Stephen J. Cannell(1941-2010)
- Writer
- Producer
- Actor
Stephen J. Cannell was raised in Pasadena, California. His father ran
an interior design firm. From an early age, Stephen suffered from
undiagnosed dyslexia, which made it nearly impossible from him to do
well in school, he either flunked or was held back many times. Even
though one of the courses he had trouble with was English, he wrote in
one of his yearbooks that it was his ambition to be an author. After a
lot of work, he managed to graduate from high school and attend the
University of Oregon. He worked for his father's design firm while he
wrote television scripts and story ideas after work. He sold his first
story ideas to Mission: Impossible (1966) and his first script to It Takes a Thief (1968). His first
steady job in television was as a story editor on Adam-12 (1968). He created a
character named Jim Rockford for a script he wrote for the series
Toma (1973), a show he was producing at the time. That script was rejected
by ABC, so it was rewritten and eventually became the pilot for the
classic NBC series, The Rockford Files (1974). From there, it becomes nearly impossible
to list all of his work. He has either written or co-written over 300
television scripts, created or co-created over two dozen television
series, formed a successful production company, wrote best-selling
police novels and even acted in his own and other producers' shows. He
has won an Emmy, two Writer's Guild Awards, two Edgar Award Nominations
and has a star on the Hollywood Blvd. Walk of Fame. Despite his many
accolades, his first love continued to be writing. A co-worker of his
on "Rockford", writer and Gia Đình Sopranos (1999) creator David Chase, was once quoted as
saying no person he ever met seemed to love writing as much as Stephen
J. Cannell.