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George Kirgo (born George Blumenthal; March 26, 1926 – August 22, 2004) was an American screenwriter, author and humorist.

Early lifeEdit

Kirgo was born George Blumenthal in Hartford, Connecticut, the middle child of three born to Russian immigrants Isadore and Anna Blumenthal.<ref>George Blumenthal in household of Isadore Blumenthal, "United States Census, 1930". FamilySearch. Retrieved 2014-02-08</ref> While attending Hartford Public High School,<ref name=EV/> he worked as a movie usher and as a reporter for The Hartford Times;<ref name=NSLF>"Nothing Succeeds Like Failure, Kirgo Claims". The Binghamton Press, February 10, 1962; retrieved February 5, 2014.</ref> graduating in 1943, he was dubbed "the Orson Welles of HPHS" by his high school yearbook.<ref name=EV/>

In April 1944, while attending Wesleyan University, Blumenthal enlisted in the U.S. Army Reserve,<ref>George Blumenthal, "United States World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946". FamilySearch. Retrieved 2014-02-16.</ref> eventually serving in the USAAF<ref name=LATobit/> during the final few months of World War II, in the South Pacific and Japan.<ref name=NSLF/> It was sometime after his return, but before his brief emergence in the early 1950s as a small book seller and publisher, that Blumenthal became George Kirgo,<ref name=WC>Search results for "Kirgo Books". WorldCat. Retrieved 2014-02-10.</ref><ref name=UNM>"Register of the Witter Bynner Letters to George Kirgo, 1949–1953"</ref><ref>Olson, Charles (1985). "Notes". Charles Olson & Robert Creeley: The Complete Correspondence, Volume 6. Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press. p. 337. Template:ISBN.</ref> officially adopting his erstwhile nickname.<ref name=EV/>

CareerEdit

A screenwriter since 1954, Kirgo's many credits encompass a wide variety of TV series, including Kraft Suspense Theatre, The New People, Run for Your Life, Room 222, Mary Tyler Moore, My Mother the Car, and The Feather and Father Gang. He scripted or co-scripted feature films such as Red Line 7000, Spinout, Don't Make Waves, and Voices as well as TV movies such as Get Christie Love!, The Man in the Santa Claus Suit, and the American Playhouse production My Palikari. He was a producer for the short-lived 1978 situation comedy Another Day.

Kirgo also appeared onscreen on occasion, primarily in the early 1960s, with a flurry of talk and game show appearances between 1959 and 1964. The first of these came shortly after the publication of his first book, the comic novel Hercules, the Big Greek Story. Some glowing notices notwithstanding,<ref>Stone, Leonard W. "Subtle Satire". The Hartford Courant. June 15, 1958. "Funny, funny, funny! [...] Kirgo tells his story with the spice of a Balzac and the zany atmosphere that the best comedians in Hollywood would find difficult to reproduce. Kirgo's is a subtle type of humor for the most part. Yet more often than not, he hits you smack on the funny bone and you find yourself laughing aloud." Retrieved 2014-02-06. </ref><ref>Hirsch, Robert R.. "The Marxman Hits Humor Bull's-eye". The Los Angeles Times. July 13, 1958. "Any resemblance between this novel and what goes on in Hollywood is purely the figment of a press agent's imagination but it is genuinely funny in the Rabelaisian tradition." Retrieved 2014-02-06 </ref><ref>Geller, Leon "Something Personal: 'The Big Greek Story'". The Sydney Morning Herald. October 18, 1958. Retrieved 2014-02-06.</ref> not much notice was paid; nonetheless, the book impressed Tonight Show host Jack Paar sufficiently to secure Kirgo a guest spot;<ref group="lower-alpha">Well before Paar's revelation, an equally notable head had been turned. In the summer of 1958, theatrical producer David Merrick discerned in Kirgo's under-exposed Hollywood satire the seeds of a hit Broadway musical. News reports notwithstanding, nothing seems to have come of these plans.<ref>Walker, Danton. "Broadway". The Reading Eagle. October 16, 1958. "David Merrick scheduling George Kirgo's "Hercules – The Big Greek Story" for a Broadway musical." Retrieved 2014-02-05.</ref> </ref> the ensuing appearance sufficed to earn the fledgling novelist several such invitations over the next two seasons.<ref name=LATobit/><ref name=NSLF/> During this period, Kirgo published his second book, How to Write Ten Different Best Sellers Now In Your Spare Time and Become the First Author on Your Block Unless There's an Author Already Living on Your Block in Which Case You'll Become the Second Author on Your Block and That's OK, too, and Other Stories. similarly satirical in nature, though this time non-fiction.<ref name=NSLF/> On January 2, 1962, Kirgo made his daytime TV debut as one of the regular panelists, with Dennis James, on Monty Hall's game show Your First Impression.<ref>Danzig, Fred. "Emotional Striptease Popular, Writer Reports". The Reading Eagle. January 3, 1962. Retrieved 2014-02-05.</ref><ref>Connolly, Mike. "Mike Connolly in Hollywood". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. April 7, 1962. Retrieved 2014-02-04.</ref>

By mid-1964, the show was cancelled, but writing assignments, for both big screen and small, quickly filled the void. From that point on, for more than two decades, Kirgo's screen appearances were confined to bit roles in a handful of TV shows and one feature film, The Best Man, a political drama scripted by Gore Vidal, in which Kirgo's character interacts, albeit briefly, with the president of the United States, portrayed by Henry Fonda.<ref group="lower-alpha">At least in the case of The Best Man, Kirgo appears to have improvised his own dialogue.<ref name=PK>Kael, Pauline (1982, 1984, 1991). "The Best Man (1964)". 5001 Nights at the Movies. New York: Henry Holt & Company. p. 65. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>Email correspondence with Julie Kirgo. Retrieved 2014-02-04. "[W]hile I'd love to award my Dad a truckload of posthumous credits, in all honesty, I can't confirm any of these...except for THE BEST MAN, where his ad-libbed lines really can't be considered "writing"--and believe me, he'd say so himself!"</ref> </ref> It would be the early 1980s before Kirgo's writing workload lessened, and it was not until 1987 that he was briefly resurrected as an on-air personality, the TV/movie critic for The Morning Program, CBS's ill-fated alternative to ABC's Good Morning America and NBC's Today.<ref>"CBS Unveils 'Morning' Plans". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 17, 1986. Retrieved 2014-02-04.</ref><ref>Champlin, Charles. "'Morning' at CBS: Hold the Toasts". The Los Angeles Times. February 5, 1987. Retrieved 2014-02-05.</ref>

From 1987 to 1991, Kirgo was president of the Writers Guild of America, West, most notably during the contentious 150-day-long strike over compensation from home video sales, which took place between March and August 1988.<ref>Horn, John. "Striking Writers Reach Agreement". The Gettysburg Times. August 4, 1988. Retrieved 2014-02-04.</ref> He also served as vice president of the Writers Guild Foundation between 1995 and 2001.<ref name=IFO>Royal, Susan. "Writers Guild Hands Out Honors". Indie Film Online. 2001. Retrieved 2014-02-09.</ref> In addition, Kirgo helped script the WGAW's Annual Awards show from 1979 through 1998, and from 1991 through 2001, he produced it.<ref name=WGAWobit>Scott, Gabriel. "WGAW News & Events: George Kirgo Dies" Template:Webarchive. WGAW. August 23, 2004. Retrieved 2014-02-04.</ref>

In 1988, Kirgo received PEN Center USA's president's award,<ref>"PEN Will Honor 10 Writers at Banquet Scheduled Tonight". The Los Angeles Times. September 30, 1998. Retrieved 2014-02-09.</ref> and, in 2001, the WGAW's Morgan Cox Award, for his years of service to the Guild.<ref>"Previous Morgan Cox Award Recipients" Template:Webarchive. WGA. Retrieved 2014-02-09.</ref> Kirgo was also a founding member of the National Film Preservation Board of the Library of Congress.<ref name=VarietyObit>McNary, Dave. "Wx-WGA prexy Kirgo dies; Guild mainstay a screenwriter, TV scribe since '54". Variety. August 22, 2004. Retrieved 2014-02-04.</ref>

DeathEdit

In 2004, following a long illness, Kirgo died at age 78, having lost his wife of 38 years (and mother of his three children), Terry Newell, nearly two decades earlier. He was survived by his second wife, Angela Wales, then director of the Writers Guild Foundation (previously executive director of the Australian Writers Guild), and three children from his first marriage – screenwriters/producers Dinah Kirgo and Julie Kirgo, and musician-songwriter Nick Kirgo.<ref name=VarietyObit/> In addition, Kirgo left behind stepson Alec Perrin, his sister Rita Lapp, four grandchildren,<ref name=LATobit/> niece Tyne Daly, and nephew Tim Daly.<ref name=IFO/>

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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Further readingEdit

External linksEdit

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