John Charles Walters Company

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The John Charles Walters Company was a production company formed in 1978 by four former employees of MTM Enterprises: James L. Brooks, David Davis, Stan Daniels and Ed. Weinberger. The company existed from 1978 until 1983 and produced the TV show Taxi.

The foursome who created John Charles Walters were part of the creative team that produced The Mary Tyler Moore Show and its spinoff Phyllis, as well as The Betty White Show among others, during the 1970s. They were lured away by Paramount following the end of The Mary Tyler Moore Show's run. Paramount financed the John Charles Walters Company during its existence.

The company also produced The Associates, a TV sitcom about a small group of young Wall Street lawyers which ran during the 1979 television season starring Martin Short. The show lasted for nine of the 13 episodes produced, but received two Primetime Emmy Award nominations, two Golden Globe Award nominations and one Writers Guild of America Award nomination after its cancelation.

Company name[edit]

According to a 2003 interview, James L. Brooks said that the company was named the John Charles Walters Company because the foursome "wanted a venerable Protestant name."[1] The book Hailing Taxi indicates that the partners discovered an old pub sign that said "Charles Walters." They bought it in order to make it their logo, but then discovered that there was a director in Hollywood named Charles Walters. They added the name John to avoid legal problems.

The only known existence of Walters appears at the end of both Taxi and The Associates, as well as the 1978 telefilm Cindy, a reworking of Cinderella with an all-Black cast. In the end credits, the back of Walters is seen leaving his office while a female voice off-screen wishes him good night (with the words "Night, Mr. Walters!" or "Merry Christmas, Mr. Walters!" in holiday-themed episodes); Walters merely groans in response while he puts his hat on as he exits. The logo was shot by assistant cinematographer Larry Foster. Ed. Weinberger provided the voice of Walters during the sequence.[2] The woman is Weinberger's actual assistant.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

  • Gracie Films – The succeeding company founded by James L. Brooks

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Academy of Television Arts & Sciences". Archived from the original on 2004-12-24. Retrieved 2006-02-11.
  2. ^ "Ed. Weinberger - Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast!". Retrieved 2017-12-08.

External links[edit]