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・ Bob Sauvé
・ Bob Savage
・ Bob Saverine
・ Bob Sayers
・ Bob Scanlan
・ Bob Scarpitto
・ Bob Schacht
・ Bob Schaefer
・ Bob Schafer
・ Bob Schaffer
・ Bob Scheffing
・ Bob Scheifler
・ Bob Schepers
・ Bob Scherbarth
・ Bob Schieffer
Bob Schiller
・ Bob Schillerstrom
・ Bob Schloredt
・ Bob Schmetterer
・ Bob Schmidt
・ Bob Schmidt (American football)
・ Bob Schmidt (baseball)
・ Bob Schmidt (musician)
・ Bob Schmitz
・ Bob Schneider
・ Bob Schnelker
・ Bob Scholtz
・ Bob Schooley
・ Bob Schoolley-West
・ Bob Schoonbroodt


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Bob Schiller : ウィキペディア英語版
Bob Schiller
:''For the financial analyist and writer (born 1946), see Robert Shiller.''
Bob Schiller (born November 8, 1918) is an American screenwriter. He worked extensively with fellow producer/screenwriter Bob Weiskopf on numerous television shows in the United States, including ''I Love Lucy'' (1955–1957) and ''All in the Family'' (1977–1979) on the CBS network. For the latter series, he received an Emmy Award in 1978 as one of the writers of the episode "Cousin Liz".
Schiller, born in San Francisco, California, began writing for television in 1950. His credits include the 1955 CBS sitcom ''Professional Father'', starring Stephen Dunne as a child psychologist and Barbara Billingsley as his wife. That same year, he wrote for two competing series, NBC's ''The Jimmy Durante Show'' and CBS's ''It's Always Jan'', starring Janis Paige as a widowed single mother in New York City.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Wesley Hyatt, "Comedy Time" )〕 During 1954–1955, Schiller was one of the writers for the CBS sitcom ''That's My Boy'', starring Eddie Mayehoff and Gil Stratton. Schiller's producing credits include the CBS sitcoms ''The Good Guys'' and ''All's Fair''.
Schiller also penned radio scripts for such classic shows as ''Duffy's Tavern'', ''Abbott and Costello'', ''The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet'', ''The Mel Blanc Show'', ''Sweeney and March'', ''The Jimmy Durante Show'', and ''December Bride'', and then for TV stars such as Danny Thomas, Ed Wynn, Garry Moore, and Red Buttons.
==Creative partnership with Bob Weiskopf==
The creative partnership and friendship with Bob Weiskopf began in 1953. Weiskopf, also a comedy writer, had just relocated to Los Angeles from New York City. Schiller's first wife recommended a school to his Weiskopf's wife, and also mentioned that Schiller was looking for a partner. The two writers first collaborated on a radio script for the ''Our Miss Brooks'' show before delving into the new medium of network television. They wrote for popular 1950s shows such as ''Make Room for Daddy'', ''The Bob Cummings Show, ''I Love Lucy, the TV adaptation of the popular radio series ''My Favorite Husband'', ''The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour'', ''The Ann Sothern Show'' (which they co-created), and ''Pete and Gladys''.
Further success would continue into the 1960s and 1970s with such series as ''The Lucy Show'', ''The Red Skelton Show'', ''The Good Guys'' (where they were also co-producers), ''The Phyllis Diller Show'', ''The Carol Burnett Show'', ''The Flip Wilson Show'', ''Maude'' (which they also co-produced), ''All in the Family'' and its spinoff series, ''Archie Bunker's Place''. Schiller and Weiskopf were honored with two Emmy Awards, a pair of Peabody Awards, a Golden Globe, and the Writers’ Guild of America's Paddy Chayefsky Laurel Award for Television Achievement.〔("LucyLibrary Profile: Bob Schiller and Bob Weiskopf: ''I Love Lucy'' Writers," LucyLibrary.com article ), accessed July 7, 2013.〕

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