Steven L. Sears
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Steven Lee Sears | |
---|---|
Born | Fort Gordon, Georgia | December 23, 1957
Pen name | Buddy Williers |
Occupation | Writer, producer |
Period | 1980s-present |
Website | |
www |
Steven Lee Sears (born December 23, 1957) is an American writer and producer primarily working in television.[1] He is known for writing and co-executive producing the popular series Xena: Warrior Princess, as well as his subsequent creation Sheena, based on the comic book of the same name.
While he initially began his career as an actor, Sears had greater success with his writing and began to pursue it full-time in 1984 (with the series Riptide), accumulating an impressive resume[peacock prose] as staff writer, story editor and producer on such shows as Stingray, The A-Team, J.J. Starbuck, The Highwayman, Father Dowling Mysteries, Swamp Thing, and Raven. In addition, he has written for shows such as Hardcastle and McCormick, Superboy, The Hollywood Detective, Jesse Hawkes, Hardball, Grand Slam, and Walker, Texas Ranger. He has also written in the arenas of film, stage, animation and interactive.
Steven L. Sears was born into a military family, his father being a career soldier with the U.S. Army. Consequently, Steven traveled quite a bit, his family being rotated out to new assignments every three years. As a result, he had visited 14 countries and 48 U.S. states before the age of 13, when his father retired from the military. After moving to St. Augustine, Florida, Steven became active in the arts programs at St. Augustine High School as well as local productions. His first professional acting work was in "The Cross and the Sword", a symphonic drama which was the official state play of Florida.[citation needed][2][3]
Upon graduation, he entered the University of Florida and received his associate of arts degree. He then transferred to Florida State University to study in the school of theater, then under the direction of Richard G. Fallon. After graduating with a bachelor of arts in 1980, Sears moved to Los Angeles to pursue a career in acting but soon discovered he had an affinity for writing.
Partnering with another aspiring writer, Burt Pearl, the two of them began to write scripts "for the fun of it."[citation needed] The producers of the Stephen J. Cannell Productions hit "Riptide" brought them in for an interview.[citation needed] From that meeting, Sears and Pearl got their first assignment.[citation needed] That assignment led to a full-time staff position at Stephen J. Cannell Productions.[citation needed] After working together for several years, Sears and Pearl moved on separately into successful[according to whom?] independent careers.[citation needed]
Sears established a scholarship program for undergraduate theatre students at Florida State.[citation needed][4] He was also honored by the Florida State University Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa as a "Grad Made Good" in 2006.[citation needed][5] In 2012, he was inducted into the hall of fame at St. Augustine High School, a part of the St. Johns County Center for the Arts. Sears continues his association with aspiring filmmakers and students by occasionally appearing as a guest lecturer at such institutions as UCLA, USC, FSU, UCLB, AFI, and others.[citation needed] He also volunteers his time to the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for their student Emmys and student internship programs.[citation needed] He is also very active on the internet, having a fairly high profile among fans of his previous series[peacock prose] as well as various screenwriting forums.[weasel words]
Sears currently[when?] lives in Los Angeles, California, and enjoys sashimi, photography, history, the great outdoors, and Florida State University football.[citation needed]
Screenwriting
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (November 2022) |
- Hardcastle and McCormick (1985)[6]
- Riptide (1985-1986)[7]
- The A-Team (1985-1986)[8]
- Stingray (1987)[9]
- The Highwayman (1988)[10]
- Superboy (1989)[11]
- Hardball (1989)[12]
- Jesse Hawkes (1989)[13]
- Hollywood Detective (1991)[14]
- Swamp Thing (1992-1993)[15]
- Raven (1993)[16]
- The Itsy Bitsy Spider (1994)[17]
- Walker, Texas Ranger (1995)[18]
- Xena: Warrior Princess (1995-1999)[19]
- Sheena (2000-2002)[20]
- She Spies (2003-2004)[21]
- Transformers: Rescue Bots (2014)[22]
Producer
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (November 2022) |
- J.J. Starbuck (1987)[23]
- Swamp Thing (1992-1993)[24]
- Raven (1993)[25]
- Xena: Warrior Princess (1995-2000)[26]
- Sheena (2000-2002)[27]
References
[edit]- ^ "Official bio".
- ^ "'Cross and Sword' celebrates 50 years".
- ^ "'Cross and Sword' brought entertainment and history outdoors".
- ^ "School of Theatre Donation Funds". 14 February 2018.
- ^ "Grads Made Good". 5 March 2015.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.
- ^ "Steven L. Sears". IMDb.