Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Paul Junger Witt (March 20, 1941 – April 27, 2018) was an American film and television producer. He, with his partners Tony Thomas and Susan Harris (also his wife), produced such television shows as Here Come the Brides, The Partridge Family, The Golden Girls, Soap, Benson, It's a Living, Empty Nest, and Blossom.
Thomas began working in Hollywood film/TV production at Screen Gems as an associate producer on the acclaimed television movie Brian's Song. In 1974, he teamed with producer Paul Junger Witt and wife Susan Harris to form a TV production company, Witt/Thomas Productions (alternately Witt/Thomas/Harris Productions), which produced numerous ...
Harris formed the production company Witt/Thomas/Harris Productions with Paul Junger Witt and Tony Thomas. Harris married television producer Paul Junger Witt on September 18, 1983; he co-produced all the shows she created. He died in 2018.
Witt/Thomas Productions is an American television and movie production company run by TV producers Paul Junger Witt and Tony Thomas.The company was consistently productive between its founding in 1973 and 1999, but is still active, producing an occasional film or TV series project.
Fresh from their triumph at the Oscars earlier this month with “Oppenheimer,” Christopher Nolan and his wife, producer Emma Thomas, will receive a knighthood and damehood respectively for ...
Tony Goldwyn's "Scandal" character wasn't exactly the model husband.In real life, the actor has been married to his wife Jane Musky since 1987. The 63-year-old, who recently joined the cast of ...
By the mid-1970s, Thomas' son Tony had become an accomplished television producer. Tony, along with Paul Junger Witt, formed Witt/Thomas Productions in 1975, and was responsible for his father's next three (and ultimately final) starring vehicles. Thomas returned to series TV in the NBC sitcom The Practice, airing from January 1976 to January ...
Carson and Holland split in 1985, and he married his fourth and final wife, Alexis Maas, in 1987. Producer George Schlatter told PEOPLE in 2005 that "the real love of [Carson's] life was Alex."