Ellen Idelson

Ellen Idelson (June 13, 1961 – September 19, 2003) was an American television producer, television writer and actress.

Ellen Idelson
Born(1961-06-13)June 13, 1961
DiedSeptember 19, 2003(2003-09-19) (aged 42)
EducationSan Francisco State University (BA)
Harvard University (MFA)
OccupationActress, television producer, television writer
Years active1987–2003

Life and career

Idelson was born Los Angeles, California.[1] She is the daughter of actor and television writer Bill Idelson and actress Seemah Wilder.[1]

She attended San Francisco State University and the Harvard University American Repertory Theatre Advanced Training Institute, following the career paths of both her parents.[1]

As a television producer and writer she worked on the series The Nanny, Caroline in the City, Ellen, Boy Meets World, Will & Grace, Suddenly Susan, Grosse Pointe and Working (only as a producer). All of the aforementioned work was with fellow writer and producer Rob Lotterstein.

As an actress she did a number theatre work performing in local Los Angeles theaters, including the Mark Taper Forum and productions of Theatre West and the Los Angeles Shakespeare Festival. She also appeared on television in sketches of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and having small roles in Will & Grace. In 2001, she had the lead role in the independent film Moose Mating. Idelson also helped found Los Angeles Theatresports, serving as artistic director.[1]

Death

Idelson died on September 19, 2003 at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center due complications from cancer and Crohn's disease, a disease she suffered from for much of her life. She was 42 years old.[1]

The pilot episode of Fox sitcom The War at Home was dedicated in her memory.[2] The series was created and executive produced by Idelson's former producing and writing partner, Rob Lotterstein.

gollark: Big investors bet the value would go *down*. Reddit decided they wanted it to go *up*, and are burning lots of money on that.
gollark: They're just not better off, that's not the same as being worse off.
gollark: What? No.
gollark: You would do it if you thought a stock would go down in value for whatever reason.
gollark: Thus, they lose money.

References

  1. From Staff and Wire Reports (September 23, 2003). "Ellen Idelson, 42; Theater Actress and Television Writer". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 22, 2011.
  2. Rob Lotterstein (writer) & Andy Cadiff (director). "Pilot" The War at Home, Fox. September 11, 2005. Episode 1, season 1.
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