Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Ben Starr (American producer)

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Station(s)
  
Music of Your Life

Name
  
Ben Starr

Style
  
Classic easy-listening

Role
  
Television producer

Ben Starr 1bpblogspotcomLOm5jYfDUHoUDdeNpKzmeIAAAAAAA
Country
  
United States of America

Died
  
January 19, 2014, Los Angeles, California, United States

Awards
  
Distinguished Flying Cross

Nominations
  
Edgar Award for Best Television Episode Teleplay, Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written Comedy

Movies and TV shows
  
Silver Spoons, Our Man Flint, How to Commit Marriage, The Busy Body

Similar People
  
Martin Cohan, Daniel Mann, Joel Higgins, William Castle, Don Brodie

Ben starr television show reel


Benjamin Starr (October 18, 1921 – January 19, 2014) was an American television producer, creator, writer and playwright.

Contents

Ben starr on his love of writing emmytvlegends org


Biography

Born in Manhattan, New York, to Russian immigrants, Starr grew up in Brooklyn and worked in his parents' doughnut factory. He attended City College, later graduated from UCLA, and served in World War II. He became a second lieutenant navigator stationed in England and received the Distinguished Flying Cross. After the military, he began writing comedy for radio stars, such as Al Jolson, Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis and George Burns. He started his television writing career for the live program Climax!.

Starr co-created the sitcom Silver Spoons, helped develop The Facts of Life, and was a regular screenwriter for the popular series Mister Ed and All in the Family. He also wrote for such comedies as Chico and the Man, Maude, The Andy Griffith Show, Petticoat Junction and The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. He is notably credited for writing The Brady Bunch episode "The Personality Kid" in which Peter Brady (Christopher Knight) delivers his Humphrey Bogart impersonation of "pork chops and applesauce". Starr also penned the Diff'rent Strokes line "What are you talking about, Willis?", in which Gary Coleman delivered in his own way and made it a catchphrase.

Starr also co-wrote the screenplays for the 1966 James Bond parody Our Man Flint, the 1966 Western satire Texas Across the River and the animated versions of Treasure Island (1972) and Oliver Twist (1974). He also wrote plays, including Broadway's The Family Way in 1965. The 2012 documentary Lunch featured Starr, along with Sid Caesar, Carl Reiner and other career comedy writers and performers who reflected on the genre and the industry.

Starr was married to his wife Gloria Kaplan for 50 years, until her death in 1999. They had three children. At age 92, Starr died of congestive heart failure in 2014 at his home in Los Angeles.

References

Ben Starr (American producer) Wikipedia