Richard Maynard (television producer)

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Richard Maynard was an American writer, television producer and educator.

He was born in 1943 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and died on January 2, 2007 at his San Fernando Valley home. He died of natural causes at the age of 64.

Maynard received his B.S. and M.A. in history and education from Temple University and another master's degree following studies at the University of Pennsylvania and Princeton University.

He was married and divorced from ex-wife Lorrie Maynard, with whom he had two sons, Jeffrey Maynard, (an actor and teacher), and Kevin Maynard, (a TV producer, writer and Variety contributor).[1]

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[edit] Educator

Maynard taught all levels, from high school to graduate school including a ten-year position in the Media Studies M.A. program at New York's The New School. . He also taught at Antioch College, UCLA, UC Berkeley and the International School of Film & Television in San Antonio Los Banos, Cuba.

In the 1960s, while teaching at Simon Gratz High School, Maynard developed the Curriculum on Black History for the Philadelphia School District.[2]

[edit] Writer

Maynard was editorial director of language arts for Scholastic Publishing for nine years. He contributed to publications including the Los Angeles Times, Las Vegas Weekly, and Emmy Magazine.

[edit] Production Credits

[edit] Mini-series

[edit] Films

"Normal Life" was featured at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival
"Normal Life" was featured at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival
  • Stompin' at the Savoy on CBS[3]
  • Mission of the Shark: The Saga of the U.S.S. Indianapolis on CBS
  • Bridge Across Time (aka: "Arizona Ripper", or "Terror at London Bridge")[4]
  • Time Stalkers
  • The Babysitter's Seduction
  • Blood Brothers
  • Gold Coast
  • Normal Life

[edit] Festivals and awards

[edit] References

  1. ^ Variety
  2. ^ Jewish Exponent
  3. ^ NY Times
  4. ^ IMDB
  5. ^ NY Times

[edit] External links