The Mercury News

Steven Bochco, television writer, producer dead at 74

- City News Service

LOS ANGELES >> Steven Bochco, the writer and producer behind the iconic 1980s and ‘90s TV shows “Hill Street Blues,” “L.A. Law” and “NYPD Blue,” died Sunday morning at the age of 74 after a long battle with leukemia.

The details of Bochco’s death were not immediatel­y clear. It was first reported by TMZ and the Hollywood Reporter, which both cited a family source.

NBC4 later released a family member’s statement that read, “Steven fought cancer with strength, courage, grace and his unsurpasse­d sense of humor.”

Bochco’s colleagues and admirers quickly took to social media to mourn the prolific creator.

“It was his vision, style, taste and tenacity that made me love watching TV,” tweeted actress Sharon Lawrence, who appeared on “NYPD Blue.”

Bochco received a stem cell transplant from an anonymous 23-year-old in late 2014, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

In addition to his three most famous shows, the 10-time Emmy Award winner also was behind the Neil Patrick Harris ABC comedy-drama “Doogie Howser, M.D.” and the TNT drama “Murder in the First.”

Bochco was born in New York City, but cut his show business teeth at Universal Studios in the mid-1960s.

His enduring legacy rests on “Hill Street Blues,” the gritty NBC drama that offered a more nuanced and realistic portrayal of police life than American audiences were used to seeing in cop shows from the 1970s. It ran from 1981-87.

“LA Law” (1986-94) and “NYPD Blue” (1993-2005) followed, with both shows enjoying long prime-time runs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States