Tim Kring

Richard Timothy Kring (born July 9, 1957) is an American screenwriter and television producer, best known for his creation of the drama series Strange World, Crossing Jordan, Heroes, and Touch.

Tim Kring
Kring at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con International
BornRichard Timothy Kring
(1957-07-09) July 9, 1957
El Dorado County, California, United States
OccupationScreenwriter, television producer
NationalityAmerican
Notable works

Early life

Kring was born in El Dorado County, California. He is Jewish.[1] He has two brothers and a sister.[2]:83

He attended Allan Hancock College, where his father, Ray, was the track coach, then graduated from the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts in 1983.[3] Discussing his beginnings, Kring said:

I never even thought about scripts when I got out of film school. I pulled cables and shot documentaries. I finally got a gig with commercial house where I would come on with a camera crew as second assistant shooting Japanese cigarette commercials. I had an opportunity to get into the camera crew and decided I did not really want to do that with my life. So I sat down and wrote a script and went back to all the people I had met, got an agent out of it and started going out on a gazillion pitch meetings, and pitched anything I could.[2]:6

Career

Kring's first job as a screenwriter was for the television show Knight Rider. Other early projects included co-writing an episode of Misfits of Science (which, like his later project Heroes, featured super-powered humans as a main theme) and Teen Wolf Too with Jeph Loeb. Kring and Loeb would collaborate again when producing Heroes. Kring also co-wrote the 2010 book Shift: A Novel (Gates of Orpheus Trilogy) with Dale Peck.

After the cancellation of Heroes in 2010 Kring created the TV series Touch, a drama focusing on a father (Kiefer Sutherland) who discovers that his mute son can predict future events.[4] The series premiered on January 25, 2012 on Fox and was cancelled after two seasons on May 9, 2013.

On February 22, 2014, during its Olympics coverage, NBC announced Heroes is coming back as a 13-episode event miniseries titled Heroes Reborn. It premiered in 2015 with creator Tim Kring as the executive producer.[5]

Awards and nominations

Kring has been nominated for an Emmy Award in 2007 for Outstanding Drama Series as the producer for Heroes. He was also named one of the Masters of Sci Fi TV for his work on the series.[6]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1996–1997 Chicago Hope Producer
1999–2002 Strange World Creator
1999–2001 Providence Co-executive producer
2001–2007 Crossing Jordan Creator/Executive producer
2006–2010 Heroes Creator/Executive producer
2012–2013 Touch Creator/Executive producer
2015 Dig Co-creator/Co-executive creator
2015–2016 Heroes Reborn Creator/Executive creator
2017–2018 Beyond Executive creator
2019 Treadstone Creator
gollark: <> is usable maybe, right?
gollark: I mean this semiunironically. It is *already* possible to generate fairly artistic images automatically via CLIP+VQGAN and similar things. This will only improve over time. Because people often like knowing that people went to some effort to make a thing, though (see handmade goods, etc.) there will probably be demand for human art anyway.
gollark: You are MUCH like Intel's flagship Xeon Platinum 8380 "Ice Lake" 2P server configuration.
gollark: Art will be automated in 10 years anyway.
gollark: If no moon is detected in 24 hours of scanning, it is deemed not there.

References

  1. Hadas Bashan (December 24, 2009). אנטי גיבור [Anti Hero]. Pnai Plus (in Hebrew) (1062). Yedioth Ahronoth. pp. 58–61. Retrieved December 28, 2009.
  2. Meyers, Lawrence (June 2, 2010). Inside the TV Writers' Room: Practical Advice for Succeeding in Television. Syracuse University Press. ISBN 0-8156-3241-X.
  3. "Notable Alumni". University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts. Archived from the original on 2007-05-23.
  4. Spoiler TV: Pilot Order for Heroes Creator Tim Spoiler TV
  5. "NBC's 'Heroes' to be Revived as Miniseries (Video)". The Hollywood Reporter. February 22, 2014.
  6. Master of Sci-Fi: Tim Kring Archived 2008-10-02 at the Wayback Machine


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