 18 1985 Norman Lear and Jerry Perenchio sold their company Embassy Communications Inc Embassy Pictures Tandem Productions and Embassy Home Entertainment to Coca Cola The company gained the rights to such shows as All in the Family Sanford and Son The Jeffersons Good Times Maude Diff rent Strokes Archie Bunker s Place The Facts of Life One Day at a Time Who s the Boss and Silver Spoons among others AITF at the time however was still distributed by Viacom Enterprises but under license by Embassy Coke also made plans to spin off Embassy Pictures and Embassy Home Entertainment 26 Under Coca Cola s ownership Embassy saw success with 227 and Married with Children The same year Columbia and LBS Communications launched What s Happening Now in first run syndication The show was a sequel to the 1970s ABC sitcom What s Happening Also that year Barney Rosenzweig via his The Rosenzweig Company banner had inked a three year distribution deal with the studio to distribute their own projects 27 Major changes took place in 1986 On May 5 Coke acquired Merv Griffin Enterprises producer of the popular series Dance Fever The Merv Griffin Show and the two game shows Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune the nighttime versions were distributed by King World which is now handled by successor CBS Media Ventures 28 However Sony Pictures Television handles off net syndication reruns by broadcasting them on Game Show Network while sister company Sony Pictures Home Entertainment owns DVD rights though as game shows are unlikely to get a proper release On May 21 1986 Joe Indelli was resigned as president of Columbia Pictures Television Distribution in order to launch a new company that was owned by MTM Enterprises to syndicate its own programs and Robert King who was partner of The Television Program Source would replace it as CPTD s president of the studio 29 Also in 1986 the former Lear units Embassy Television Embassy Telecommunications and Tandem Productions were merged to become Embassy Communications the Tandem unit ceased production to be used after the cancellation of Diff rent Strokes but remained in name only while the Columbia and Embassy units continued to exist separately Also on the same year on August 28 CPT acquired Danny Arnold s Four D Productions Inc for 50 million 30 31 32 On November 24 1986 Coca Cola regrouped CPT Embassy Communications and Merv Griffin Enterprises into Coca Cola Television which was a division of the entertainment sector of The Coca Cola Company 33 and Coke formed a new first run syndication unit Coca Cola Telecommunications due to Coca Cola merging the distribution unit of Columbia Pictures Television and The Television Program Source a syndicator that was a joint venture between Alan Bennett former King World president Robert King and CPT that was created on October 15 1984 which Coca Cola had a small investment in originally and notably distributed the 1985 1986 nighttime syndicated version of The Price Is Right and was slated to distribute a new version of Match Game for syndication in 1987 34 It was headed by Gary Rosenthal who was leading Embassy Telecommunications and also inserted was a new subsidiary Coca Cola Television Operations 35 On September 9 1986 Columbia Pictures Television s European division is expanding its branch producing programming for ITV franchisee holders such as HTV and added new co productions from other ITV franchisees such as Anglia Television and Yorkshire Television 36 Coca Cola Telecommunications also took some programs that were or slated to be distributed under the Columbia Pictures Television banner including What s Happening Now The Real Ghostbusters Dinosaucers and Punky Brewster as well as taking the US distribution rights of Hardcastle and McCormick from Colex Columbia acquired the rights to Punky a former NBC in house production because Financial Interest and Syndication Rules prevented the network from producing more episodes for syndication after they cancelled it During the fall of 1986 the sitcom Designing Women began a successful seven year run on CBS The same year Tri Star Pictures formed Tri Star Television and produced the short lived series Downtown Tri Star produced more series in 1987 Take Five Nothing in Common My Two Dads Werewolf and Buck James Also that same year Clyde Phillips joined the studio as an independent television producer 37 In 1987 a major reorganization shook up at Columbia Embassy Television whereas Embassy employee Glenn Patrick resigned to start his own film and television production company and Barbara Corday was appointed president at the organized studio The Columbia name would now be used for dramatic shows while the Embassy name would be used for comedic output 38 Owing to the association with Castle Rock Entertainment with the movie studio CPT signed on to handle international distribution and off net syndication of Castle Rock s programs because Columbia had a 40 interest in the studio 39 Columbia Pictures Entertainment 1987 1989 Edit On December 21 1987 Coca Cola spun off their entertainment holdings and sold it to Tri Star Pictures Inc for 3 1 billion 40 Tri Star was renamed as Columbia Pictures Entertainment which they partially owned 41 after the film Ishtar turned out to be a notorious failure both critically and financially CPT Holdings then became a stand alone division from CPT In January 1988 Columbia Embassy Television and Tri Star Television were formed to create the new Columbia Pictures Television and Embassy Communications was reduced as in name only and was renamed as ELP Communications as the copyright holder for the shows by Embassy Meanwhile Coca Cola Telecommunications and Embassy Communications the distributor arm were merged into the new Columbia Pictures Television Distribution All shows in the era ended with the Columbia logo between 1988 and 1991 As a result many of the staff including Barbara Corday who had been as president of the studio since 1984 has been laid off as well as former Coca Cola Telecommunications presidents Herman Rush and Peter Seale who had also been laid off and replaced mostly by Tri Star alumnus such as Scott Siegler who was president of the studio and former Columbia Embassy executives were assigned to the new unit namely Gary Lieberthal who had the same title as Columbia Embassy would assume the position of the new CPT and Barry Thurston president of CET will have the same title for the new CPT 42 43 Other executives retained by CPE were Arnold Mesnser who was previously president of Tri Star Telecommunications who took over the responsibilities of Rush and Seale will have still have an unspecified corporate operation at CPE s headquarters for the New York area allowing Herman Rush and Peter Seale had plans to set up a new syndicated company to handle the former CCT product 44 On February 2 1988 Barry Thurston vice president of Columbia Embassy Television became president of Columbia Pictures Television Distribution 45 On December 26 1988 writer Pamela Pettler signed a deal with the studio 46 On February 2 1989 Columbia Pictures Television formed a joint venture with Norman Lear s Act III Communications called Act III Television to produce television series instead of managing 47 48 The Sony years to the end 1989 2001 Edit On November 8 1989 Sony bought Columbia Pictures Entertainment for 3 4 billion and the next day Sony acquired The Guber Peters Entertainment Company formerly game show production company Barris Industries with the library of game shows including The Newlywed Game The Dating Game and The Gong Show for 200 million after hiring film producers Peter Guber and Jon Peters to run the company On November 5 1990 CPE folded its first run syndication unit Guber Peters Television into Columbia Pictures Television Distribution 49 On August 7 1991 CPE changed its name to Sony Pictures Entertainment 50 and TriStar Television was relaunched on October 10 Throughout the 1990s the studio launched such successful shows as Beakman s World on TLC and CBS in 1992 Mad About You on NBC in 1992 Ricki Lake in syndication which lasted 11 years The Nanny on CBS in 1993 Party of Five on Fox NewsRadio on NBC Malcolm amp Eddie on UPN in 1996 and the short lived cult following animated series The Critic on ABC and Fox in 1994 One of the most successful by far was Seinfeld a Castle Rock Entertainment production which Columbia distributed in off net syndication years later On August 21 1992 Columbia s subsidiary CAT Holdings Inc Columbia Act III Television and Franklin Waterman Entertainment created a joint venture called Franklin Waterman 2 51 On December 7 1992 Sony Pictures acquired the Barry amp Enright Productions game show library In 1992 CPT has the potential by possibly going off net syndication rights to a company backed by a joint venture between RHI Entertainment and Trilogy Entertainment Group 52 Later that year director Jonathan Lynn had signed a deal with the studio to develop their own television projects including an NBC series commitment 53 On May 10 1993 CPT and MCA TV formed their barter divisions CPT s barter division was called Columbia Pictures Television Advertising Sales a k a Columbia Television Advertising Sales The sales division handled series by TriStar Television and Merv Griffin Enterprises as well as off net series by Castle Rock Entertainment HBO Independent Productions and Brillstein Grey Entertainment CPT used other companies such as Group W Productions for Beakman s World MTV s One World Entertainment for Married with Children and Tribune Entertainment for Designing Women 54 Merger with TriStar Television restructuring and expansion 1994 2001 Edit On February 21 1994 after takeover by Sony Pictures Entertainment Columbia Pictures Television and TriStar Television merged under the leadership of Jon Feltheimer and the two combined studios became Columbia TriStar Television After the merger Columbia Pictures Television Distribution was renamed as Columbia TriStar Television Distribution 55 56 During that year SPE acquired a vast back catalog of independently produced game shows with the acquisition of Stewart Television Along with the Merv Griffin Chuck Barris Barry amp Enright and CPT game shows they ve already owned these were part of the basis of the Game Show Network launched on December 1 1994 In 1998 ELP Communications became an in name unit of Columbia TriStar Television In 1997 most new shows as well as some existing CPT shows like Party of Five dropped the CPT logo and begin putting the CTT logo in its place and also in January 1997 changed monikers from Sony Television Entertainment to Columbia TriStar Television Group 57 On July 1 2000 Barry Thurston stepped down as president of Columbia TriStar Television Distribution after 17 years and was succeeded by then current president Steve Mosko 58 On January 1 2001 Columbia Pictures Television officially dropped its separate logo and it was replaced by that of Columbia TriStar Television with Days of Our Lives being the last known show to feature the separate CPT logo just in time when NBC started doing split screen credits On October 25 2001 CTT and CTTD merged to form Columbia TriStar Domestic Television 59 On September 16 2002 Sony Pictures changed the name of its TV division as Sony Pictures Television 60 See also EditList of Sony Pictures Television programs Sony Pictures Television Columbia TriStar Television TriStar Television Screen Gems Columbia Pictures TriStar Pictures Triumph FilmsNotes and references Edit a b c Remodeling at Screen Gems Broadcasting 1974 05 06 pp 39 40 A man for all seasons CPT s David Gerber PDF Broadcasting 1974 10 07 Retrieved 2021 10 31 Program Briefs PDF Broadcasting 1974 05 27 Retrieved 2021 10 31 Program Briefs PDF Broadcasting 1974 09 09 Retrieved 2021 10 31 Program Briefs PDF Broadcasting 1975 03 24 Retrieved 2021 10 30 In Brief PDF Broadcasting 1975 06 30 Retrieved 2021 10 30 NBC alumnus gets CPT production reins PDF Broadcasting 1976 05 10 Retrieved 2021 10 30 Universal goes abroad with largest portfolio from fall line ups Broadcasting 1977 06 13 p 50 Spelling Goldberg puts four ABC hits in syndication Broadcasting 1977 06 27 p 58 Montanus succeeds Katleman as MGM TV president PDF Broadcasting 1977 08 01 Retrieved 2021 09 05 Fates amp Fortunes PDF Broadcasting 1978 06 12 Retrieved 2021 10 30 New TOY Broadcasting 1979 02 19 p 39 Monitor PDF Broadcasting 1981 06 01 Retrieved 2021 08 20 New York Times Time s Film Unit Sold to Columbia nytimes com Retrieved on August 14 2013 Perry pp 28 Columbia buys Spelling Goldberg Broadcasting 1982 05 17 p 42 Fates amp Fortunes PDF Broadcasting 1982 06 28 Retrieved 2021 09 21 Coke Completes Columbia Merger The New York Times June 23 1982 Retrieved 2010 03 14 Fates amp Fortunes PDF Broadcasting 1983 09 05 Retrieved 2021 09 26 Fates amp Fortunes PDF Broadcasting 1983 02 21 Retrieved 2021 10 12 CPT Links with Centerpoint for Pompeii amp Sadat Minis Variety 1983 05 18 p 50 Sale in the works for Eden mini series Broadcasting 1984 01 30 p 45 Fates amp Fortunes PDF Broadcasting 1984 07 02 Retrieved 2021 09 21 Making deals PDF Broadcasting 1984 08 06 Retrieved 2021 10 01 Making deals PDF Broadcasting 1984 08 06 Retrieved 2021 10 24 Coke buys Embassy 485 million Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine normanlear com Making deals PDF Broadcasting 1985 10 21 Retrieved 2021 10 29 Structuring and restructuring Broadcasting 1986 05 12 p 66 Indelli Leaves Columbia Pic TV To Honcho A New MTM Distrib Will Be Replaced By Bob King Variety 1986 05 21 p 59 COKE TO BUY FILM CONCERN TO SETTLE SUITS AP News Archive August 29 1986 Retrieved November 30 2013 COMPANY NEWS Coke Suit Pact The New York Times August 30 1986 Retrieved 2011 05 17 Eugene Register Guard Google News Coke Gets Barney Miller news google com Retrieved on November 30 2013 KATHRYN HARRIS Los Angeles Times November 25 1986 Nation articles latimes com Retrieved on May 31 2013 In Brief Broadcasting 1984 10 15 p 96 Coke Revamps TV Subsidiary Ups Lieberthal Variety 1986 11 26 pp 105 126 Guider Elizabeth 1986 09 03 ITV Companies Coprod Barriers Coming Down Sez Columbia Exec Variety p 68 Lewis and Phillips renewed PDF Broadcasting 1992 12 07 Retrieved 2021 09 19 Corday to top restructured Columbia Embassy Television PDF Broadcasting 1987 03 23 Retrieved 2021 09 09 In Brief PDF Broadcasting 1987 10 19 Retrieved 2021 10 06 KATHRYN HARRIS September 2 1987 Coke Tri Star Confirm Plans for 3 1 Billion Deal Los Angeles Times Retrieved on August 8 2013 Dick p 46 Coca Cola Entertainment and Tri Star to merge TV units PDF Broadcasting 1987 10 19 Retrieved 2021 09 08 Coke s EBS amp Tri Star Merge TV Biz Forming Col Pictures TV Variety 1987 10 21 pp 512 528 Coke Reorganizing TV Division After Merging It With Tri Star Two Execs Seek Syndie Rights Variety 1987 10 28 pp 43 72 CPT s Barry Thurston Supplying the demand Broadcasting 1988 02 08 p 133 Program Notes PDF Broadcasting 1988 12 26 Retrieved 2021 09 27 WILLIAM K KNOEDELSEDER Jr Los Angeles Times February 2 1989 Norman Lear Columbia Form Joint TV Venture articles latimes com Retrieved on June 19 2013 RICHARD W STEVENSON New York Times February 2 1989 Lear Joins With Columbia To Produce TV Not Manage nytimes com Retrieved on June 19 2013 Swallowed Up Broadcasting 1990 11 05 p 10 She Holds Torch for Sony Pictures Entertainment latimes com Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2015 10 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Trilogy links with RHI PDF Broadcasting 1992 02 10 Retrieved 2021 10 06 Lynn signs deal with Columbia PDF Broadcasting 1992 12 14 Retrieved 2021 11 01 Columbia and MCA both form barter units Broadcasting 1993 05 10 p 15 Los Angeles Times http articles latimes com 1994 02 11 business fi 21622 1 vice president latimes com February 11 1994 Retrieved on June 28 2012 Coe Steve February 1994 Feltheimer heads new Columbia TriStar TV Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 124 no 8 p 20 Cox Dan 1997 01 30 SONY STREAMLINING Variety Retrieved 2021 08 29 Joe Schlosser Broadcasting amp Cable 5 14 2000 Barry Thurston is a firm go nexttv com Retrieved on October 11 2013 The Free Library Sony Pictures Entertainment Unveils Realignment of Columbia TriStar Domestic Television Operations thefreelibrary com Retrieved on July 3 2012 Sony Pictures Entertainment Renames Television Operations Domestic and International Divisions Take Sony Name prnewswire com Bibliography Edit Perry Jeb H 1991 Screen Gems A History of Columbia Pictures Television from Cohn to Coke 1948 1983 ISBN 0 8108 2487 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Columbia Pictures Television amp oldid 1141139810, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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