Steve White is a film producer. He was a network executive at NBC, where responsible for some of the highest-rated TV films of the 1980s. Among them were An Early Frost, which tackled AIDS; The Burning Bed, which exposed spousal abuse; and Adam, a film about missing children. He left NBC's movie and miniseries department to run New World Pictures and later formed his own production company, Steve White Entertainment, in 1988 and went on to produce more than 30 TV movies. In 1997, White formed Singer/White Entertainment with his wife, producer Sheri Singer. The two produced 10 TV movies during the past two seasons. He then returned to NBC in 2000.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| |
rdfs:comment
| - Steve White is a film producer. He was a network executive at NBC, where responsible for some of the highest-rated TV films of the 1980s. Among them were An Early Frost, which tackled AIDS; The Burning Bed, which exposed spousal abuse; and Adam, a film about missing children. He left NBC's movie and miniseries department to run New World Pictures and later formed his own production company, Steve White Entertainment, in 1988 and went on to produce more than 30 TV movies. In 1997, White formed Singer/White Entertainment with his wife, producer Sheri Singer. The two produced 10 TV movies during the past two seasons. He then returned to NBC in 2000.
|
sameAs
| |
dcterms:subject
| |
abstract
| - Steve White is a film producer. He was a network executive at NBC, where responsible for some of the highest-rated TV films of the 1980s. Among them were An Early Frost, which tackled AIDS; The Burning Bed, which exposed spousal abuse; and Adam, a film about missing children. He left NBC's movie and miniseries department to run New World Pictures and later formed his own production company, Steve White Entertainment, in 1988 and went on to produce more than 30 TV movies. In 1997, White formed Singer/White Entertainment with his wife, producer Sheri Singer. The two produced 10 TV movies during the past two seasons. He then returned to NBC in 2000.
|