Sneha Girap (Editor)

Javier Grillo Marxuach

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Javier Grillo-Marxuach

Role
  
Television screenwriter


Javier Grillo-Marxuach wpproductionpatheoscomblogskateoharefiles20

Awards
  
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series, Writers Guild of America Award for Television: Dramatic Series

Books
  
The Middle Man:, The Middleman 1, Inescapability, The Middleman: The Doo, Middleman

Similar People
  
Leonard Dick, Damon Lindelof, Carlton Cuse, David Fury, Elizabeth Sarnoff

Education
  
Huron High School (1989)

Movies and TV shows
  
The Middleman, Fruitcake

Q a with javier grillo marxuach


Javier "Javi" Grillo-Marxuach ( listen ), born October 28, 1969 in San Juan, Puerto Rico, is a television screenwriter and producer, and podcaster, known for his work as writer and producer on the first two seasons of the ABC television series Lost, as well as other series including Charmed and Law and Order: Special Victims Unit.

Contents

Javier Grillo-Marxuach I am Javier GrilloMarxuach writer and producer from

In conversation with showrunner javier grillo marxuach


Early life

Javier Grillo-Marxuach Middleman Supreme Javier GrilloMarxuach on the Life of a

Grillo-Marxuach received a BA in 1991 from Carnegie Mellon. While there he was active as an actor, writer and director with Scotch'n'Soda, the theatrical club for non-theater majors that also counts composer Stephen Schwartz, author Iris Rainer Dart and actor Frank Gorshin among its notable alumni. Grillo-Marxuach also wrote a weekly pop-culture column for the campus newspaper, The Tartan.

Javier Grillo-Marxuach Javier GrilloMarxuach Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

He has an MFA from USC and (as of 2015) sponsors a fellowship there for MFA students who demonstrate an interest or facility with Hispanic language and culture.

Career

Javier Grillo-Marxuach Former quotLostquot writer from Ann Arbor reflects as the series

Grillo-Marxuach joined the crew of Lost as a supervising producer and writer for the first season in 2004. He returned as a supervising producer and writer for the second season in 2005. The writing staff won the Writers Guild of America (WGA) Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2006 ceremony for their work on the first and second seasons. The writing staff were nominated for the WGA Award for Best Dramatic Series again at the February 2007 ceremony for their work on the second and third seasons.

In 2006, he left the Lost team, and began working as a co-executive producer for Medium, as well as entering the world of comics with his own Viper Comics title, The Middleman. He also wrote the 2006 Annihilation - Super-Skrull limited series for Marvel Comics, part of the company's Annihilation event, and the Annihilation: Conquest - Wraith limited series for the 2007 Annihilation: Conquest follow-up project. He is also writer of Dynamite Entertainment's four-issue limited series Classic Battlestar Galactica: Cylon Apocalypse.

In 2008 the ABC Family picked up his television series The Middleman, for which he is the writer and producer. The series was not picked up for second season due to poor ratings.

In 2010, a pilot for Department Zero was moved to active production by ABC. The pilot is based upon work by Jonathan Maberry.

As of 2015, Grillo-Marxuach is a co-executive producer of the SyFy channel's series Helix.

Grillo-Marxuach has also served as a writer and co-executive producer of The 100.

Episodes written

  • "Helix" (2013-2015) TV Series
  • "Department Zero" (2010) TV Pilot
  • The Middleman (2008) TV Series
  • "The Pilot Episode Sanction" (Season 1, Episode 1)
  • "The Sino-Mexican Revelation" (Season 1, Episode 3)
  • Medium (2005) TV Series
  • "Four Dreams Part 1" (Season 3, Episode 1) with Glenn Gordon Caron
  • "Four Dreams Part 2" (Season 3, Episode 2) with Glenn Gordon Caron
  • "Apocalypse, Push" (Season 3, Episode 11)
  • "We Had A Dream" (Season 3, Episode 15)
  • "1-900-LUCKY" (Season 3, Episode 18) with Robert Doherty
  • "Head Games" (Season 3, Episode 20) with Robert Doherty & Moira Kirkland
  • "Burn Baby Burn Part 1" (Season 4, Episode 7)
  • "Burn Baby Burn Part 2" (Season 4, Episode 8) with RenĂ© Echevarria
  • Lost (2004) TV Series
  • "House of the Rising Sun" (Season 1, Episode 6)
  • "All the Best Cowboys Have Daddy Issues" (Season 1, Episode 11)
  • "Hearts and Minds" (Season 1, Episode 13) with Carlton Cuse
  • "...In Translation" (Season 1, Episode 17) with Leonard Dick
  • "Born to Run" (Season 1, Episode 22) (story)
  • "Orientation" (Season 2, Episode 3) with Craig Wright
  • "Collision" (Season 2, Episode 8) with Leonard Dick
  • Jake 2.0 (2003) TV Series
  • episode "The Good, The Bad and The Geeky"
  • episode "Whiskey - Tango - Foxtrot"
  • episode "Get Foley"
  • Boomtown (2002) TV Series (writer)
  • Episode "Monsters Brawl"
  • The Dead Zone (2002) TV Series (story) (episode 1.07 "Enemy Mind")
  • The Chronicle (2001) TV Series
  • episode "Bring Me the Head of Tucker Burns"
  • episode "Hot From the Oven"
  • episode "The King is (Un) Dead"
  • episode "Let Sleeping Dogs Fry"
  • episode "Pig Boy's Big Adventure"
  • episode "Touched by An Alien")
  • Cops On the Edge: Episode 89 (2000)
  • Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (1999) TV Series
  • episode 3.07 "Sacrifice"
  • Charmed (1998) TV Series
  • episode 1.04 "Dead Man Dating"
  • episode 1.11 "Feats of Clay"
  • episode 1.16 "Which Prue is it, Anyway?"
  • episode 1.21 "Love Hurts"
  • episode 2.05 "She's a Man, Baby, A Man!"
  • episode 2.11 "Reckless Abandon"
  • episode 2.17 "How to Make a Quilt Out of Americans"
  • Three (1998) TV Series
  • episode "Breakout"
  • episode "Emerald City"
  • Van Helsing Chronicles (1997) (TV)
  • Dark Skies (1996) TV Series (teleplay)
  • episode "Hostile Convergence"
  • The Pretender (1996) TV Series
  • episode "The Better Part of Valor"
  • episode "The Paper Clock"
  • episode "Potato Head Blues"
  • SeaQuest DSV (1993) TV Series
  • episode 3.4 "Destination Terminal"
  • episode 3.7 "Equilibrium"
  • episode 3.13 "Weapons of War"
  • References

    Javier Grillo-Marxuach Wikipedia