George Burditt | |
---|---|
Born |
George Henry Burditt July 29, 1923 Boston, Massachusetts |
Died | June 25, 2013 Burbank, California |
(aged 89)
Resting place |
San Fernando Mission Cemetery (Mission Hills, Los Angeles) 34°16′25.48″N 118°28′1.71″W / 34.2737444°N 118.4671417°W |
Residence | Burbank, California |
Occupation | Writer, producer |
Years active | 1970–1987 |
Television | Three's Company |
Spouse(s) | Joyce Rebeta-Burditt (1957–2013) (his death) |
Children | Paul, Jack, Ellen |
Parent(s) | John and Dorothy Burditt |
Relatives | 1 brother |
George Henry Burditt (July 29, 1923 – June 25, 2013) was an American television writer and producer. He wrote sketches of variety shows and other television shows, like Three's Company, which he also served as an executive producer in its last few seasons.
George Henry Burditt was born in Boston, Massachusetts, in July 29, 1923, to John and Dorothy Burditt. He had one brother. He served in the United States Marine Corps around the Pacific Ocean during World War II. In Cleveland, Ohio, he worked for American Greetings and married his former employee Joyce Rebeta-Burdett on May 11, 1957.
Burditt moved from Cleveland to Los Angeles to become a television writer. All together with his writing partner Paul Wayne and other writing crew, they earned Emmy Award nominations for Outstanding Writing for a Variety or Music Series: The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour in 1972 and 1974, and Van Dyke and Company in 1977, a variety show starring Dick Van Dyke. Burditt and Wayne co-wrote mainly the first three seasons (1977–79) of the television series Three's Company, and Burditt served as an executive producer of the series in 1981–84. Both together co-wrote one episode of All in the Family, "Archie Eats and Runs" (1974), and another episode of Sanford and Son (alongside Aaron Ruben), "The Way to Lamont's Heart" (1974).