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Aaron Spelling has a stroke / Dies at 83

Yes unfortunatly Aaron Spelling has just passed away.

TV producer Aaron Spelling dies at 83


Saturday Jun 24 14:21 AEST
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AP - Aaron Spelling, a onetime movie bit player who turned to television production to create a massive number of hit series from the vintage Charlie's Angels, Dynasty, Love Boat and Fantasy Island to Beverly Hills 90210 and Melrose Place, has died, his publicist said. He was 83.
Spelling died on Friday at his mansion near Beverly Hills after suffering a stroke on June 18, according to publicist Kevin Sasaki.
Spelling's other hit series included Burke's Law, The Mod Squad, Starsky and Hutch, TJ Hooker, Matt Houston, Hart to Hart and Hotel.

He kept his hand in 21st-century TV with series including 7th Heaven and Summerland.
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He also produced more than 140 television movies. Among the most notable: Death Sentence (1974), Nick Nolte's first starring role; The Boy in the Plastic Bubble (1976), John Travolta's first dramatic role, as a boy born without immunities whose life is spent in isolation; The Best Little Girl in the World (1981), which starred Jennifer Jason Leigh as a teenage anorexic.

During the 1970s and 1980s, Spelling provided series and movies exclusively for ABC and is credited for the network's rise to major status. Jokesters referred to it as The Aaron Broadcasting Company.
Success was not without its thorns. TV critics denounced Spelling for fostering fluff and nighttime soap operas. He called his shows "mind candy"; critics referred to them as "mindless candy." Charlie's Angels ushered in a genre known as "jiggle TV" for its gratuitous focus on the female form.

"The knocks by the critics bother you," he admitted in a 1986 interview with The Associated Press.
"But you have a choice of proving yourself to 300 critics or 30 million fans. You have to make a choice. I think you're also categorised by the critics. If you do something good they almost don't want to like it."
He liked to cite some of his more creditable achievements, like Family (1976-80), a drama about a middle-class family, and The Best Little Girl in the World.

Among his prestige films for TV: Day One (1988), about an atomic blast in middle America; And the Band Played On (1992), based on Randy Shilts' book about the AIDS crisis.
Spelling had arrived in Hollywood virtually penniless in the early 1950s. By the 1980s, Forbes magazine estimated his wealth at $US300 million ($A409 million). He enjoyed his status, working in a Hollywood office larger than those of golden-era moguls ("I'm slightly claustrophobic," he explained.) He gifted his second wife, Candy, with a 40-carat diamond ring.

The Spellings' most publicised extravagance was their 5,085-square-metre French chateau in Holmby Hills.
The couple bought the former Bing Crosby estate for $US10 million ($A13.65 million). It was levelled to the ground, along with two other houses. Construction cost was estimated at $US12 million ($A16.38 million).
The two-story house reached a height of 15 metres. Among the features: an entire floor for closets, a one-lane bowling alley, plus the usual elements for the Hollywood rich - pool, tennis court, gym, screening room. Built on rollers, it easily survived the 1994 Northridge earthquake.
The mansion dwarfed nearby estates, and the neighbours were furious. One woman won an injunction during construction, calling the place "Look-at-me-I'm-rich architecture."

Born on April 22, 1923, Spelling grew up in a small frame house on Browder Street in Dallas "on the wrong side of the tracks," he wrote in his 1996 autobiography. He was the fourth son of immigrant Jews, his father from Poland, mother from Russia. The father's name, Spurling, was simplified to Spelling by an Ellis Island official.
Spelling enlisted in the Army Air Corps after graduating from high school in 1942.
"I grew up thinking 'Jew boy' was one word," the producer wrote in his memoir, "Aaron Spelling: A Prime-Time Life." He was considered strange by his Dallas schoolmates because his parents spoke Yiddish. He was subjected to anti-Semitic taunts and beatings on his way home from school.
At 8, the boy suffered what he termed a nervous breakdown, and he spent a year in bed. He later considered that period the birth of his creative urge. He fell in love with great storytellers, especially O. Henry. Of his early TV series he said, "They are all O. Henry short stories."

"I still have nightmares about being in a $6,000 house in Dallas, Texas," he remarked in a 1996 AP interview. "Wall-to-wall people, one bathroom. I was the one to go to the local bakery a block away on Saturday to get the day-old stuff."
After combat and organising entertainment in Europe during the war, Spelling returned to Texas and enrolled at Southern Methodist University, where he wrote and directed plays. He continued working in local theatrics after graduating.

Finding no work in New York, Spelling moved to Los Angeles, where he staged plays and acted in more than 40 TV shows and 12 movies. His skinny frame suited him for the role of a ragged beggar in the MGM musical Kismet. He worked for three weeks, repeating his one line: "Alms for the love of Allah."
The Kismet experience resulted in two decisions: he abandoned acting for the typewriter; he married a young actress he had been courting, Carolyn Jones. She became well-known, especially as Morticia in The Addams Family series. They divorced after 13 years, and she died of cancer in 1983.

Spelling's friendship with such actor-producers as Dick Powell, Jack Webb and Alan Ladd led to his rapid rise as a prolific writer and later producer of TV series. In 1960, Powell, head of Four Star Productions, hired him to produce shows for Powell himself, his wife June Allyson and Lloyd Bridges. Burke's Law, with Gene Barry as a millionaire detective, became the first hit series Spelling created.

After Powell's death, Spelling teamed with Danny Thomas in a production company, scoring a huge success with The Mod Squad, about a trio of youthful undercover cops. In 1969, Spelling began an exclusive contract with ABC, helping the network to rise from a low third place to the top of the network ratings. Former ABC programming chief Leonard Goldberg joined him as partner in 1972.
After ABC cancelled Dynasty in 1989 and his contract with the network had ended, Spelling found himself without a show on the air for the first time since 1960.

"I was so depressed, I would have quit, but I like TV too much," Spelling wrote in his memoir. Besides, his company had started issuing stock in 1986, and he had an obligation to his investors. After a year's respite, he returned with Beverly Hills 90210, which helped launch the fledgling Fox Network into the bigtime. Melrose Place gave Fox another hit.
Throughout his career, Spelling maintained the same image: the skinny frame, slightly hawkish face. He usually posed with a pipe in his mouth, a custom he adopted early after seeing stars with pipes in fan magazine photos.

Spelling and his second wife, Candy, had two children, Tori (for Victoria), who became a star on the two Fox serials ("Now I'm known as Tori Spelling's father," he said in mock lament), and Randy, who appeared in the short-lived Malibu Shores.
Spelling set a record of producing more than 3,000 TV shows. Besides the TV movies, he produced 10 theatrical films including California Split, Mr Mom 'night, Mother, Loose Cannons and Soapdish.

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©AAP 2006

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=108490
 
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When I read that earlier today my jaw just dropped (People reports that he passed away around 6:30 p.m. Pacific time) -- he was seriously like an immortal tour de force in the television industry. He will be greatly missed :cry:

I won't lie, when I first came to the US, I watched 90210 and Melrose Place weekly to help my English skills (Yes, at 9 years old I was watching TV-14 shows without adult supervision...oops). Of course, both series taught me some very strange things about American behavior and relational issues, but nonetheless, his shows helped me break into the culture and understand the insanity that is human nature. So in a very indirect manner, I wouldn't be where I am today if it wasn't for him. And boy, 90210 was definitely addictive. I still catch a rerun every once in a while.

What a great loss this is. God rest his soul.

P.S. Just an FYI, Randi was also a regular on "Sunset Beach."
 
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That's so sad. It's amazing how many great tv shows he helped to create.
 
I read that his wife is cheating on him and Tori is not on good terms with her.

I wonder how his estate is going to be divided.
 
This is so sad. I loved Charlie's Angels.

I never thought about his money, I wonder how rich he is?
 
Rest in Peace, Mr. Spelling. And thank you for Melrose Place - it gave me a lot of mindless enjoyment during a time in my life when I really needed something to distract me. And my fiance adored Dynasty.

Thank you for the AP bio, tastes_like_chic - I didn't know most of that. I always get my interested piqued by people who've had their names "simplified" by Ellis Island officials, since it happened in my family (Stasiuk to Stasky? Grrr.)

Faith Akiyama - Thanks for the reminder of Randi on Sunset Beach! I should thank Mr. Spelling for that as well, I caught it from the beginning and think I saw every episode (thank you VCR ^_^

The beginning of this thread says Tori was travelling home to see him when he had the stroke, but as of this morning Lainey's Gossip has her still in Toronto strolling around with her husband - she never went home :ninja: I don't have a very good relationship with my father, and he's done some terrible things, but if he had a stroke, I'd be there. I can't imagine what she's thinking, if it's true.
 
I was totally amazed when I read it this morning. I know the guy is pretty old but he seemed to be in great shape, he was everywhere.

Total shock, I seriously considered Aaron to be immortal :(

Anyway, I feel bad for his kids, especially Tori. She really seemed to adore her father.

Sidenote: I have a feeling that if Aaron doesn't have a rock-hard will, all hell might break loose over his money/house.
 
aw. best wishes to his family. i can't even imagine how much of a wreck i would be if my dad passed away.:cry:.

maybe this means they will have a 90210 marathon in his honor? i would definitely watch it.
 
God 90210. That changed a generation. And I LOVED Sunset Beach. It was absolutely hysterical.
 
SiennaInLondon said:
God 90210. That changed a generation. And I LOVED Sunset Beach. It was absolutely hysterical.

Sunset Beach was awesome!

Anyway, I was so sad when I found this out. Even though I knew he was old, Aaron Spelling is one of those famous people who you think will always be around...like Dick Clark. He made such a mark on television history, and I just hope that he had all of his assets together, so there is not an awful battle for his money. I wonder if Tori will write this into the next season of "So Notorious"?
 
Not to sound too offbeat...
but his is going to be one of the biggest funerals ever in the entertainment industry...provided it's not just for family.

RIP, Sir.
 

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