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Darin Henry
Darin Henry
from Wikipedia

Darin Henry (born 1970 or 1971)[1] is an American television writer. He has written for many different television series, including Seinfeld, Futurama, The War at Home and Oddballs. He also wrote a Big Finish Doctor Who audio called The Game. He wrote an episode for Shake It Up and is the co-executive producer for the series.

Key Information

Writing credits

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My Family

  • "While you Weren't Sleeping" (series 5)
  • "Neighbour Wars" (series 8) (Also for the last episode of series 8 Henry was credited as an associate producer with Paul Minnett & Brian Leveson)
  • "The Guru" and "Kenzo's Project" (co-written with Tom Anderson) (series 9)
  • "Mary Christmas" (co-written with Paul Minnett & Brian Leveson) (series 10)
  • "Darts All, Folks" (series 11)

Not Going Out

  • "Amy" (co-written with Lee Mack)
  • "Dancing" (co-written with Lee Mack)

Seinfeld

Futurama

The War at Home

  • "It's a Living"
  • "Three's Company"

Shake It Up

  • "Whodunit Up?" (season 2)
  • "Spirit It Up" (season 3)
  • "Clean It Up" (season 3)
  • "Forward and Back It Up" (season 3) (with Jennifer Glickman)
  • "Stress It Up" (season 3)

K.C. Undercover

  • "Off the Grid" (season 1)
  • "Double Crossed: Part 3" (season 1)
  • "Stakeout Takeout" (season 1)
  • "The Neighborhood Watchdogs" (season 1)
  • "First Friend" (season 1)
  • "The Mother of All Missions" (season 2)
  • "In Too Deep" (season 2)
  • "Virtual Insanity" (season 2)
  • "Web of Lies" (season 3)
  • "Keep on Truckin'" (season 3)
  • "Stormy Weather" (season 3)
  • "The Domino Effect" (season 3)

Oddballs

  • "Wanted Dead or a Fly"
  • "Line Cutters"
  • "Pillow Fight Club"
  • "Almost Home Alone"
  • "Partners"

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Darin Henry is an American television writer and producer known for his contributions to prominent sitcoms including Seinfeld, Futurama, and K.C. Undercover. Born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, he began his career in the entertainment industry with entry-level roles on Seinfeld, progressing to writer for several episodes during the show's later seasons while also serving as a research consultant, assistant to the writers, and production staff member. His work on Seinfeld established him in the field of sitcom writing, leading to subsequent positions as a producer and writer on series such as The War at Home, where he served as supervising producer and contributed teleplays, and Grosse Pointe. Henry has maintained a versatile career across network, cable, and animated programming, holding executive producer and co-executive producer roles on Disney Channel shows like K.C. Undercover and Shake It Up, where he also wrote multiple episodes. He has contributed stories and scripts to animated series including Futurama as an executive story editor, Oddballs, and others, demonstrating range in both live-action and animated formats. Beyond television, Henry founded Sitcomics, a publishing venture that merges sitcom-style narratives with comic book presentation. His career reflects a long-term focus on comedy writing and production, with credits spanning from the 1990s to recent projects in the 2020s.

Early life

Early life and education

Darin Henry was born on July 30, 1970, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, United States. He grew up in Silver Spring Township, central Pennsylvania. He attended Temple University. During his college years at Temple University, he spent a semester abroad and met writers from the British sitcom Red Dwarf, an experience he later described as a pivotal moment in his life.

Career

Seinfeld

Darin Henry began his career on Seinfeld in 1993 as a production assistant and member of the production staff, contributing to 22 episodes through 1994. Through a connection in central Pennsylvania, he was recommended to director Tom Cherones, who offered him an entry-level position with the understanding that it might involve menial tasks, marking his initial foothold in Hollywood television production. He advanced to more specialized roles as assistant to the writers, research consultant, and clip coordinator from 1994 to 1998, working on 29 episodes in these capacities. After a temporary departure to write for Muppets Tonight, Henry returned to Seinfeld in 1997 at the personal request of Jerry Seinfeld to contribute as a writer during the series' run as the top-rated show on television. He received sole or shared writing credits on four episodes across the final two seasons: "The Van Buren Boys" (season 8), "The Slicer" (season 9, co-written with Gregg Kavet and Andy Robin), "The Bookstore" (season 9), and "The Chronicle" (season 9, also known as "The Clip Show", co-written with Dan O'Keefe). Later, Henry produced several behind-the-scenes featurettes for the Seinfeld DVD releases between 2005 and 2007, including segments such as "Running with the Egg: Making a 'Seinfeld'" and "Queen of the Castle: The Elaine Benes Story."

Post-Seinfeld work (1999–2009)

After concluding his work on Seinfeld in 1998, Darin Henry transitioned into story editing and producing roles across animation, sitcoms, and other television formats. He served as executive story editor and story editor on the animated series Futurama from 1999 to 2000, contributing to 18 episodes and writing the episode "The Problem with Popplers". In 1999, he also worked as story editor on one episode of Zoe, Duncan, Jack & Jane. From 2000 to 2001, Henry was executive story editor on the sitcom Grosse Pointe for 12 episodes. In 2002, he took on the role of assistant to producers on the feature film Manna from Heaven. Henry then shifted toward supervising and producing positions on multi-camera sitcoms, most notably serving as supervising producer and producer on The War at Home from 2005 to 2007 across 43 episodes, while also writing five episodes including "It's a Living" and "Three's Company". During the same mid-2000s period, he produced several DVD featurettes for Seinfeld releases from 2005 to 2007, including "Running with the Egg: Making a 'Seinfeld'". Henry's writing credits expanded to include one episode of The Bad Girl's Guide in 2005 and the Big Finish audio drama Doctor Who: The Game in 2005. He contributed as a writer on eight episodes of the British sitcom My Family from 2004 to 2011, including "While You Weren't Sleeping" and "Neighbour Wars", alongside associate and co-executive producer credits on multiple episodes. In 2009, he wrote one episode of Hotel Babylon and co-wrote two episodes of Not Going Out with Lee Mack during 2009–2011.

Disney Channel and family television (2010–present)

In 2012, Darin Henry began an extended involvement with Disney Channel's family-oriented programming as co-executive producer on Shake It Up, contributing to 25 episodes in that role and writing 5 episodes, including "Whodunit Up?" and "Spirit It Up." He followed this in 2014 by serving as consulting producer on the Disney XD series I Didn't Do It, overseeing 16 episodes. Henry's longest-running Disney Channel project was K.C. Undercover, where he worked as co-executive producer and later executive producer from 2015 to 2018, producing 75 episodes overall while writing 12, including "Off the Grid" and "Double Crossed: Part 3." During this period, he also contributed writing to shorter formats, co-writing the 2015 short Bummed and providing scripts for Old Guy in both 2013 and 2020 iterations. More recently, Henry has expanded into animation with writing credits on Netflix's Oddballs (2022–2023), authoring 6 episodes including "Wanted Dead or a Fly" and "Line Cutters," and on the 2024 revival of Totally Spies!, where he wrote 3 episodes. These projects underscore his ongoing focus on accessible, family-centered storytelling across live-action and animated formats.

Personal life

Personal life

Darin Henry has been married to actress Ursula Burton since August 2003. Through this marriage, he is the son-in-law of Gabrielle B. Burton and Roger V. Burton. He is the brother-in-law of Charity Burton, Gabrielle Burton, Jennifer Burton, and Maria Burton.
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