Kevin Wade

Kevin Wade (born March 9, 1954) is an American screenwriter and television producer.[1]

Kevin Wade
Born (1954-03-09) March 9, 1954
OccupationScreenwriter, television producer
Years active1960—present 2000—present 2010—present

Early life and career

Wade was born in Chappaqua, New York,[2] and attended Connecticut College. Before his writing career took off, Wade acted in two films for Mark Rappaport, including The Scenic Route (1978). He wrote the play Key Exchange,[3] which was produced off-Broadway in 1981[4] and released as a film in 1985.[3] Seven years later he received his first screen credit for Working Girl,[1] which earned him nominations for the Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay and the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay. Additional film credits include True Colors,[1] Mr. Baseball,[1] Junior,[1] Meet Joe Black,[1] and Maid in Manhattan.[1]

For television, Wade created and executive produced the short-lived ABC drama series Cashmere Mafia. He also wrote the seven episodes that were broadcast by the network before the show was canceled. He joined the writing staff of the CBS drama "Blue Bloods" in its first season and has served as its executive producer/showrunner since the second season.

Personal life

He was married to Polly Draper (1983–1990; divorced). He is married to Sasha Clifton Wade since 1991 and has 2 children.

gollark: In this case, I want a thing I can access on my phone and stuff without installing any additional software on it, and which can benefit from browsers' really nice rendering engines.
gollark: Browsers provide a useful cross-platform environment which is well-sandboxed but still has decent access to a lot of stuff, which allows you to run an application in a few seconds without installing anything, and which can interact easily with some server somewhere.
gollark: The interweb™ is *good*.
gollark: It would take much longer to implement, be significantly less readable, run somewhat faster, and have more security issues.
gollark: Also, C makes sense for some things, but not that many. Programming my current eternally unfinished web project in C would be extremely stupid.

References

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