Calgary Herald

Producer broke ground with ’ 70s’ All in the Family

- LYNN ELBER

LOS ANGELES Bud Yorkin, a director and producer who helped forge a new brand of topical TV comedy with the 1970s hit All in the Family, died Aug. 18, a family spokesman said. He was 89.

Yorkin died at his home in the Bel Air area of Los Angeles of natural causes, Jeff Sanderson said.

Yorkin, who started as a writer and director in the early days of TV, made his biggest mark after joining writer- producer Norman Lear to form Tandem Production­s.

Tandem turned out a number of movies and TV shows in the 1960s before Yorkin and Lear adapted the English comedy Till Death Us Do Part as All in the Family with stars Carroll O’Connor and Jean Stapleton in 1971.

After the CBS sitcom became an unexpected hit with its unvarnishe­d take on race, women’s rights and other social issues, Tandem produced a string of more successes including The Jeffersons, Sanford and Son and Maude.

TV viewers who had been spoonfed bland, carefully sanitized fare embraced the new sitcoms.

Lear recalled starting his partnershi­p with Yorkin in 1959, the year the TV special An Evening with Fred Astaire, directed and written by Yorkin, won multiple Emmy Awards.

“His was the horse we rode in on and I couldn’t love or appreciate him more,” Lear said.

It was Lear, 93, a social activist who is still developing projects, who became best known for Tandem’s groundbrea­king TV series.

Yorkin also directed for the big screen, with credits including Arthur 2: On The Rocks, Start The Revolution Without Me and Come Blow Your Horn.

He was a producer on the planned sequel to Ridley Scott’s 1982 science- fiction film Blade Runner, set to begin production next year, Sanderson said.

Born Feb. 22, 1926 in Washington, Pennsylvan­ia, Yorkin served in the U. S. Navy during the Second World War and later earned a degree in electrical engineerin­g from Carnegie Mellon University ( then Carnegie Technical).

But his comedic skill took him into TV, where he began working as a stage manager and then writer for The Colgate Comedy Hour. He became a favourite director for variety series including The Dinah Shore Show and The George Gobel Show.

After his partnershi­p with Lear ended in the 1980s, Yorkin joined with others to create a new company that produced sitcoms including What’s Happening and Carter Country.

He is survived by his wife, actress Cynthia Sikes Yorkin, sons David and Michael, daughters Nicole and Jessica, and four grandchild­ren.

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Bud Yorkin

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