James Burrows

James Burrows

U.S. Director, Producer

James Burrows. Born in Los Angeles, California, December 30, 1940. Educated at Oberlin College, B.A.; Yale University, M.F.A. Director, some off-Broadway productions; worked at MTM Productions, 1974–77, directed episodes of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Bob Newhart Show, Rhoda, Phyllis, Taxi, and Lou Grant for MTM; with Glen and Les Charles, formed Charles-Burrows-Charles Company, 1982; co-creator and co-executive producer, as well as director of Cheers; other directing credits include Dear John (pilot), Night Court, Wings (pilot), as well as episodes of Friends, News Radio, The Tracey Ullman Show, Third Rock from the Sun, Frasier, and Will & Grace. Recipient: three Directors Guild of America awards for comedy direction; nine Emmy Awards; American Comedy Award for Lifetime Achievement, 1996.

Bio

James Burrows is one of the few television directors who has made the successful transition to producer. He became one of the top sitcom directors at MTM Productions, the company founded by Mary Tyler Moore and Grant Tinker. Later, while working as the resident director for Taxi, Burrows helped form the independent production company responsible for the long-running NBC series Cheers. His critically acclaimed directing and production talents have won numerous awards, including nine Emmys.

One of Burrows’s first goals was to establish an identity separate from that of his famous father, Abe, who had written the books for a number of successful musicals, including Guys and Dolls and How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. Interestingly, the senior Burrows had also written for the popular 1930s radio series Duffys Tavern, which, like Cheers, was set in a bar. While this did not inspire the younger Burrows to duplicate that situation in Cheers, his father’s work on a stage adaptation of Truman Capote’s Breakfast at Tiffanys, which starred Mary Tyler Moore, did lead James Burrows to an informal meeting with MTM President Grant Tinker. At that time, the younger Burrows was known simply as “Abe’s kid.”

In 1974, while directing theater in Florida, Burrows asked Tinker for a job at MTM. Tinker hired him to observe other MTM sitcom directors, with his first assignment being The Bob Newhart Show. Tinker recounts in his autobiography, Tinker in Television, that as Burrows became more comfortable with his role as observer, he began drawing closer to the action on the Bob Newhart set, causing Newhart to turn to his producer and demand, “Get that guy out of here. He makes me nervous.”

This incident marked a significant turning point in Burrows’s career, for Tinker responded by teaming Burrows with MTM’s veteran director Jay Sandrich. The two hit it off immediately, and Burrows proved a quick study. Today he is considered as accomplished a director as Sandrich himself. Like Sandrich, he developed a directing style sensitive to the specific needs of the weekly sitcom format, which includes actors who already have a deep understanding of the characters they portray. Burrows’s goal is to make his actors “director proof,” so that subsequent directors do not erode the developed, established personae.

Burrows stayed with MTM until 1977, gaining directing experience on every sitcom they produced, including The Bob Newhart Show. He then joined MTM alumni James L. Brooks, Stan Daniels, David Davis, and Ed Weinberger on the series Taxi, for which he directed 76 episodes. Because Taxi had such a large set, Burrows became one of the first directors to use four cameras simultaneously, an adaptation of the three-camera system that had been a staple of sitcom production since I Love Lucy. A testament to his talent, Burrows won Emmys in both 1980 and 1981 for his Taxi efforts.

In 1982 Burrows, along with Glen Charles and Les Charles, formed the Charles-Burrows-Charles Company and then created and produced Cheers. Lasting into the 1990s, Cheers allowed Burrows, now in the role of producer, to carry on the tradition of quality television established two decades earlier at MTM. Although the Charles-Burrows-Charles Company disbanded after Cheers voluntarily retired, Burrows has continued working as a director for such comedies as Wings, Friends, News Radio, Third Rock from the Sun, The Tracey Ullman Show, and Frasier. He is executive producer of the NBC sitcom Will & Grace, and directed every episode of the first three seasons.

See also

Works

  • 1970–71 The Mary Tyler Moore Show

    1972–78 The Bob Newhart Show

    1974–78 Rhoda
    1975 Fay

    1975–77 Phyllis
    1976–83 Laverne and Shirley
    1977 Busting Loose
    1977–78 The Betty White Show
    1977–82 Lou Grant
    1978 Husbands, Wives, and Lovers
    1978 Free Country
    1978–83 Taxi
    1979–80 A New Kind of Family
    1979–80 The Associates
    1980 Good Time Harry
    1981–82 Best of the West
    1982–93 Cheers (also co-creator, co-executive producer)

    1984–92 Night Court

    1986–88 Valerie
    1986 All Is Forgiven
    1987 The Tortellis
    1987–90 The Tracey Ullman Show 1988 Dear John (pilot)
    1990 Wings (pilot)
    1990 The Marshall Chronicles 1990 The Simpsons
    1991 Flesh nBlood
    1992–93 Flying Blind
    1993–97 Frasier
    1994–2004 Friends
    1995–99 Caroline in the City

    1995–99 News Radio
    1995 Partners
    1995 Hudson Street

    1996–2001 Third Rock from the Sun 1996 Pearl
    1996–97 Men Behaving Badly

    1997 Chicago Sons

    1997 Fired Up (pilot)
    1997–98 George and Leo
    1997–2002 Dharma and Greg

    1997–2000 Veronicas Closet
    1997 Union Square
    1998–2001 Will & Grace (also executive

    producer)

    1998 Conrad Bloom

    1998–2000 Jesse
    1999 LadiesMan
    1999–2000 Stark Raving Mad
    2000 Madigan Men
    2000–01 Cursed (The Weber Show) 2002 Good Morning, Miami (pilot)

    2002  Bram and Alice (pilot)

    2003  Two and a Half Men (pilot)

    2003 The Stones

  • 1978 More than Friends


    1981 Every Stray Dog and Kid

    2002 Dexter Prep Pilot

  • Partners, 1982.

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