1. Big Cartoon Forum

    You WIll Need To Reset Your Password!!!

    We just moved hosts on this system, and this has caused a few updates. One is the way we encode and store the encoded passwords.

    Your old passwords will NOT work. You will need to reset your password. This is normal. Just click on reset password from the log in screen. Should be smooth as silk to do...

    Sorry for the hassle.

    Dave Koch
  2. Big Cartoon Forum

    Are You Just Hanging Out?

    Just lurking? Join the club, we'd love to have you in the Big Cartoon Forum! Sign up is easy- just enter your name and password.... or join using your Facebook account!

    Membership has it's privileges... you can post and get your questions answered directly. But you can also join our community, and help other people with their questions, You can add to the discussion. And it's free! So join today!

    Dave Koch
  3. Big Cartoon Forum

    Other Side Of Maleficent

    I have been looking forward to Maleficent with equal amounts of anticipation and dread. On one hand, she is easily my favorite Disney villain, so cold and so pure, and I want desperately to see more of her and her back-story. On the other hand, she is easily my favorite Disney villain, and I would hate to see her parodied, taken lightly or ultimately destroyed in a film that does not understand this great character. The good news is that this film almost gets it right; but that is also the bad news.

  4. Big Cartoon Forum

    BCDB Hits 150K Entries

    It took a while, but we are finally here! The Big Cartoon DataBase hit the milestone of 150,000 entries earlier today with the addition of the cartoon The Polish Language. This film was added to BCDB on May 9th, 2014 at 4:23 PM.

  5. Big Cartoon Forum

    Warner Brings Back Animated Stone-Age Family

    Funnyman Will Ferrell and partner Adam McKay are working on bringing back everyone’s favorite stone-age family. The duo’s production company Gary Sanchez Productions is in development on a new Flintstones animated feature.

  6. Big Cartoon Forum

    Disney To Feast In France

    The follow up to Disney’s 2013 Academy Award Winning short Paperman has been announced, and it will premiere at France’s Annecy International Animated Film Festival. Titled The Feast, the short looks to be based on the same stylized CG techniques used on last years Paperman, a more natural and hand-drawn look to computer animation.

  7. Big Cartoon Forum

    Renegades of Animation: Pat Sullivan

    Pat Sullivan became famous worldwide for his creation of Felix the Cat. What most animation histories gloss over is Sullivan’s checkered past and longtime standing as a wildcat renegade. He didn’t follow the rules. And he made damn sure to fully protect his intellectual properties.

"Untouchables" producer Alan A. Armer dies at 88

Discussion in 'Non-Animated Movies And TV' started by eminovitz, Oct 31, 2013.

  1. eminovitz

    eminovitz Research Guru / Moderator Emeritus

    Joined:
    Oct 30, 2013
    Messages:
    10,279
    Likes Received:
    102
    Trophy Points:
    2,297
    Alan A. Armer, an Emmy Award-winning television producer whose series included The Fugitive and The Untouchables, has died. He was 88.

    Armer, a retired longtime professor in what now is called the Department of Cinema and Television Arts at Cal State Northridge, died of colon cancer Sunday at his home in Century City, California, said his son, Michael.

    In a more than two-decade career that began in Los Angeles during the live TV days of the late 1940s, Armer was a producer on the 1950s series My Friend Flicka, Broken Arrow and Man Without a Gun.

    From 1960 to 1963, he was an executive producer on The Untouchables, the Prohibition-era series starring Robert Stack as the crime-fighting Eliot Ness.

    As the producer of The Fugitive, starring David Janssen as Dr. Richard Kimble, who is wrongly convicted of murdering his wife, Armer took home an Emmy when the show won for outstanding dramatic series in 1966.

    Armer produced The Fugitive, which was executive-produced by Quinn Martin, for the first three years of its 1963-67 run.

    For Quinn Martin Productions, he went on to produce The Invaders, the 1967-68 science fiction series starring Roy Thinnes, and the first season of Cannon, the 1971-76 detective series starring William Conrad.

    Armer also produced the 1968-71 Western series Lancer and was a producer of the 1973-74 adventure series The Magician, as well as TV-movies such as Birds of Prey, starring Janssen.

    "I think Alan knew every aspect of producing: he knew what made a good script, he knew directing and editing, but what I remember about working with him was his patience and his kindness," said writer and producer David Rintels, who was Armer's story editor and associate producer on The Invaders.

    "He wanted it the best it could be, and he would take whatever time was necessary to do it," Rintels said. "He'd never get short-tempered about it. He was the most collegial of men."

    Armer, who began lecturing at Cal State Northridge in what was then called the Radio-Television-Film Department in the '70s, became a part-time faculty member in 1980.

    "I guess I was suffering burnout at the time," Armer said of his transition to teaching in a 2000 university interview. "Nearly everything I had worked on had been successful and I had won a lot of awards, but I just wasn't happy anymore. My wife asked me why I kept doing it."

    Around that time, he received a call from the chairman of the Radio-Television-Film Department asking if he wanted to teach a writing class. He later became a full professor, teaching screenwriting, directing and mass communications. "I enjoyed every minute I spent working with those kids," he said.

    In 2000, a year after he retired as a professor, the university announced that Armer had donated $1 million to build a 120-seat screening room in Manzanita Hall. It is named for Armer and his wife Elaine.

    Born in Los Angeles on July 7, 1922, Armer served in the Army during World War II and was an announcer for Armed Forces Radio in India and Ceylon, now Sri Lanka. He earned a bachelor's degree in speech and drama at Stanford University in 1947 and became an announcer at a radio station in San Jose.

    After returning to Los Angeles, he took a job at an advertising agency, where he got his first taste of television by writing, directing, narrating, acting in and editing TV commercials.

    Teamed with Walter Grauman, he developed Lights, Camera, Action, a live TV talent show that aired on what was then known as KNBH Channel 4, the new NBC station in Hollywood, from 1949 to 1951.

    Armer, who earned a master's degree in theater arts at UCLA in 1982, wrote three books, including Directing Television and Film and Writing the Screenplay: TV and Film.

    His wife of 53 years, Elaine, died in 2002.

    In addition to his son Michael, Armer is survived by his other children, Ellen King, David and Aimee Greenholtz; six grandchildren; and two great-grandsons.


    (Via Los Angeles Times)

Share This Page