The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences’ Hall of Fame Committee announced today that it has tapped reality show producers Mary-Ellis Bunim and Jonathan Murray, Michael Eisner, Sábado Gigante game-show host Don Francisco, Sherman Hemsley, lighting designer Bill Klages, Chuck Lorre and I Love Lucy duo Vivian Vance & William Frawley for induction into the academy’s Hall of Fame. The 21st annual induction ceremony is set for March 1 at the Beverly Hills Hotel. The nine new inductees were recognized for their extraordinary contributions to TV after candidates were submitted to the Hall’s selection committee, which is chaired by WME Entertainment board member Mark Itkin and includes Fox alternative president Mike Darnell, Warner Bros TV president Peter Roth, veteran executive Fred Silverman, CBS Entertainment chief Nina Tassler and Dolby Labs’ Steve Venezia. Bunim, Vance and Frawley will be honored posthumously. From the TV Academy’s release highlighting the new members:
Mary-Ellis Bunim (1946-2004) and Jonathan Murray, Bunim/Murray Productions – Widely credited with inventing the modern reality television genre, Mary-Ellis Bunim’s unique talents in producing daytime soap operas combined with Jonathan Murray’s experience in news and documentaries proved to be the perfect ingredients to develop The Real World. This groundbreaking MTV show quickly became part of the cultural DNA, and it has now endured for almost 20 years, having been renewed through its 28th season. During their 14-year partnership, Bunim and Murray broke the boundaries of conventional television to create more than just a show. Instead they pioneered a whole new genre known as “reality television.” Beyond The Real World, the duo infused their finely tuned sense of dramatic story structure, transforming the ordinary tales of real people into extraordinary television programming with hit series including the first reality game show, Road Rules (MTV) followed by The Real World/Road Rules Challenge (MTV), now in its 21st season; the first reality soap opera, Emmy Award-winning Starting Over (syndicated); the first reality sitcom, The Simple Life (E!), and the first-ever reality feature film, The Real Cancun. Since Bunim’s passing in 2004, Murray has continued the pair’s unscripted tradition overseeing Bunim/Murray Productions’ programming including Keeping up with the Kardashians, Kourtney and Kim Take New York and Khloe and Lamar (E!), The Bad Girls Club, Love Games and upcoming Best Ink (Oxygen), Project Runway and Project Runway All Stars (Lifetime); Autism: The Musical (HBO); and, of course, The Real World and The Challenge (MTV).
Michael Eisner - Michael Eisner has been a leader in the American entertainment industry for four decades. He began his career at ABC, where he helped take the network to number one in primetime, daytime and children’s television. In 1976, he became president of Paramount Pictures, turning out a string of critically acclaimed, blockbuster films and positioning the studio as the most profitable in both theatrical movies and network television production. In 1984 Eisner assumed the position of Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The Walt Disney Company and, in the ensuing 21 years, transformed it from a film and theme park company with $1.8 billion in enterprise value into a global media empire valued at $80 billion. In 2005, Eisner began the “next act” of his career, by founding the Tornante Company; a privately held company that makes investments in and incubates companies and opportunities in the media and entertainment space. Through the Tornante Company, Eisner also founded Vuguru, an independent studio that develops and finances scripted, story-driven content for digital and international platforms. In October 2007, the Tornante Company and Madison Dearborn Partners, LLC. acquired The Topps Company, Inc., a leading creator and marketer of sports and related cards, entertainment products, and distinctive confectionery items. Eisner is also an accomplished writer, having published his third book, WORKING TOGETHER: Why Great Partnerships Succeed, in 2010.
Mario Kreutzberger, aka “Don Francisco” – Emmy Award winner Mario Kreutzberger is the host of Sábado Gigante (Giant Saturday), one of the most popular programs in the history of Spanish-language television. He is also host of Don Francisco Presenta (Don Francisco Presents), another variety show featuring interviews with the biggest artists of the moment. Better known as “Don Francisco,” Kreutzberger was born in southern Chile, the son of German Jewish immigrants who escaped Germany during turbulent times preceding World War II. Although he enjoyed taking singing and drama lessons as a child, his father hoped he would follow in his footsteps by working in the garment industry and sent him to apprentice in New York City. Upon his return to Chile, Kreutzberger began working in his newly acquired profession, but his fascination with television and his staunch perseverance eventually led him into his country’s fledgling broadcasting industry. And, on August 8, 1962, the show that went on to make television history was born. In August 2003, Chile’s Universidad del Pacífico bestowed upon Kreutzberger its highest academic honor, the “Honoris Causa en Comunicación Social,” an honorary degree in communication. In December of that same year, the Chilean government decorated him with the “Gabriela Mistral Order of Merit,” its highest grade of Grand Officer for his contribution to culture and solidarity in the country. In September 2008, Chilean President Michelle Bechelet awarded Kreutzberger with the highest honor in the country, the “Condecoración Por Servicios Meritorios” (Decoration for Exemplary Service) in recognition for his humanitarian efforts. In his homeland Chile, Kreutzberger created the Chilean Telethon which today has resulted in the construction of eleven hospitals where more than 80,000 disabled children are treated. His idea inspired 13 countries of Latin America to create telethons of their own. He is president of the International Telethon Organization, ORITEL. Kreutzberger has also been honored with a Hollywood Walk of Fame Star in 2001 and with an Emmy in 2005 for “Leader of Spanish-Language Television.” In 2010, Kreutzberger received the Hispanic Heritage Award as a Legend. The Guinness Book of World Records recognized Sabado Gigante as the “ …longest-running TV show in the Americas.”
Sherman Hemsley – Sherman Hemsley is most famous for his acting role as George Jefferson on the iconic CBS television series All in the Family, and on the spinoff series The Jeffersons. While performing in Purlie on Broadway in 1971, Hemsley received a call from Norman Lear, who wanted to cast him as George Jefferson in All in the Family. Lear held the role open for him, and two years later he finally joined the cast. All in the Family broke ground in its depiction of issues previously considered unsuitable for U.S. network television comedy, such as racism, homosexuality, rape, miscarriage, abortion, and cancer. The show was ranked number one in the yearly Nielsen ratings from 1971 to 1976. It became the first television series to reach the milestone of having topped the Nielsen ratings for five consecutive years, a mark later matched by The Cosby Show and surpassed by American Idol. Lear then created the spinoff series for Hemsley and co-star Isabel Sanford, and The Jeffersons went on to enjoy an 11 year run through 1985, the longest-running sitcom with a predominantly African American cast in the history of American television. Hemsley won an Emmy Award in 1984 for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series for his role as George Jefferson. In 1986, Hemsley was cast as Ernest Frye in the NBC series Amen, and in 1991, joined the voice cast for the ABC comedic live-action puppet series Dinosaurs, playing the role of sadistic dinosaur boss Bradley P. Richfield.
Bill Klages – The winner of seven Primetime Emmy Awards, Bill Klages has been associated with some of the most outstanding productions in television history. After establishing his reputation at NBC with the dramatic series Playwrights ’56, Klages lighted landmark shows of early television starring entertainment legends Milton Berle, Sid Caesar, Ernie Kovacs and Perry Como. In the decades that followed, Klages lighted an array of acclaimed entertainment specials and award shows including The Kraft Music Hall, My Name Is Barbra, Night of 100 Stars, Sills and Burnett at the Met, Baryshnikov by Tharp, The Tony Awards, The Emmy Awards, The Kennedy Center Honors, Sweeney Todd , The Grammy Awards and many others. Major events he has designed include the 1984 Olympics Closing Ceremonies and the “Liberty Weekend” Statue of Liberty celebration, as well as four Republican National Conventions. KIages has provided television lighting-facility design for the 16,000-seat Lakewood Church in Houston, the 21,000-seat Latter Day Saints Convention Center in Salt Lake City, the George W. Bush Presidential Library in Dallas and numerous other studios and venues. He has also conducted seminars throughout the United States, Canada and Europe. In 2004, he received the “Distinguished Achievement Award in Lighting Design” from the United States Institute of Theatre Technology and was named “Lighting Designer of the Year” at the 2002 LDI Convention. Along with his seven Primetime Emmy wins, Klages has received twenty-one Emmy nominations, as well as Monitor and Ace Awards.
Chuck Lorre - One of the most accomplished television comedy writer/producers of the past 20 years, Chuck Lorre co-created and serves as executive producer of TV’s most-watched program Two and a Half Men and the award-winning comedy, The Big Bang Theory. Lorre is also executive producer of Mike & Molly, the #1 new comedy of the 2010-2011 season. Previously, Lorre created hits such as Dharma & Greg, Grace Under Fire and Cybill, and served as co-executive producer on Roseanne. The Long Island native got his start in the entertainment business as a guitarist/singer touring the country and writing pop songs, including Debbie Harry’s Top 40 hit “French Kissin’ in the USA.” After more than a decade on the road, Lorre turned his attention to television. He began writing animation scripts for DIC and Marvel Productions, and wrote and produced the themes and scores for animated series such as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. He won the BMI Crystal Award for co-writing the Two and a Half Men theme song, was named an honorary member of the Royal Canadian Institute for the Advancement of Science, and received the David Angell Humanitarian Award on behalf of the American Screenwriters Association for demonstrating charitable efforts at the Venice Family Clinic. In 2009, Lorre received the NATPE Brandon Tartikoff Legacy Award, was named Television Showman of the Year at the 46th Annual ICG Publicists Awards Ceremony and was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Vivian Vance (1909-1979) – Born Vivian Roberta Jones, Vance is probably the single most recognizable female sidekick in the history of television. Although her first love was the stage, her role as Ethel Mertz would forever endear her to television fans around the world. Vance’s talent took her from her hometown of Independence, Kansas to a small theatre company in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and on to New York and Broadway in the early 1930s. She became a regular on Broadway after being cast in the hit musical Anything Goes as a chorus member and understudy to the show’s star, Ethel Merman. Several years later she won her first major Broadway role opposite comedian Ed Wynn, in the production of Hooray for What! One of her most successful stage roles was in the musical Let’s Face It! in which she starred alongside Danny Kaye and Eve Arden for over 500 performances. In 1951, TV director Marc Daniels took Desi Arnaz and writer Jess Oppenheimer to see Vance star in the play Voice of the Turtle at the La Jolla Playhouse in California. By the end of the first act, Arnaz and Oppenheimer both agreed that they had found their “Ethel” for their new television sitcom, I Love Lucy. Vance remained with the beloved CBS series until it ended its run in 1957, playing best friend, neighbor, and partner-in-crime to Lucille Ball’s “Lucy Ricardo.” She was the first actress to win an Emmy Award for “Outstanding Supporting Actress” in 1954, and was nominated an additional three times for her role as Ethel Mertz. Vance returned to television a few years later to play Lucille Ball’s sidekick once again on The Lucy Show.
William “Bill” Frawley (1887-1966) – An American stage, screen, and television entertainer, Frawley is best known for his role as Fred Mertz on I Love Lucy, but appeared in more than 110 films and over a dozen major plays in his lifetime. Frawley’s career started on the road in vaudeville with his brother, and later with his then wife, fellow vaudevillian Edna Louise Broedt. Playing the prestigious Orpheum circuit, Frawley honed his craft and developed the comedic talent and timing that would be his trademark. His first major hit was in the musical comedy Merry, Merry in 1925, and he continued to act on and off Broadway until 1933. Frawley’s movie career lasted over 50 years, starting with the silent film Lord Loveland in 1916. Although he played mostly supporting roles, he appeared in major films such as Ziegfeld, Miracle on 34th Street and The Lemon Drop Kid. In 1951, Frawley was cast as “Fred Mertz” in I Love Lucy opposite Vivian Vance. During the run of the series, he was often called upon to display his musical and dancing talents. His other true love, sports, was often incorporated into the show’s scripts. Frawley was nominated for five Emmy Awards for his supporting role as the penny-pinching best friend and landlord of the Ricardos. After I Love Lucy went off the air, Frawley debuted as live-in grandfather/housekeeper “Bub O’Casey” in My Three Sons and remained on the show from 1960 until 1965, until poor health forced him into retirement. Frawley passed away in 1966.





About time Fred and Ethel got some love!
Interesting that this came from the Academy. John Ritter won the Emmy as Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series in 1984. Hemsley was nominated.
I’m surprised Isabel Sanford wasn’t included with Hemsley.
Hemsley? Ouch. That brings home just how few African Americans are represented in the TV biz. I would have picked Kevin Hooks first –from child actor to a top TV director.
Im very happy to see Jon and Mary-Ellis on that list.
Very happy Vivian Vance and William Frawley are getting inducted, and also Bunim and Murray, I love the Challenges and the Real World, and they started a trend this is going strong. I wish they’d bring back Road Rules, but that doesn’t concern this.
Very happy that Michael Eisner is being recognized too.
I agree with Terrence, I’m surprised Isabel Sandford wasn’t included with Hemsley. That duo was great!
Vivian Vance and William Frawley are just being inducted today, in the 21st induction ceremony? What the heck happened the last 20 times around? This Committee needs to take a good, close look at itself.
Outside of Vivian Vance, William Frawley and Sherman Hemsley, the rest of these are crap. No one connected with any reality show should win anything since the whole stupid genre has just about killed TV.
TV is a platform, a vehicle for entertainment and story telling. Content lives and breathes within that platform. News, scripted, game, unscripted – - who knows what else may come in the future. To say its killed television is just arrogant.
Sure it may have killed your idealized, perhaps nostalgic memory of what it once was, but all reality television has done is give a new voice to inspiring and uplifting to comical and degrading. If it’s not a genre people wanted to see, the ratings wouldn’t be there, the advertisers wouldn’t be there and the genre wouldn’t be there.
People want it. People get it. TV isn’t dead, its evolved.
I guess James Arness still hasn’t made a big enough contribution to television.
Sometimes I get the sense that the “mad, angry commenters” are like old stubborn folk who want life to be like it was in the “good ole days”….
Things have changed, the TV world has changed because the AUDIENCE changes and people want something new. I understand some people do NOT like reality TV, but why are the ratings consistently high? Why are there SO MANY reality shows on network and cable? Because there’s an audience for them!
I agree, I was shocked that Bill and Vivian are just now getting recognition. But ask many 18-34 year-olds who they are and I bet they don’t know!
Anyway, Mary-Ellis and Jon deserve this. Congratulations.
William Frawley had to wait 45 years in the grave for this honor and Chuck Lorre gets into the Hall without spending a day in a coma.
This is a sham of hall of shame. William Frawley is a pioneer and a genius. He’s what made people think Fred McMurray was a good dad on My Three Sons. And then to reduce it down to a gimmick of putting him in with Vivian Vance for a cute factor.
The Academy members are tasteless morons. Chuck Lorre before James Arness? Chuck Lorre doesn’t deserve any of honors besides a t-shirt that says, “I survived Charlie Sheen.” And there’s quite a few hookers in Hollywood that deserve that shirt before Lorre gets his.
With due respect to the late, great Mr. Frawley, he was an actor, who kept himself employed. In his role as a producer, Chuck Lorre has given jobs to hundreds of people in the industry over the past two decades. That would seem worth celebrating, especially now.
Is this the Award for Employing People? Was that the whole part of giving this award – to people who get folks hired in the world of video? Cause in that case, shouldn’t the guys behind Vivid Video get their lifetime award? Why not an award to the Infomercial Industry. James Arness kept quite a lot of folks employed for 20 years. But there’s no love for him like there’s for Chuck Lorre – the man who gave us tepid sitcoms including the comeback of Charlie Sheen – which I believe is listed as a war crime in Helsinki.
Over the last year, Chuck has pretty much creatively ruined the Big Bang Theory. Maybe he should get an award for turning that show from must see to “I’ll catch the rerun.”
William Frawley is a true God of Television. He deserves better than to be linked to a man who only knows funny when he steals it from another show.
While their best known work was as a TV couple, Frawley and Vance deserve separate nominations, not as a “team”. If that’s the norm, then put ISabel Sanford along with Sherman Hemsley. Otherwise, the decision to put George Jefferson in the Hall by himself seems odd.
And really? Lorre?? WTF!
Didn’t Vivian Vance and WIlliam Frawley have a legendary hatred for each other?
Now they are added to a hall of fame together as some sort of publicity-seeking cute tribute.
Frawley got ticked when she said that a woman who looked like her would have never married Frawley. After I Love Lucy, the duo went onto new shows in neighboring studios. Viv on The Lucy Show and Frawley on My Three Sons. Frawley would send the Douglas boys over to the Lucy Show set to pull pranks on Viv.
You know who should be in the Hall of Fame? Ric Flair.
Just to set the record straight. My cousin Vivian was born in Cherryvale Kansas, not Independece. Cherryvale is her home town.
Fuck reality shows! The people behind them should not even be ALLOWED to attend the HOF! Fred and Ethel were legen-wait for it-DARY! But how could you put in George without Weezie?
“Vance’s talent took her from her hometown of Independence, Kansas” WRONG!! Vivian Vance was born in Cherryvale, Kansas!! Independence trys to claim her, but it is NOT TRUE. Some of Vivian’s cousins still live in Cherryvale, and the house where she was born is lived in by one of her cousins. The US Postal Service recognizes Cherryvale as Vivian Vance’s HOMETOWN, why can’t the rest.
One of my favorite Bill Frawley stores was told by Tim Considine:
While he was in the Reserves in the early 1960s, his commanding office came to visit the set. Tim asked Bill Frawley to come to lunch with them, hoping for a little “star power.” Bill, who was known for his irascibility, was exceptionally polite and pleasant during lunch. On their way back to the studio, Tim breathed a sigh of relief. Until the Officer asked “What was Ethel like?” Frawley’s response? “Why that ****.”