Robert Hewitt Wolfe

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Robert Hewitt Wolfe is an American television producer and scriptwriter. He is mostly known for his work as a writer on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and for developing and producing the series Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda. He currently (2005) lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Celeste, and dog, Tonka.

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[edit] Background

Wolfe was born in 1964 in Waterbury, Connecticut, the son of a career army officer and a surgical nurse. As an army family, the Wolfes moved frequently before finally settling in San Francisco in the mid-seventies. During his childhood, Wolfe tried three times to write a novel (at the ages of ten, thirteen and twenty), but never finished. In college he discovered that television and film writing suits him better.

Wolfe graduated UCLA, receiving a bachelor's degree in Film and Television and a MFA in Screenwriting. His first screenplay, Paper Dragons, placed second in the prestigious Goldwyn awards. The prize money allowed Wolfe to buy his first computer. At this point he decided to try and make himself a career in showbusiness.

[edit] Star Trek work

Wolfe's career didn't seem to be rising for five years, until he sold the story for A Fistful of Datas to the series Star Trek: The Next Generation. His writing of the screenplay for the episode secured him a place in the creative staf of the series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, that had made its debut in the following year.

Wolfe worked on DS9 for five years (under the supervision of showrunners Michael Piller and Ira Steven Behr. During this time, he wrote or co-wrote over thirty episodes. These include action-packed episodes with high story-arc importance (The Way of the Warrior, Call to Arms), dramatic character studies (The Wire, Hard Time) and even comedic farces (Family Business, Little Green Men).

[edit] Andromeda and other later work

In the period that followed his departure from Deep Space Nine, Wolfe made several attempts at writing television pilots. One of which, Futuresport, was produced as an ABC TV movie starring Dean Cain and Wesley Snipes. He has also written several (unproduced) features, including “Splicers” for 20th Century Fox and Zero Gee for John Woo and Terrance Chang's Lion Rock Productions.

In 1999, working from notes by Gene Roddenberry, Wolfe developed the syndicated series Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda. The series premiered in the fall of 2000 as the number one original hour in syndication, a position it has held for most of its run. Robert served as head writer and executive producer on “Andromeda” for its first two seasons, during which the series was nominated for two Saturn Award for Best Syndicated Series and for a BC Film Commission Leo Award for Best Dramatic Series. Wolfe left Andromeda in the fall of 2001.

Wolfe is currently executive producer of the upcoming Sci Fi Channel two-hour movie and series The Dresden Files, along with Hans Beimler, Nicholas Cage and others. It is a production of Lions Gate Television and Saturn Films. It will premiere in January 2007 on the Sci-Fi Channel. Based on the books of Jim Butcher, Wolfe and Beimler wrote the screenplay for the two hour movie.

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