Lin Bolen
Lin Bolen | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | January 19, 2018 | (aged 76)
Nationality | American |
Other names | Lin Bolen Wendkos |
Occupation(s) | Vice President of Daytime Programming, NBC (1972–1976) Television producer |
Years active | 1972–late 1990s |
Spouse |
Lin Bolen (March 21, 1941 – January 19, 2018) was an American television executive and producer. She was most noted for her role at
Early life and education
Bolen was born in
Bolen graduated from Benton Consolidated High School. She attended Miss Hickey's School in St. Louis.[4] From 1961 to 1963, she attended City College of New York, where she studied advertising and communications media.[5]
Career
This section needs additional citations for verification. (March 2024) |
In 1961, Bolen began her career producing commercials. She then worked on documentaries about Twiggy, and then as a writer and producer of documentary films, which included Crisis in America – Welfare for ABC-TV and Stravinsky's Requiem to Martin Luther King with the New York City Ballet.[6]
Bolen was appointed Vice President of Daytime Programming at NBC in 1972.
Although NBC was airing the successful game shows
Bolen also decided to end the eleven-year run of Jeopardy!, feeling that its demographics were old. The show's creator and producer
In the spring of 1976, while NBC was still the #1 network in daytime, Bolen left the network to become an independent TV producer. She formed her own production company called Lin Bolen Productions. The new company created and developed game shows, movies of the week, and theatrical films for networks and studios.[12]
Bolen created the game show
One series which Bolen's company produced for NBC was loosely based on her own career, taking a serious look at the men who ran network television. W.E.B. was scheduled against ABC's hit series Charlie's Angels and did not perform well. It was canceled after 13 weeks. In 1982, Bolen was hired as head of creative affairs at InterMedia Entertainment, which was owned by Fred Silverman.
Bolen's company produced the television movie The Christmas Coal Mine Miracle, starring Kurt Russell and Melissa Gilbert, which became the highest rated movie of the year for NBC. Other films followed, including Good Against Evil starring Kim Cattrall and Dan O'Herlihy for ABC; Golden Gate starring Perry King, Melanie Griffith, and John Saxon; A two-hour pilot for ABC called Farrell for the People starring Valerie Harper and Ed O'Neill; a comedy pilot for NBC called The Ann Jillian Show, and an NBC summer variety pilot called Live From the South Seas starring John Rowles.
Network
Bolen's career as a network executive provided an inspiration in the creation of Faye Dunaway's role as network executive Diana Christiansen in the 1976 satirical film about television, Network.[13][14] However, in an interview with UPI in 1978, Bolen had said that the Network character was nothing like her.[15][16]
Personal life and death
After leaving NBC, Bolen married director Paul Wendkos in 1984. They remained married until his death on November 12, 2009.[17]
Bolen died on January 19, 2018, at a hospital in Santa Monica, California, and was survived by her son, Jordan Wendkos.[5][18]
Selected filmography
- Crisis in America – Welfare
- Stravinsky's Requiem to Martin Luther King
- 1976: Stumpers!(TV Series) – Creator, executive producer, writer (1 episode)
- 1977: Good Against Evil (TV Movie) – Executive producer
- 1977: Christmas Miracle in Caufield, U.S.A. aka Christmas Coal Mine Miracle (TV Movie) – Producer
- 1978: W.E.B. (TV Series) – Executive producer (3 episodes)
- 1981: Golden Gate (TV Movie) – Producer
- 1982: Farrell for the People (TV Movie) – Producer
- 1984: Comedy Club (TV Movie) – Executive producer
- 1989-1990: Ann Jillian
- Live From the South Seas
References
- OCLC 42649641.
- OCLC 825116583.
- ^ Moore, Sally (22 April 1974). "The Mistress of Daytime TV". People. 1 (8).
- ^ a b c Klemesrud, Judy (11 October 1972). "Soap Operas: Same Time, Same Station, but a New Boss". The New York Times.
- ^ a b Genzlinger, Neil (4 February 2018). "Lin Bolen, a Trailblazing TV Executive, Dies at 76". The New York Times.
- ^ Hess, Marge (15 June 1973). "Woman heads daytime NBC shows". The Hutchinson News. p. 33.
- ^ "NBC Takes Daytime Lead". Variety. 22 September 1975.
- ^ Brown, Les (19 October 1974). "NBC‐TV Trying an Hour‐Long Daytime Soap Opera". The New York Times.
- ^ "'As World Turns' on CBS Will Expand to Hour Dec. 1". The New York Times. 10 September 1975.
- OCLC 51059113.
- ^ Brown, Les (21 December 1975). "TV Notes: All‐Star Game Throws Democrats a Curve; "Lucky Lady"". The New York Times.
- ^ Sharbutt, Jay (June 25, 1985). "New Soap Bubbles From ABC". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Shales, Tom (4 October 1978). "'Network': The Prophetic Conniption". The Washington Post.
- OCLC 38540422.
- ^ Scott, Vernon (31 July 1978). "Producer Lin Bolen Denies She's 'Network' Character". Milwaukee Sentinel. United Press International (UPI). p. 2.[permanent dead link]
- ^ Brody, Larry (29 January 2018). "LB: Saying Goodbye to Lin Bolen, A Real TV Pioneer". TVWriter.Com.
- ^ Hevesi, Dennis (21 November 2009). "Paul Wendkos, Director of 'Gidget,' Dies at 84". The New York Times.
- ^ Haring, Bruce (28 January 2018). "Lin Bolen Dies: First Female VP Of Programming At A Network Was 76". Deadline Hollywood.
Further reading
- Bolen, Lin (17 May 1978). Six From Showbiz (Audio interview). Long Beach, CA: Long Beach Museum of Art Video Archive. OCLC 123464020.
External links
- Lin Bolen at IMDb