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		Emmy-winning TV producer-writer Norman Lear dies at age 101
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		 [December 07, 2023] 
		By Bill Trott 
 (Reuters) -Producer-writer Norman Lear, whose groundbreaking hit 
		comedies such as "All in the Family" and "Maude" addressed race, 
		abortion and other social issues rarely seen before on U.S. television, 
		died on Tuesday, at the age of 101, his family said.
 
 Lear, one of the most influential people in television, died at his Los 
		Angeles home of natural causes, "surrounded by his family as we told 
		stories and sang songs until the very end," the family said on Facebook 
		on Wednesday.
 
 Lear, who won six Emmy Awards for his work in television, was known for 
		his campaigning for liberal causes, including voting rights, and worked 
		well into his 90s.
 
 In addition to "All in the Family" and "Maude," Lear dominated American 
		TV screens in the 1970s and '80s with the situation comedies "Sanford 
		and Son," "The Jeffersons," and the soap-opera spoof "Mary Hartman, Mary 
		Hartman." At one point in the 1970s, Lear had eight shows on the air 
		with an estimated 120 million viewers, Time magazine said.
 
 By drawing material from social themes of the time, Lear's shows made 
		network executives nervous because they had depth and an air of 
		controversy.
 
 "For him to say that he didn't have an impact on not only television but 
		society is ... a little too humble," said Rob Reiner, who had a 
		co-starring role on "All in the Family" before becoming a film director.
 
 "I loved Norman Lear with all my heart," Reiner said on the X social 
		media platform after news of his death. "He was my second father."
 
		
		 
		President Joe Biden hailed Lear as a "transformational force in American 
		culture."
 "Norman loved America and told our stories with heart, facing the good, 
		the bad, and the truth of who we are as a nation striving to form a more 
		perfect union," he said in a statement.
 
 Lear and production partner Bud Yorkin put "All in the Family" on the 
		air in January 1971, and the show would go on to win four Emmys for best 
		comedy in its nine seasons. It was based on a British show, "Til Death 
		Do Us Part," and gave U.S. television one of its most memorable and 
		controversial characters: Archie Bunker.
 
 Veteran actor Carroll O'Connor portrayed Archie as a crude, loud, 
		blue-collar New Yorker who spouted racist, homophobic and antisemitic 
		comments. He was cast against a scatterbrained wife he called "Dingbat," 
		a liberal daughter and an even more liberal son-in-law he referred to as 
		"Meathead," played by Reiner.
 
 "All in the Family" was the top-rated show on U.S. television for five 
		straight years, according to CBS, and TV Guide ranked it fourth on its 
		list of television's all-time greatest shows.
 
 Born on July 27, 1922 in New Haven, Connecticut, Norman Milton Lear's 
		most lasting creation was partly based on fact. Many of the harsh words 
		that came out of Archie's mouth had first been spoken by Lear's own 
		father, Herman Lear, who went to prison for selling fake bonds, and 
		frequently told his wife to "stifle" herself and called his son "the 
		laziest white kid I ever saw."
 
 "I grew up in a family that lived at the top of its lungs and the ends 
		of its nerves," Lear told Esquire magazine.
 
 Some critics said the Archie Bunker character put a laughing face on 
		bigotry, but Lear said it only pointed to the complexity of humanity.
 
 A year after "All in the Family" started, Lear aired "Maude," a spin-off 
		that starred Bea Arthur as Archie's acerbic sister-in-law and political 
		opposite.
 
		
		 
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            Television producer Norman Lear poses for a portrait in New York, 
			U.S., October 12, 2016. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo 
            
			 As with Bunker, the character was 
			like none previously seen on American television. Maude was on her 
			fourth husband, protested marijuana laws and had an abortion before 
			the U.S. Supreme Court legalized the procedure nationwide. Her 
			husband battled alcoholism, had two nervous breakdowns and attempted 
			suicide.
 Black characters in U.S. television in the '70s were mostly limited 
			to minor roles until Lear made them the focus of some of his shows.
 
 "Good Times" centered on a working-class Black family living in a 
			public housing project in Chicago. Many of the show's episodes deal 
			with the family's efforts to pull their way out of the circumstances 
			through hard work and study.
 
 "The Jeffersons," another "All in the Family" spin-off, featured an 
			upwardly mobile Black couple who moved to Manhattan's upscale Upper 
			East Side, where most of their neighbors were white. The show's lead 
			character George was brash, ambitious and unapologetic.
 
 Lear's other hits included "Sanford and Son," a sitcom about a Black 
			junkyard owner in a Los Angeles neighborhood.
 
 While Lear was celebrated for his inclusion, some critics also said 
			many of his depictions of Black characters tended to perpetuate 
			stereotypes.
 
 Lear produced a string of other hit shows, including "Diff'rent 
			Strokes," "Fernwood 2 Night," and the "All in the Family" spin-off 
			"Archie Bunker's Place." But Lear also had flops such as "All That 
			Glitters," "Sunday Dinner" and another "All in the Family" spin-off, 
			"Gloria."
 
 Lear dropped out of college during World War Two to join the Army 
			and flew 52 combat missions in B-17 bombers. He went to Los Angeles 
			in 1950 with the intention of being a publicist but began writing 
			for TV stars such as Danny Thomas, Jerry Lewis, Dean Martin and Andy 
			Williams.
 
 Lear shifted focus in 1981 and founded the liberal activist group 
			People for the American Way to boost voting rights and fight 
			right-wing extremism. He also established the Norman Lear Center at 
			the University of Southern California's Annenberg School of 
			Communication.
 
 In 2001, he and a partner purchased an original copy of the American 
			Declaration of Independence and sent it on a three-year tour of U.S. 
			schools, libraries and events.
 
			 He rebooted his 1970s TV series "One Day at a Time" to focus on a 
			Cuban American family in 2017, and three years later he earned his 
			sixth Emmy for a live special broadcast of "All in the Family" and 
			"Good Times."
 In February 2021, Lear received the Carol Burnett Award, a lifetime 
			achievement award, at the Golden Globe Awards ceremony, for his 
			contributions to television.
 
 Lear, who was convinced that laughter had lengthened his own life, 
			used humor to enrich the lives of others, his online obituary said.
 
 “I’ve never been in a situation in my life, however tragic, where I 
			didn’t see comedy,” Lear said in the 2016 documentary, "Norman Lear: 
			Just Another Version of You."
 
 Lear is survived by his third wife, Lyn, and his six children. A 
			private service for his immediate family will be held.
 
 (Writing and reporting by Bill Trott; Additional reporting by Susan 
			Heavey and Costas Pitas; Editing by Diane Craft, Jonathan Oatis and 
			David Gregorio)
 
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