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Jane Milmore
Jane Milmore
from Wikipedia

Jane Milmore (March 25, 1955 – February 4, 2020) was an American playwright, screenwriter, television producer and actress.

Key Information

Biography

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Born in Laramie, Wyoming,[1] to Joan Marie Judge and John Edward Milmore, Milmore was of Irish descent and was one of five girls, including romance author Kaitlin O'Riley and actress Jennifer Milmore. Raised in New York and New Jersey attending school in Brooklyn, she graduated from Keansburg High School in Keansburg, New Jersey.[2] Milmore married television producer Richard Vaczy, best known for the classic comedy series Golden Girls, on October 24, 2004. The couple split their time between homes in Beverly Hills, California, and Rumson, New Jersey.[3] She died on February 4, 2020, from pancreatic cancer at the age of 64.[4]

Career

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Milmore wrote 23 published plays with Billy Van Zandt.[1] She wrote and executive produced numerous television series. She won both a People's Choice and an NAACP award for series Martin, a Prism Award for The Hughleys and was nominated for an Emmy for the CBS special I Love Lucy the Very First Show. As an actress, she appeared in numerous TV series and made-for-TV movies. She also appeared in the feature film A Wake in Providence. She performed Off-Broadway in the shows Silent Laughter, Drop Dead! and You've Got Hate Mail.

References

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from Grokipedia
Jane Milmore was an American playwright, screenwriter, television producer, and actress known for her decades-long collaboration with Billy Van Zandt on farcical stage comedies and her contributions as a writer and producer on several prominent 1990s and early 2000s sitcoms. She co-created the short-lived Fox series Daddy Dearest starring Don Rickles and Richard Lewis, and wrote and produced episodes for shows including Martin, The Wayans Bros., The Hughleys, Anything But Love, Suddenly Susan, and Yes, Dear. Her television work earned her an Emmy nomination for an informational special on I Love Lucy and various awards including People's Choice, Image, and Prism honors for her contributions to Martin and The Hughleys. Milmore began her career as an actress, appearing in national television commercials, guest roles on series such as Newhart, Martin, The Hughleys, and The Wayans Bros., and the feature film A Wake in Providence, which she also co-wrote with Van Zandt. Born in Laramie, Wyoming, and raised in New York and New Jersey, she formed her enduring creative partnership with Van Zandt during a high school drama competition, leading to over 20 co-written plays that established them as noted practitioners of modern farce. Their theatrical works include Love, Sex and the I.R.S., Drop Dead!, You've Got Hate Mail, Lie, Cheat, and Genuflect, Playing Doctor, and The Boomer Boys Musical, many of which premiered through their Unofficial Rep Company in New Jersey and remain widely licensed. Milmore transitioned successfully from acting and playwriting to television, where she developed series for performers such as Martin Lawrence, D. L. Hughley, Brooke Shields, and others. She and Van Zandt also established a scholarship supporting theater students at Brookdale Community College in New Jersey. Milmore died in Los Angeles in 2020 after a 15-month battle with pancreatic cancer.

Early life

Family background

Jane Milmore was born on March 25, 1955, in Laramie, Wyoming, to John E. Milmore and Joan Judge. She was the oldest of five sisters. Her sisters included Kathleen Milmore, who writes romance novels under the pen name Kaitlin O'Riley, and Jennifer Milmore, an actress. Milmore spent her childhood in Brooklyn, New York, and was later raised in New Jersey.

Education and early interests

Jane Milmore spent her childhood in Brooklyn, New York, where she attended school. She later moved to New Jersey and graduated from Keansburg High School in Keansburg in 1973. Milmore developed an early interest in theater during her high school years, participating in drama activities that included representing Keansburg High School with a production of Neil Simon's Plaza Suite at the Barn Theater in Rumson, New Jersey. The Barn Theater hosted an annual high school drama competition described as a local equivalent to the Tony Awards. Her involvement in this competition led to her meeting Billy Van Zandt.

Collaboration with Billy Van Zandt

Meeting and partnership

Jane Milmore met Billy Van Zandt at the Barn Theatre's high school drama competition in Rumson, New Jersey, where the New Jersey native Van Zandt encountered the Wyoming-born Milmore while representing their respective high schools. A month later, they were cast together in Neil Simon's Star Spangled Girl, marking their first shared performance. This initial collaboration launched a continuous professional partnership that spanned forty-six years, lasting until Milmore's death in 2020. Their playwriting collaboration began in 1979 with Love, Sex and the I.R.S.. During this time, they co-authored twenty-three published plays and contributed to numerous television projects. The pair became recognized for their distinctive modern farce style, which combined physical comedy and adult humor with fever-pitched one-liners, puns, slapstick, and pratfalls, often at the expense of actorly dignity. They were described as "masters of modern farce" and as direct descendants of comedy icons like Groucho Marx, Lucille Ball, and the Three Stooges, bringing an uninhibited, madcap approach to theatrical comedy that distinguished them from many contemporaries.

Playwriting career

Notable plays and productions

Jane Milmore co-authored over 20 plays with Billy Van Zandt, with their works collectively published worldwide by Concord Theatricals (formerly Samuel French). Their collaborations have been produced extensively in regional theaters, Off-Broadway venues, and internationally, establishing them as prolific contributors to contemporary American comedy. Among their most recognized early works is Love, Sex, and the IRS (1978), which has endured as a summer stock perennial since its premiere. Subsequent notable titles include Silent Laughter and Drop Dead!, both of which received Off-Broadway productions in which Milmore also performed. You've Got Hate Mail became a significant Off-Broadway hit, running for four and a half years, and was named Mexico’s 2014 Play of the Year. Other prominent productions include The Property Known as Garland, written specifically for Adrienne Barbeau, which set house records during its run and subsequently toured. Do Not Disturb, directed by Olympia Dukakis, further highlighted their range in character-driven comedy. Additional notable plays in their catalog are Bathroom Humor and Confessions of a Dirty Blonde. Their final collaboration was the musical The Boomer Boys Musical. Milmore's involvement extended beyond writing to acting in several of their Off-Broadway stagings, including Silent Laughter, Drop Dead!, and You've Got Hate Mail.

Television career

Writing and producing credits

Jane Milmore began her television writing career as a writer on the CBS sitcom Newhart. She formed a long-term creative partnership with Billy Van Zandt, with whom she collaborated extensively as a writer and producer on multiple series. Their joint television credits include writing and producing work on the sitcoms Anything But Love, Nurses, Martin, The Wayans Bros., The Hughleys, Yes, Dear, and Center of the Universe. Milmore co-created the sitcom Daddy Dearest, starring Don Rickles and Richard Lewis. She also served as a producer on the 1990 CBS special I Love Lucy: The Very First Show, earning a shared Primetime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Informational Special. As a showrunner, Milmore oversaw more than 300 hours of television comedy and developed projects for talents including Brooke Shields, Don Rickles, Olympia Dukakis, and the Wayans Bros. She wrote and produced material featuring performers such as Bob Newhart, D.L. Hughley, Jamie Lee Curtis, Richard Lewis, John Goodman, Andrew Dice Clay, and Martin Lawrence.

Acting appearances

Jane Milmore began her career as an actress, appearing in episodes of CHiPs and California Fever before gaining further experience through national television commercials. She went on to appear in the ABC sitcom Anything But Love alongside Jamie Lee Curtis and Richard Lewis, as well as the series Sydney. Milmore guest-starred on various sitcoms, including Bless This House, Newhart, Martin, The Hughleys, and The Wayans Bros. She also had roles in the television movies If Things Were Different, Desperate Lives, and A Cry for Love. In feature films, she co-starred in A Wake in Providence (1999).

Awards and recognition

Personal life

Marriage and residences

Jane Milmore married television producer Richard Vaczy on October 24, 2004. The marriage ended in divorce in 2009. During their marriage, Milmore resided in Beverly Hills, California, and Rumson, New Jersey. She maintained a long-term creative partnership with Billy Van Zandt that spanned 46 years until her death, though they were not married.

Death

Illness and passing

Jane Milmore died on February 4, 2020, in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 64 after a 15-month battle with pancreatic cancer. Her death ended a 46-year writing partnership with Billy Van Zandt.
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