Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
David Zabel
View on WikipediaDavid Breitel Zabel is an American television producer and writer. He has worked extensively on ER, becoming an executive producer and the series' showrunner. He has won a Humanitas Prize for his writing for ER. He was also the showrunner/executive producer of the PBS series Mercy Street.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Zabel was raised in New York City. He attended Princeton University and New York University's Graduate Acting Program at the Tisch School of the Arts.[1]
Career
[edit]Zabel began his scriptwriting career with episodes for JAG and Star Trek: Voyager. He then became the story editor for the first season of Dark Angel in 2000 while continuing to write teleplays. In 2001, Zabel joined the crew of ER as an executive story editor and was promoted to co-executive producer later that season.[2] He was made executive producer partway through the tenth season and took on the role of showrunner for the eleventh season.[2] As a credited writer, Zabel contributed to over 45 scripts for ER.
Zabel and R. Scott Gemmill were awarded the Humanitas Prize in the 60 minutes category in 2007 for their script for the season 12 episode "There Are No Angels Here", which followed doctors from the Chicago-set series performing aid work in a refugee camp in Darfur. Humanitas stated that the prize was awarded for the episode's "unflinching look at the brutality inherent in civil wars and its belief that heroism is complex, complicated and multi-layered."[3]
Zabel led the show through the 2007 Writers Guild of America Strike and picketed along with the rest of the writing team. Thirteen episodes were written prior to the strike, and new episodes were written once the strike was resolved, so Zabel was able to deliver a shortened 19 episode season.[4]
Zabel was the showrunner/executive producer of "ER" through the end of its run, after 15 seasons, in 2009. He was nominated for a second Humanitas Prize for writing the episode "Heal Thyself," which he also directed. He was the showrunner of Detroit 1-8-7 in 2010-2011, for which he also wrote and directed numerous episodes.
In 2013, he had two pilots that he wrote and produced go to series on ABC - Lucky 7 (co-written with Jason Richman) and Betrayal. He served as executive producer and showrunner on both shows.
In 2016, the first season of his PBS series Mercy Street aired. The second season was released on January 22, 2017, being cancelled on March 9 of that year.
In 2022, Zabel replaced Angela Kang as showrunner of The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon, a spin-off series in The Walking Dead franchise. Zabel wrote or co-wrote three episodes in its first season.[5]
Filmography
[edit]| Year | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1998–1999 | JAG | 2 episodes |
| 1999 | Star Trek: Voyager | "Pathfinder" |
| 2000–2001 | Dark Angel | 5 episodes |
| 2001–2009 | ER | Executive producer 150 episodes; writer 44 episodes |
| 2008 | Keith | Feature film |
| 2010–2011 | Detroit 1-8-7 | Executive producer; writer 6 episodes |
| 2013–2014 | Betrayal | Executive producer; writer 13 episodes |
| 2013–2014 | Lucky 7 | Executive producer; writer 6 episodes |
| 2014 | Red Band Society | 1 episode |
| 2015 | The Adversaries | Television movie |
| 2016–2017 | Mercy Street | 12 episodes |
| 2019 | Stumptown | Executive producer |
| 2023–present | The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon | Showrunner; writer 11 episodes |
References
[edit]- ^ "NYU Graduate Acting Alumni". 2011. Archived from the original on 2013-05-16. Retrieved 2011-12-08.
- ^ a b "Biographies - Executive Producer David Zabel". NBC. 2007. Archived from the original on 2008-05-09. Retrieved 2008-05-12.
- ^ "33rd Humanitas Prize Winners Announced" (PDF). Humanitas. 2007. Retrieved 2008-05-12. [dead link]
- ^ Fred Topel (2007). "David Zabel on Writers Strike". CanMag. Archived from the original on 2008-03-17. Retrieved 2008-05-12.
- ^ Rosy Cordero, Dominic Patten (April 29, 2022). "Norman Reedus 'Walking Dead' Spinoff Adds David Zabel As New Showrunner; Angela Kang To Remain As EP". Deadline. Retrieved May 1, 2022.
External links
[edit]- David Zabel at IMDb
David Zabel
View on GrokipediaEarly years
Early life
David Zabel was born on April 1, 1966, in New York City.[1] Zabel was raised in Manhattan, immersed in the dynamic urban landscape of New York City, which fostered his early exposure to the arts and performance. Growing up in this culturally rich environment, he developed a strong interest in theater, sparking his passion for storytelling and creative expression.[6][1] Zabel hails from a family deeply rooted in the legal profession, with limited public details available beyond their professional achievements. His grandfather, Charles D. Breitel, was a prominent judge who served as chief judge of the New York Court of Appeals from 1974 to 1985. Zabel's parents and uncle are lawyers, while his brother, Richard, a former Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, now serves as General Counsel at Elliott Management.[7][8][9] Despite this pervasive legal influence—"I grew up in a family where law was in the air we were breathing," Zabel has noted—the household provided no notable ties to entertainment, yet it did not deter his inclination toward narrative arts.[8]Education
David Zabel attended Princeton University starting in 1984, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1988, where he studied English literature and drama.[1] During his time at Princeton, Zabel was deeply involved in the university's theater scene, spending extensive hours at 185 Nassau Street—the hub for arts activities—in late-night rehearsals, intensive writing workshops, and various production roles such as acting, set building, costumes, and props.[10] His initial academic interests leaned toward history and theater, which evolved into a focused engagement with dramatic writing and performance.[10] Following Princeton, Zabel pursued graduate studies at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, obtaining a Master of Fine Arts in acting from the Graduate Acting Program in 1992.[11] This program emphasized rigorous training in performance and theatrical craft, providing foundational skills that later informed his transition to screenwriting and television production.[12] No specific academic honors, theses, or notable mentors from his NYU studies are documented in available records.Professional career
Early career
Following his MFA in acting from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, Zabel transitioned into writing, initially focusing on plays in the New York theater scene as a foundation for his screenwriting aspirations.[12][13] He began freelancing in the early 1990s, honing his craft through uncredited behind-the-scenes contributions to independent theater projects before securing representation with an original pilot script that opened doors in television.[13] This led to his first credited television work on the military legal drama JAG in the late 1990s, where he wrote two episodes during season 4.[13] Zabel's episode "The Black Jet" (season 4, episode 10, aired November 24, 1998) centered on a pilot's emergency landing of a stealth aircraft in Iran, exploring themes of espionage and military justice.[14] His subsequent JAG script, "Dungaree Justice" (season 4, episode 12, aired January 12, 1999), addressed a case involving sailors assaulting a bar owner in retaliation for an alleged rape of a female shipmate, highlighting issues of accountability in the Navy.[15] These freelance writing assignments marked his entry into episodic television, building on his theatrical background to craft character-driven narratives within procedural formats. In 1999, Zabel contributed to Star Trek: Voyager with the episode "Pathfinder" (season 6, episode 10, aired December 1, 1999), for which he received story credit and co-teleplay credit with Kenneth Biller; the story followed engineer Reginald Barclay's efforts to establish contact with the stranded USS Voyager using holographic simulations.[16] This sci-fi assignment expanded his portfolio, demonstrating versatility in speculative storytelling. Zabel's early producing experience emerged on Dark Angel (2000–2002), where he joined as a staff writer for the first season and quickly progressed to story editor, overseeing narrative development while writing five episodes.[13] Notable among these was "C.R.E.A.M." (season 1, episode 4, aired October 31, 2000), which delved into themes of genetic engineering and economic disparity in a dystopian Seattle.[17] His role involved collaborating with show creator James Cameron, refining scripts to balance action and social commentary, and this position solidified his transition from freelance writer to key creative team member before major network commitments.[6]ER
David Zabel joined the writing staff of the medical drama ER in 2001 as an executive story editor during its eighth season, quickly advancing to co-executive producer later that year.[8] By season 10, he had become an executive producer, and he assumed the role of showrunner for the final five seasons (11 through 15), spanning 2004 to 2009, overseeing the series' narrative direction as it navigated declining ratings while concluding its 15-year run.[10] Under his leadership, ER shifted focus toward ensemble dynamics among newer cast members, adapting to the absence of original stars like George Clooney, whose 1999 departure had already reshaped the show's early momentum into a more procedural format that Zabel further evolved.[18] Zabel contributed to over 45 episodes as a writer, making him the most prolific scribe on the series, with credits spanning teleplays, stories, and co-writing efforts that emphasized emotional depth in high-stakes medical scenarios.[10] Notable examples include season 12's "There Are No Angels Here" (2006), which he co-wrote and which depicted ER doctors providing aid in a Darfur refugee camp, highlighting global humanitarian crises amid the hospital's chaos.[19] Another standout was the season 15 episode "Heal Thyself" (2008), which Zabel both wrote and directed, exploring the personal toll on new chief of staff Dr. Catherine Banfield through a case involving child endangerment and institutional grief.[20] As showrunner, Zabel steered ER through its later years by innovating plotlines that blended domestic medical emergencies with broader social issues, such as international conflicts and ethical dilemmas in healthcare, while developing key character arcs like Dr. Luka Kovač's evolving leadership and Dr. Neela Rasgotra's professional growth amid personal losses.[21] He adeptly managed significant cast transitions, including Noah Wyle's exit as Dr. John Carter in the season 11 finale, by integrating recurring appearances and elevating supporting roles to sustain viewer investment in the ensemble.[22] These changes helped maintain narrative continuity, ensuring the series ended on a note of reflective closure rather than abrupt reinvention. In production, Zabel prioritized tight episode pacing to balance rapid-fire action sequences with character-driven moments, often structuring 45-minute installments around 4-5 major cases to mirror the intensity of emergency room shifts.[23] He also upheld the show's commitment to medical accuracy by collaborating with on-set consultants, including physicians and nurses, to authenticate procedures and terminology, particularly in complex storylines involving trauma care and ethical consultations.[24]Post-ER television work
Following the conclusion of ER in 2009, David Zabel transitioned to leading new television projects, drawing on his experience in ensemble-driven storytelling to explore diverse genres beyond medical dramas.[25] His first major post-ER endeavor was as showrunner and executive producer for the ABC police procedural Detroit 1-8-7 (2010–2011), which followed the Detroit Police Department's homicide unit in gritty, case-of-the-week episodes infused with character backstories.[26] Zabel wrote four episodes of the series, emphasizing the procedural format's blend of crime-solving and personal drama.[27] The show was cancelled after one season in May 2011 due to low ratings.[28] In 2013, Zabel co-created and served as showrunner for ABC's Lucky 7, an adaptation of the British series The Syndicate about a group of gas station workers who win the lottery, which aired three episodes before cancellation. Later that year, he created and served as showrunner for the ABC thriller Betrayal, an adaptation of the Dutch series Overspel that centered on an illicit affair complicating a high-stakes legal case involving corruption and murder.[29] He wrote multiple episodes, focusing on the narrative's exploration of infidelity's consequences without romanticizing it.[30] Like Detroit 1-8-7, Betrayal lasted only one season before cancellation in 2014.[25] Zabel expanded into historical drama as co-creator, writer, and showrunner for PBS's Mercy Street (2016–2017), a period piece set in a Union-occupied mansion-turned-hospital during the American Civil War.[31] Co-created with Lisa Wolfinger, the series drew from extensive historical research, including memoirs and letters from real Civil War nurses like Mary Phinney and Kate Cumming, to authentically depict medical practices, racial tensions, and gender roles of the era.[32] Zabel wrote and teleplayed several of the 12 episodes across two seasons, incorporating his prior medical drama expertise to ground the show's portrayal of wartime healthcare innovations and ethical dilemmas.[33] PBS cancelled Mercy Street on March 9, 2017, citing funding challenges after its second-season finale.[34] Zabel contributed as an executive producer and writer for three episodes of ABC's Stumptown (2019), a contemporary private investigator series based on the comic books, marking his involvement in action-oriented crime narratives with strong female leads.[33] This project highlighted his versatility in shifting from historical and thriller formats to lighter, character-focused procedurals. From 2023 onward, Zabel has been the creator, showrunner, writer, and executive producer for AMC's The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon, a post-apocalyptic spin-off centering on the titular survivor's journey in a zombie-infested Europe, emphasizing themes of reluctant heroism and found family.[13] He has written or co-written numerous episodes across the first three seasons, including key installments like the season 2 reunion of protagonists Daryl and Carol.[33] The series' international production began in France for seasons 1 (2023) and 2 (2024), filming in locations such as Paris, Provence, and Mont-Saint-Michel to capture a distinctly European flavor distinct from the U.S.-centric original Walking Dead universe.[35] Season 3 (2025), which premiered on September 7 and concluded in October, shifted filming to Spain, including sites in Madrid, Galicia, Belchite, Catalonia, and Valencia, introducing new threats and cultural elements while advancing the characters' quest for home.[36] As of November 2025, the series remains active, with a fourth and final season announced to wrap the Daryl and Carol storyline.[37]Filmography
Television credits
David Zabel began his television career as a writer on military and legal dramas before transitioning to medical and sci-fi genres, eventually taking on producing and showrunning roles on high-profile series.[33] His credits demonstrate a progression from staff writing to executive production, contributing to over 200 episodes across multiple shows.[6] The following table summarizes his key television contributions:| Years | Series | Role | Episodes/Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1995–1998 | JAG | Writer | 2 episodes, including story development for legal-military cases.[33][38] |
| 1999 | Star Trek: Voyager | Story writer | 1 episode ("Pathfinder," teleplay co-written with Kenneth Biller).[6] |
| 2000–2002 | Dark Angel | Writer, producer, story editor | 21 episodes total, including teleplays for sci-fi action narratives.[33] |
| 2001–2009 | ER | Writer, executive producer, showrunner, director | 150 episodes as producer/showrunner (seasons 8–15); 44 episodes written; directed 1 episode ("Heal Thyself," 2008).[33][39][20] |
| 2010–2011 | Detroit 1-8-7 | Executive producer, writer | Full season (18 episodes), overseeing police procedural drama.[26] |
| 2013 | Lucky 7 | Creator, writer, executive producer | 1 episode aired (of 13 ordered), ABC lottery drama. |
| 2013–2014 | Betrayal | Executive producer, writer, developer | Full season (13 episodes ordered, 10 aired), adapting Dutch series Overspel.[40] |
| 2014–2015 | Red Band Society | Executive producer | Full series (22 episodes), teen medical comedy-drama. |
| 2015 | The Adversaries | Creator, executive producer | Unaired television pilot. |
| 2016–2017 | Mercy Street | Creator, showrunner, writer | 12 episodes total, historical drama set during the Civil War.[41] |
| 2019 | Stumptown | Writer, executive producer | 3 episodes, contributing to private investigator series.[1] |
| 2023–present | The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon | Showrunner, writer, creator | 19 episodes across seasons 1–3 (as of November 2025), post-apocalyptic spin-off; renewed for a fourth and final season.[42][43][5] |
