Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Myles Wilder
View on WikipediaThis article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (February 2021) |
Myles Wilder (January 28, 1933 – April 20, 2010) was an American television comedy writer and producer.[1]
Key Information
Wilder attended and graduated from UCLA's Theater Arts Department. During his senior year, he and two of his friends, Mitch Rose and Wayne Thoms, produced a documentary entitled "The Sports Car" that depicted the history of and interest in sports cars. He started writing in Hollywood in 1952 with Rebound. He wrote seven screenplays for film, with six of them being directed by his father W. Lee Wilder (1904–1982), the older brother of famous director Billy Wilder. Myles would write for a variety of shows over the next two decades, such as McHale's Navy, Korg: 70,000 B.C., and The Dukes of Hazzard. He also served as a script consultant on the television series Karen, producer of Hazzard and McDuff, the Talking Dog, and executive story consultant on programs like Hazzard, Hong Kong Phooey, and Devlin
Filmography
[edit]Films written
- Phantom from Space (1953)
- Killers from Space (1954)
- The Snow Creature (1954)
- Fright (1956)
- Manfish (1956)
- Seven Guns to Mesa (1958)
- Spy in the Sky! (1958)
Television written
- Rebound (1952)
- Wagon Train (1960, 1961, 1963)
- Bluebeard's Ten Honeymoons (1960)
- Bonanza (1960)
- My Three Sons (1961, 1967)
- Bachelor Father (1961-1962)
- The Aquanauts (1961)
- The Real McCoys (1961)
- McHale's Navy (1963-1966)
- I'm Dickens, He's Fenster (1963)
- Karen (1964-1965)
- Broadside (1964-1965)
- Hank (1965)
- The Patty Duke Show (1965-1966)
- Tammy (1965)
- Vacation Playhouse (1965)
- Laredo (1966)
- Mona McCluskey (1966)
- Run, Buddy, Run (1966)
- The 38th Annual Academy Awards (1966)
- Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. (1967-1968)
- Get Smart (1967-1968)
- Mr. Terrific (1967)
- The Magical World of Disney (1969)
- The Doris Day Show (1969, 1972-1973)
- The Flying Nun (1969)
- The Ghost & Mrs. Muir (1969)
- The Tim Conway Comedy Hour (1970)
- The Brady Bunch (1970, 1972-1973)
- Here's Lucy (1970)
- The Tim Conway Show (1970)
- The Good Life (1971)
- The Paul Lynde Show (1972-1973)
- The Roman Holidays (1972)
- Wait Till Your Father Gets Home (1972)
- Butch Cassidy (1973)
- Inch High, Private Eye (1973)
- The Addams Family (1973)
- Temperatures Rising (1973)
- Korg: 70,000 B.C. (1974; creative consultant)
- Hong Kong Phooey (1974)
- Devlin (1974)
- Welcome Back, Kotter (1975, 1977)
- When Things Were Rotten (1975)
- McDuff, the Talking Dog (1976, also creator)
- Good Heavens (1976)
- The San Pedro Beach Bums (1977)
- C.P.O. Sharkey (1978)
- Diff'rent Strokes (1978)
- The Dukes of Hazzard (1979-1985)
References
[edit]- ^ Barnes, Mike (April 26, 2010). "TV comedy writer Myles Wilder dies". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
External links
[edit]Myles Wilder
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Family background
Myles Wilder was born on January 28, 1933, in New York City, New York.[1][3] He was the only child of W. Lee Wilder, an Austrian-born American film director and producer known for his low-budget B-movies during the 1940s and 1950s, such as Killers from Space (1954) and The Big Bluff (1955), and his wife Edna Wilder.[5][6][3] W. Lee Wilder, born Wilhelm Wilder in 1904, had entered the film industry in the 1940s, initially producing musical shorts before directing feature films characterized by modest production values and genres like film noir and science fiction.[7] Wilder was also the nephew of the acclaimed filmmaker Billy Wilder, his father's younger brother, who became one of Hollywood's most celebrated writer-directors, winning six Academy Awards for films including Sunset Boulevard (1950) and Some Like It Hot (1959).[6][8] Wilder's early years were spent in Great Neck, Long Island, until the age of eight, when his family relocated to Beverly Hills, California, in 1941 to support his father's burgeoning career in the motion picture industry.[3] This move immersed him in a creative household deeply connected to Hollywood, where discussions of screenwriting, production, and storytelling were commonplace due to his father's directorial work and his uncle's rising prominence.[6][7] Growing up surrounded by filmmakers and industry professionals fostered Wilder's early interest in entertainment, providing him with firsthand exposure to the collaborative and imaginative aspects of film and television creation.[6]Education
Myles Wilder attended Beverly Hills High School, graduating in 1951, before enrolling at Occidental College. He and his future wife, Barbara Pryor, transferred to the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in their junior year.[3] Wilder graduated from UCLA in 1955 with a Bachelor of Arts degree from the renowned Theater Arts program. This curriculum equipped him with essential skills in scriptwriting, directing, and production techniques, fostering his early interest in storytelling for film and radio. During his university years, he began honing these abilities by selling scripts to the radio series The Whistler, marking the onset of his professional writing pursuits.[3] In his senior year at UCLA, Wilder gained hands-on filmmaking experience by co-producing the documentary The Sports Car alongside classmates Mitch Rose and Wayne Thoms. The short film explored the history and growing popularity of sports cars in mid-20th-century America, serving as his first significant project in visual storytelling and production.[9] These academic and extracurricular endeavors at UCLA provided a seamless bridge to professional opportunities in Hollywood, where Wilder's training in narrative structure and technical execution proved instrumental in his entry into the entertainment industry shortly after graduation. His family's connections to the film world, including his relation to director Billy Wilder, further complemented this educational foundation without overshadowing his self-developed expertise.[3]Career
Early film work
Myles Wilder entered Hollywood in 1952 as a writer for the television anthology series Rebound, contributing the story for the episode "The Henchman."[10] This initial foray marked the beginning of his professional screenwriting career. Wilder's early film work primarily consisted of seven writing credits in the 1950s, with six directed by his father, W. Lee Wilder, a B-movie producer and director. These collaborations began with the original story for Phantom from Space (1953), a low-budget science fiction film about an invisible alien entity terrorizing Los Angeles, co-written with William Raynor. He followed with the screenplay for Killers from Space (1954), featuring alien invaders using mind control on Earth scientists, starring Peter Graves. That same year, Wilder penned the screenplay for The Snow Creature (1954), which depicted a scientific expedition capturing a Yeti in the Himalayas and transporting it to the U.S., where it escapes. In 1956, he wrote the screenplay and story for Fright, a psychological thriller involving reincarnation and murder.[11] Also in 1956, Wilder provided the story for Manfish, an adventure film inspired by Edgar Allan Poe's tales, centering on treasure hunters and underwater peril.[12] His final 1950s film credit with his father was the screenplay for Spy in the Sky! (1958), a spy thriller involving espionage and aerial surveillance.[13] The seventh film, Seven Guns to Mesa (1958), a Western about outlaws and revenge, was also directed by W. Lee Wilder with Wilder's screenplay. These projects were characteristic of low-budget genre filmmaking prevalent in the 1950s, often produced by Planet Filmways Inc. and distributed through major studios like RKO or United Artists, emphasizing science fiction elements such as alien invasions, monstrous creatures, and extraterrestrial threats amid Cold War anxieties.[8] Family connections with W. Lee Wilder facilitated these assignments, providing Wilder with early opportunities in an competitive industry and hands-on mentorship in script development and production.[14]Television writing
Myles Wilder transitioned to television writing in the late 1950s, beginning with adventure and Western series before establishing himself in comedy genres. His early TV credits included episodes for Bonanza and Wagon Train, where he co-wrote scripts emphasizing dramatic tension and character-driven narratives in frontier settings. For instance, in 1960, Wilder co-authored the Bonanza episode "The Blood Line," which explored family loyalty and inheritance conflicts. Similarly, he contributed to multiple Wagon Train installments in 1960 and 1961, such as "The Selena Hartnell Story" and "The Sam Elder Story," focusing on themes of migration and moral dilemmas during westward expansion.[15][16][17] By the 1960s, Wilder's work shifted toward light-hearted sitcoms and family-oriented comedies, often collaborating with writer William Raynor on humorous, action-infused stories that appealed to broad audiences. He penned multiple episodes for McHale's Navy, a naval comedy series, earning two Emmy Award nominations for outstanding writing in comedy in 1963 and 1964. His contributions to shows like The Patty Duke Show, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., and Get Smart highlighted his skill in crafting witty dialogue and situational humor, as seen in episodes such as "Ross Runs Away, But Not Far" for The Patty Duke Show in 1966. Wilder also wrote three episodes for The Brady Bunch between 1970 and 1973, including "What Goes Up..." and "A Room at the Top," which balanced family dynamics with comedic mishaps.[14][8][18][19][20] In the 1970s and 1980s, Wilder's television writing continued to emphasize family-friendly and adventure-comedy formats, with credits on series like Welcome Back, Kotter, Diff'rent Strokes, and The Dukes of Hazzard. For Welcome Back, Kotter, he wrote the 1975 episode "Classroom Marriage," blending schoolroom antics with relational humor. His extensive work on The Dukes of Hazzard spanned 34 episodes from 1979 to 1985, delivering high-energy chase scenes and small-town escapades. Later in his career, Wilder extended his comedic style to animated programming at Hanna-Barbera, serving as executive story consultant on Hong Kong Phooey (1974) and Devlin (1974), where he helped shape playful, adventure-driven plots for younger viewers. This evolution from live-action Westerns to animated fare underscored his versatility in producing engaging, light dramas and sitcoms across decades.[21][14]Producing and consulting roles
Myles Wilder served as producer for the long-running action-comedy series The Dukes of Hazzard from 1979 to 1985, where he oversaw episode development and emphasized the show's signature comedic elements amid its ensemble cast dynamics.[2][14] In this capacity, Wilder helped maintain narrative consistency across the series' high-stakes chases and humorous family interactions, contributing to its enduring popularity.[22] Earlier in his career, Wilder produced McDuff, the Talking Dog, a 1976 family adventure series featuring a voice-trained canine protagonist in lighthearted escapades.[23] His production work on the show focused on blending whimsical storytelling with accessible comedy suitable for young audiences. Wilder also functioned as script consultant for the short-lived sitcom Karen (1964–1965), offering guidance on story arcs to enhance the series' exploration of a young woman's independence in a professional world.[1] In animated television, Wilder took on a producing role for Korg: 70,000 B.C. (1974–1975), a Hanna-Barbera prehistoric adventure series, where he served as creative consultant to ensure comedic tone and consistent ensemble narratives in its survival-themed episodes.[1][22] He also developed projects for Walt Disney, including contributing to the script for Pete's Dragon (1977) in 1968, and oversaw additional animated series at Hanna-Barbera such as Inch High, Private Eye (1973) as story consultant. Beyond television, Wilder co-authored the 1988 medical thriller novel Freeze with William Raynor, which was optioned by Warner Bros.[24][8]Personal life
Marriage and family
Myles Wilder married Barbara "Bobbe" Pryor in 1956, shortly after her graduation from Occidental College, where the couple first met. Their marriage lasted 53 years, marked by mutual support during Wilder's early career transitions, including brief residences in Petersburg, Virginia, and London before settling in Brentwood, Los Angeles, to facilitate his entry into the Hollywood entertainment industry.[3] The couple had one daughter, Kimberly Annette. Public information on their immediate family remains limited, reflecting Wilder's preference for a private personal life centered around his professional commitments, though he cherished family time, including with his grandchildren Olivia Catherine Lee and Morgan Myles Lee. In 1994, following Kimberly's marriage to businessman Brynley Lee, Wilder and Bobbe retired to Temecula, California, where they managed an avocado grove and enjoyed a quieter lifestyle.[3][8][14]Death
Myles Wilder died on April 20, 2010, at the age of 77 in Temecula, California, from complications of diverticulitis.[8][14][2] His death was announced in trade publications shortly thereafter, with The Hollywood Reporter publishing an obituary on April 26, 2010, detailing his passing and noting his status as a nephew of filmmaker Billy Wilder.[8][3] Tributes in outlets such as Variety and the Television Academy emphasized Wilder's enduring impact on television comedy, praising his work on shows like McHale's Navy.[14][2]Notable works
Film credits
Myles Wilder's contributions to film were primarily as a writer in the science fiction and adventure genres during the 1950s.| Year | Title | Credit | Director |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1953 | Phantom from Space | Story (with William Raynor) | W. Lee Wilder |
| 1954 | Killers from Space | Story | W. Lee Wilder |
| 1954 | The Snow Creature | Screenplay | W. Lee Wilder |
| 1956 | Fright | Screenplay and story | W. Lee Wilder |
| 1956 | Manfish | Story (screenplay by Joel Murcott, based on stories by Edgar Allan Poe) | W. Lee Wilder |
| 1958 | Seven Guns to Mesa | Original story and screenplay (with Edward Dein) | Edward Dein |
