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Miller-Boyett Productions

Miller-Boyett Productions (or simply Miller-Boyett) is an American television production company that mainly developed television sitcoms from the 1970s through the 1990s. It was responsible for family-oriented hit series such as Happy Days, Laverne & Shirley, Mork & Mindy, The Hogan Family, Bosom Buddies, Full House, Perfect Strangers, Family Matters and Step by Step.

Miller-Boyett Productions
TypeProduction
IndustryTelevision production
Founded1972; 51 years ago (1972) (original)
2015; 8 years ago (2015) (relaunch)
Defunct1999; 24 years ago (1999) (original)
2020; 3 years ago (2020) (relaunch)
Key people
  • Thomas L. Miller (co-founder; partner, 1972–2020)
  • Edward K. Milkis (co-founder; partner, 1972–1984)
  • Robert L. Boyett (partner, 1978–2020)
  • Garry K. Marshall (associate, 1974–1984)
  • William S. Bickley (associate, 1991–1997)
  • Michael Warren (associate, 1991–1997; partner, 1997–1999)
ProductsTelevision programs

The company traces its roots back to Miller-Milkis Productions, which was formed in 1972. Its original run as a production company remained uninterrupted until its initial shutdown in 1999, having changed from the longtime Miller-Boyett name to Miller-Boyett-Warren two years prior. In 2015, the company was resurrected under the former Miller-Boyett name.[1]

History Edit

The production company was founded in 1972 by program executive Thomas L. Miller and former film editor Edward K. Milkis as Miller-Milkis Productions. The company had an exclusive deal with Paramount Television to produce television shows.[2] The company bought its first big hit, that of Happy Days in 1974, which ran for 11 seasons over 10 years, and spawned a lineup of spinoffs.[3] In 1979, the company became Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions once Robert L. Boyett (who was a creative consultant of Happy Days at the time) joined the company, before adopting the Miller-Boyett name five years later following Milkis' resignation.

Most of the series the company produced for ABC during the Miller-Boyett era aired on the network's Friday night lineup (known as TGIF from 1989 to 2000). The company brought out hits that were deemed to be popular, and wanted stronger attention.[4] During the 1990–91 season, all four Friday comedies on ABC were Miller-Boyett series: Perfect Strangers, Full House, Family Matters and the short-lived Going Places;[5] and the company had six sitcoms on the air during that same season, along with The Hogan Family (which had moved to CBS, after a five-season run on NBC) and the short-lived The Family Man. Around 1997, Michael Warren, longtime Miller-Boyett associate and co-creator of Family Matters and Step by Step, broke his partnership with producer partner William Bickley after twenty-one years and joined Miller-Boyett Productions; the company was renamed Miller-Boyett-Warren Productions and produced its last shows, Meego and Two of a Kind. After both shows were cancelled, the company was shut down. For the 1997–98 season, a majority of the shows went to CBS through their short-lived Friday Night Block Party sitcom block, although an attempt to do a sitcom for The WB collapsed.[6][7]

Originally, the company was set up at Paramount Television when the company was formed. After Milkis left the company, Miller and Boyett left Paramount to work for Lorimar Television in 1985,[4] which was folded into Warner Bros. Television in 1993. Despite the fact that the company shut down as Miller-Boyett-Warren Productions, it was, and still is, referred to as "Miller-Boyett Productions" (or just simply "Miller-Boyett").

In 2013, Boyett returned to TV producing under his own production nameplate, Robert L. Boyett Productions. With veteran producer Robert Horn, he co-created the FX sitcom Partners, which was co-produced by his company, along with Robert Horn Productions, Grammnet Productions and Debmar-Mercury, among other contributors. Robert L. Boyett Productions alone was originally said to be in development with Jeff Franklin Productions for the upcoming 2016 Full House sequel series, Fuller House. However, when a front cover image of the first Fuller House shooting script was made public in late July 2015, both Miller and Boyett were listed as executive producers on the script, with Miller-Boyett Productions being listed at the bottom of the cover page—thus confirming that the production company has been effectively resurrected.[1]

Production team members Edit

  • Thomas Lee Miller (August 31, 1940 – April 5, 2020 (aged 79)) – After growing up in Milwaukee, he started his career as assistant to director Billy Wilder. Miller also previously served as a development executive at Paramount and 20th Century Fox. In 1970, a year after starting the company with Edward K. Milkis, he co-created Nanny and the Professor with producer AJ Carothers. Prior to then, he was a writer of The Year of the Horse in 1966, and in 1969 he was in charge of development for The Immortal and did the same job in the 1970s for Weekend of Terror and Assault on the Wayne. He later wrote episodes for Nanny and the Professor and Me and the Chimp and co-created that show with Garry Marshall. Miller co-produced the feature films Silver Streak (1976) and Foul Play (1978) with Edward Milkis. Miller died on April 5, 2020, after Fuller House ended production.
  • Robert Lee Boyett (born 1942 (age 80–81)) – He grew up in Atlanta, and later on moved to New York City to become a development executive at ABC, then later became senior vice president at Paramount Television.[4] He later became a creative consultant to Happy Days on its mid-seasons before joining Miller and Milkis in 1978. Boyett however was not credited as an executive producer with Tom Miller and Ed Milkis on most series in the Miller/Milkis/Boyett era. Following the dissolution of the Miller-Boyett-Warren company, Boyett became a producer for Broadway theatre productions. He currently resides in Salisbury, Connecticut.
  • Edward Kenneth "Eddie" Milkis (July 16, 1931 – December 14, 1996 (aged 65)) – A lifelong resident of Los Angeles, California, he became a film editor on such movies as North by Northwest. Next he signed on as the associate producer of Star Trek. Later on, he was involved in some of Tom Miller's early shows prior to the establishment of Miller-Boyett. He died on Saturday, December 14, 1996, at the age of 65, after a lengthy illness. His last production was Exit to Eden, which he produced alongside Garry Marshall.
  • Michael Warren started his career as the associate producer of The Partridge Family, where he met writer/Producer William S. Bickley. Then as an associate producer on Happy Days for its second season, later a story consultant with William Bickley, who was then a story editor. The two men produced Out of the Blue in 1979. Warren and Bickley later wrote for Happy Days and Perfect Strangers, before creating Family Matters, Getting By and Step by Step between 1989 and 1993, at that point Bickley and Warren became squarely producers instead of producer/writers, before officially ending their partnership around the time of the cancellation of Family Matters and Step by Step and joining the Miller-Boyett team.[citation needed]

Associates to Miller, Boyett, Milkis and Warren Edit

Collaborators with Miller, Boyett, Milkis and Warren Edit

List of shows produced by either production team Edit

Miller-Milkis Productions Edit

Television series Edit

Made-for-television films Edit

  • The Heist (1972)
  • Night of Terror (1972)
  • The Weekend Nun (1972)
  • The Devil's Daughter (1973)
  • Egan (1973, two-hour movie pilot for a proposed police drama starring Eugene Roche)

Theatrically released films Edit

Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions Edit

Television series Edit

Made-for-television films Edit

Theatrically released films Edit

Miller-Boyett Productions Edit

Miller-Boyett-Warren Productions Edit

  • Meego (1997; first series with Miller/Boyett/Warren production team)
  • Two of a Kind (1998–1999; last series produced by the company before the initial 1999 shut-down)

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Lecaro, Lena (July 30, 2015). "Candace Cameron Bure Reveals Revamped 'Fuller House' Plot". Entertainment Tonight. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  2. ^ "Fates & Fortunes" (PDF). Broadcasting. February 28, 1972. Retrieved August 15, 2021.
  3. ^ "ABC-TV takes over second in ratings" (PDF). Broadcasting. September 29, 1975. Retrieved August 15, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Weinstein, Nathan (January 14, 1990). "The Revenge of Successful Sitcoms: The TV shows of Tom Miller and Bob Boyett are often maligned by critics, but their rewards are in the ratings". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 22, 2022.
  5. ^ Harris, Mark (March 29, 1991). "ABC's Formidable Fridays". Entertainment Weekly.
  6. ^ "Rival nets keep 'Step'". Variety. August 21, 1997. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  7. ^ "Arnold, Williams join the WB Net sitcom lineup". Variety. January 6, 1997. Retrieved December 6, 2021.

miller, boyett, productions, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Miller Boyett Productions news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Miller Boyett Productions or simply Miller Boyett is an American television production company that mainly developed television sitcoms from the 1970s through the 1990s It was responsible for family oriented hit series such as Happy Days Laverne amp Shirley Mork amp Mindy The Hogan Family Bosom Buddies Full House Perfect Strangers Family Matters and Step by Step Miller Boyett ProductionsTypeProductionIndustryTelevision productionFounded1972 51 years ago 1972 original 2015 8 years ago 2015 relaunch Defunct1999 24 years ago 1999 original 2020 3 years ago 2020 relaunch Key peopleThomas L Miller co founder partner 1972 2020 Edward K Milkis co founder partner 1972 1984 Robert L Boyett partner 1978 2020 Garry K Marshall associate 1974 1984 William S Bickley associate 1991 1997 Michael Warren associate 1991 1997 partner 1997 1999 ProductsTelevision programsThe company traces its roots back to Miller Milkis Productions which was formed in 1972 Its original run as a production company remained uninterrupted until its initial shutdown in 1999 having changed from the longtime Miller Boyett name to Miller Boyett Warren two years prior In 2015 the company was resurrected under the former Miller Boyett name 1 Contents 1 History 2 Production team members 2 1 Associates to Miller Boyett Milkis and Warren 2 2 Collaborators with Miller Boyett Milkis and Warren 3 List of shows produced by either production team 3 1 Miller Milkis Productions 3 1 1 Television series 3 1 2 Made for television films 3 1 3 Theatrically released films 3 2 Miller Milkis Boyett Productions 3 2 1 Television series 3 2 2 Made for television films 3 2 3 Theatrically released films 3 3 Miller Boyett Productions 3 4 Miller Boyett Warren Productions 4 ReferencesHistory EditThe production company was founded in 1972 by program executive Thomas L Miller and former film editor Edward K Milkis as Miller Milkis Productions The company had an exclusive deal with Paramount Television to produce television shows 2 The company bought its first big hit that of Happy Days in 1974 which ran for 11 seasons over 10 years and spawned a lineup of spinoffs 3 In 1979 the company became Miller Milkis Boyett Productions once Robert L Boyett who was a creative consultant of Happy Days at the time joined the company before adopting the Miller Boyett name five years later following Milkis resignation Most of the series the company produced for ABC during the Miller Boyett era aired on the network s Friday night lineup known as TGIF from 1989 to 2000 The company brought out hits that were deemed to be popular and wanted stronger attention 4 During the 1990 91 season all four Friday comedies on ABC were Miller Boyett series Perfect Strangers Full House Family Matters and the short lived Going Places 5 and the company had six sitcoms on the air during that same season along with The Hogan Family which had moved to CBS after a five season run on NBC and the short lived The Family Man Around 1997 Michael Warren longtime Miller Boyett associate and co creator of Family Matters and Step by Step broke his partnership with producer partner William Bickley after twenty one years and joined Miller Boyett Productions the company was renamed Miller Boyett Warren Productions and produced its last shows Meego and Two of a Kind After both shows were cancelled the company was shut down For the 1997 98 season a majority of the shows went to CBS through their short lived Friday Night Block Party sitcom block although an attempt to do a sitcom for The WB collapsed 6 7 Originally the company was set up at Paramount Television when the company was formed After Milkis left the company Miller and Boyett left Paramount to work for Lorimar Television in 1985 4 which was folded into Warner Bros Television in 1993 Despite the fact that the company shut down as Miller Boyett Warren Productions it was and still is referred to as Miller Boyett Productions or just simply Miller Boyett In 2013 Boyett returned to TV producing under his own production nameplate Robert L Boyett Productions With veteran producer Robert Horn he co created the FX sitcom Partners which was co produced by his company along with Robert Horn Productions Grammnet Productions and Debmar Mercury among other contributors Robert L Boyett Productions alone was originally said to be in development with Jeff Franklin Productions for the upcoming 2016 Full House sequel series Fuller House However when a front cover image of the first Fuller House shooting script was made public in late July 2015 both Miller and Boyett were listed as executive producers on the script with Miller Boyett Productions being listed at the bottom of the cover page thus confirming that the production company has been effectively resurrected 1 Production team members EditThomas Lee Miller August 31 1940 April 5 2020 aged 79 After growing up in Milwaukee he started his career as assistant to director Billy Wilder Miller also previously served as a development executive at Paramount and 20th Century Fox In 1970 a year after starting the company with Edward K Milkis he co created Nanny and the Professor with producer AJ Carothers Prior to then he was a writer of The Year of the Horse in 1966 and in 1969 he was in charge of development for The Immortal and did the same job in the 1970s for Weekend of Terror and Assault on the Wayne He later wrote episodes for Nanny and the Professor and Me and the Chimp and co created that show with Garry Marshall Miller co produced the feature films Silver Streak 1976 and Foul Play 1978 with Edward Milkis Miller died on April 5 2020 after Fuller House ended production Robert Lee Boyett born 1942 age 80 81 He grew up in Atlanta and later on moved to New York City to become a development executive at ABC then later became senior vice president at Paramount Television 4 He later became a creative consultant to Happy Days on its mid seasons before joining Miller and Milkis in 1978 Boyett however was not credited as an executive producer with Tom Miller and Ed Milkis on most series in the Miller Milkis Boyett era Following the dissolution of the Miller Boyett Warren company Boyett became a producer for Broadway theatre productions He currently resides in Salisbury Connecticut Edward Kenneth Eddie Milkis July 16 1931 December 14 1996 aged 65 A lifelong resident of Los Angeles California he became a film editor on such movies as North by Northwest Next he signed on as the associate producer of Star Trek Later on he was involved in some of Tom Miller s early shows prior to the establishment of Miller Boyett He died on Saturday December 14 1996 at the age of 65 after a lengthy illness His last production was Exit to Eden which he produced alongside Garry Marshall Michael Warren started his career as the associate producer of The Partridge Family where he met writer Producer William S Bickley Then as an associate producer on Happy Days for its second season later a story consultant with William Bickley who was then a story editor The two men produced Out of the Blue in 1979 Warren and Bickley later wrote for Happy Days and Perfect Strangers before creating Family Matters Getting By and Step by Step between 1989 and 1993 at that point Bickley and Warren became squarely producers instead of producer writers before officially ending their partnership around the time of the cancellation of Family Matters and Step by Step and joining the Miller Boyett team citation needed Associates to Miller Boyett Milkis and Warren Edit Garry Marshall Henderson Productions 1974 1984 most series produced through the end of the Miller Milkis Boyett era Robert Stigwood The Stigwood Group Ltd 1979 Makin It Hal Sitowitz Myrt Hal Productions 1981 Foul Play William Bickley amp Michael Warren 1984 1998 Perfect Strangers Family Matters The Family Man Step by Step Getting By Valerie Harper Tal Productions Inc 1986 1987 Valerie Robert Griffard amp Howard Adler 1987 1999 Perfect Strangers Going Places Step by Step Two of a Kind David W Duclon 1990 1998 Family Matters On Our Own Gregory Harrison Catalina Television 1990 1991 The Family Man Suzanne de Passe de Passe Entertainment 1994 1995 On Our Own Collaborators with Miller Boyett Milkis and Warren Edit Leonard Katzman 1974 1976 Petrocelli Chris Thompson 1980 1982 Bosom Buddies Jeff Franklin 1987 1995 2016 2020 Full House Fuller House Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen Dualstar 1998 1999 Two of a Kind List of shows produced by either production team EditMiller Milkis Productions Edit Television series Edit Angie 1979 1980 produced by Miller Milkis early 1979 produced by Miller Milkis Boyett 1979 1980 Blansky s Beauties 1977 Happy Days 1974 1984 produced by Miller Milkis 1974 1981 produced by Miller Milkis Boyett 1981 1984 Laverne amp Shirley 1976 1983 produced by Miller Milkis 1976 1981 produced by Miller Milkis Boyett 1981 1983 Makin It 1979 Mork amp Mindy 1978 1982 produced by Miller Milkis 1978 1981 produced by Miller Milkis Boyett 1981 1982 Out of the Blue 1979 Petrocelli 1974 1976 weepstake 1979 Walkin Walter 1977 rejected sitcom pilot starring Sam Spo Dee O Dee Theard and Madge Sinclair Made for television films Edit The Heist 1972 Night of Terror 1972 The Weekend Nun 1972 The Devil s Daughter 1973 Egan 1973 two hour movie pilot for a proposed police drama starring Eugene Roche Theatrically released films Edit Silver Streak 1976 Foul Play 1978 Miller Milkis Boyett Productions Edit Television series Edit Bosom Buddies 1980 1982 Goodtime Girls 1980 first series with Miller Milkis Boyett production team Foul Play 1981 adaptation of Miller Milkis 1978 theatrical film Joanie Loves Chachi 1982 1983 Made for television films Edit Little Darlings 1982 made for TV version of Stephen J Friedman s 1980 theatrical film Theatrically released films Edit The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas 1982 Miller Boyett Productions Edit The Family Man 1990 1991 Family Matters 1989 1998 Full House 1987 1995 produced in association with Jeff Franklin Productions Fuller House 2016 2020 produced in association with Jeff Franklin Productions Getting By 1993 1994 Girls Across The Lake rejected 1997 pilot for The WB starring Cindy Williams Steve Witting and Maggie Lawson Going Places 1990 1991 The Hogan Family 1986 1991 originally titled Valerie and then Valerie s Family The Hogans first series with Miller Boyett production team On Our Own 1994 1995 Perfect Strangers 1986 1993 Step by Step 1991 1998 Miller Boyett Warren Productions Edit Meego 1997 first series with Miller Boyett Warren production team Two of a Kind 1998 1999 last series produced by the company before the initial 1999 shut down References Edit a b Lecaro Lena July 30 2015 Candace Cameron Bure Reveals Revamped Fuller House Plot Entertainment Tonight Retrieved February 21 2022 Fates amp Fortunes PDF Broadcasting February 28 1972 Retrieved August 15 2021 ABC TV takes over second in ratings PDF Broadcasting September 29 1975 Retrieved August 15 2021 a b c Weinstein Nathan January 14 1990 The Revenge of Successful Sitcoms The TV shows of Tom Miller and Bob Boyett are often maligned by critics but their rewards are in the ratings Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 22 2022 Harris Mark March 29 1991 ABC s Formidable Fridays Entertainment Weekly Rival nets keep Step Variety August 21 1997 Retrieved December 6 2021 Arnold Williams join the WB Net sitcom lineup Variety January 6 1997 Retrieved December 6 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miller Boyett Productions amp oldid 1169815544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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