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Lou Grant

Lou Grant
Lou Grant Ed Asner 1977.JPG
Ed Asner as Lou Grant
First appearance "Love Is All Around" (MTM Show)
Last appearance "Charlie" (Lou Grant) (officially)
KSTP-TV's ads (unofficially)
Created by James L. Brooks and Allan Burns
Portrayed by Ed Asner
Information
Gender Male
Occupation City editor of The Los Angeles Tribune newspaper
Former News director at WJM-TV Station
Former Reporter
Former Copy boy
Family John Simpson Grant (father)
Ellen Hammersmith Grant (mother)
Spouse(s) Edie Grant (divorced)
Children Ruth (daughter)
Jane (daughter)
Sarah (daughter)
Relatives Amy (granddaughter)
Abby (granddaughter)
Eric (grandson)
Matthew (grandson)
Allen Stevens (nephew)
Bill Phelps (son-in-law)
(By 1979, he had begun referring to one of his daughters as "Ellen", and she had a young son named Nick.)

Louis "Lou" Grant is a fictional character played by Edward Asner in two television series produced by MTM Enterprises for CBS. The first was The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970–1977), a half-hour light-hearted situation comedy in which the character was the news director at fictional television station WJM-TV. A spinoff series, entitled Lou Grant (1977–1982), was an hour-long serious dramatic series which frequently engaged in social commentary, featuring the character as city editor of the fictional Los Angeles Tribune. Although spin-offs are common on American television, Lou Grant remains the only character to have a leading role on both a popular comedy and a popular dramatic series.

Although the setting of The Mary Tyler Moore Show might have implied that he was a native Minnesotan, Lou Grant in fact established that he was born in the fictional town of Goshen, Michigan. He was the son of John Simpson Grant and Ellen Hammersmith Grant; his grandfather was a pharmacist. At some point in his youth and early adulthood he developed a lifelong affection for westerns, particularly those starring John Wayne. In high school, he was a tackle for his school's football team. Soon after high school, he married Edie MacKenzie (Priscilla Morrill), at an age young enough to have four grandchildren before he turned 50.

After marriage he became a combatant in World War II. He served in both the Pacific and European Theatres. At one point, he was a sergeant in the Pacific-based 2nd Marine Division. During another phase of his wartime service he was injured by a grenade in France, the last remnants of which were only removed in his late 40s. He was also part of a unit that liberated an unknown town in Germany. During the war he met and befriended Walter Cronkite.


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