Peter Barsocchini | |
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Born | 1952 San Francisco, USA |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Screenwriter, Producer & Author |
Years active | 1986–present |
Peter Barsocchini (born 1952) is an American screenwriter, author, and television producer best known for his scripts for the High School Musical series.
Barsocchini began his professional writing career while attending high school in the San Francisco Bay Area, writing more than 300 columns about popular music for the San Mateo Times. He also worked as a freelance reporter for the Associated Press and the San Francisco Examiner and contributed reviews to the Associated Press and Rolling Stone. As a young journalist (he told the editors he was age 18, though he was only 16), he spent weeks backstage at the legendary Fillmore West, covering artists such as Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, The Grateful Dead, the Kinks, and Elton John. Upon graduating from the University of California, Santa Cruz, with a degree in creative writing, Barsocchini was hired by the Merv Griffin Company as an interviewer for the Merv Griffin Show. In 1979, Barsocchini was named producer, a position he held for seven years. He won an Emmy Award twice as producer, the youngest talk-show producer ever to receive the award. He also was the ghostwriter for Griffin's autobiography which became a national bestseller, and was followed by a collection of interviews, "From Where I Sit," published in 1981. His first novel "Ghost" was published to laudatory reviews in the late 1980s with the screen rights being purchased by Paramount Pictures, beginning the transition to the film business. His action/thriller screenplay Drop Zone was produced by Paramount and starred Wesley Snipes. He also wrote the novel adaptation of Mission Impossible a book that was a bestseller in thirteen countries.