Karen Harris (writer)
Karen Harris is an American television writer for the ABC Daytime serial General Hospital.
Career
During the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike, she chose not to accept Financial Core status.
She wrote television pilots for Spelling Television and Universal Pictures (1979-1987), and worked at Sony Pictures Television, Lorimar Television (1988–1989) and Columbia Pictures (1989–1990; A Peaceable Kingdom). While at Universal, Harris was a Writer-Producer-Supervising Producer-Executive Producer on The Incredible Hulk.
- Simon & Simon
- Shannon
- Knight Rider
- Street Hawk
- The Human Factor
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents
- Scene of the Crime
- Island Sons
- Baby Brokers
- Creator/EP/co-writer pilot: Deadline: Madrid
- Satisfaction Guaranteed–Pilot
- American Beauty–Pilot
Reaction to Wolf's promotion: Karen Harris on her Facebook page: Oh, please. (lol) I have a new lease on life, Jami. But I walked the picket lines with a whole bunch of terrific writers. Garin Wolf quit the WGA so he could scab. This is his reward. I'm sad, because there are others there who are better writers and deserve it more.
WGA West
In September 2008, scribes elected eight new board members to the WGA West. Topping the list of winners were Army Wives writer Katherine Fugate, who received 647 votes. Also elected were John Bowman (629 votes), Howard Michael Gould (619 votes), David A. Goodman (552 votes), Karen Harris (544 votes), Mark Gunn (525 votes), Aaron Mendelsohn (498 votes) and Kathy Kiernan (463 votes). Bowman, Goodman, Gunn, Mendelsohn and Kiernan are incumbents. A total of 1,235 ballots were cast. Indie firm Pacific Election Services counted the votes.
Life in General
Life In General | |
---|---|
Created by | Karen Harris |
Directed by | Roy Steinberg |
Starring | JoBeth Williams, Brynn Thayer, Robert Desiderio, Arianne Zucker, Jordan Bridges, John Ingle, Rife Sibley, Lindze Letherman, Scott Clifton, Brian Rodda, Bruce Cervi |
Country of origin | United States |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Karen Harris |
Running time | 10 minutes per episode |
Release | |
Original network | Strike.TV |
Original release | October 28, 2008 |
External links | |
Website |
Life In General is a web series which debuted on October 28, 2008 on Strike.TV, an internet network created by Hollywood writers during the 2007-2008 Writers Guild of America (WGA) strike.[1] Life In General is a scripted show set behind-the-scenes at the second longest running soap opera on TV. The companion piece is Greenville General, the soap opera on which they all work.
In the first episode entitled "Out of Control", Courtney is missing, Rod is screwing Maddie, Rachel just found out that her husband cheated on her, and Raymond may have suffered a fatal heart attack. And that's just behind the scenes.
Positions held
All My Children (hired by Brian Frons & Megan McTavish)
- Script writer: February 4, 2004 – February 24, 2005
- Script writer: 1993–1996 (hired by Wendy Riche & Claire Labine); April 8, 2005–January 3, 2008; March 17, 2008 – March 2011
- Co-head writer: (with Robert Guza Jr.) 1996–1997
- Supervising producer 2002–2003
- Writer: two episodes
- Head writer: February–November 2000; June 2000 – November 2000 (with Barbara Bloom)
- Script writer: 2002–2003
- Associate head writer: December 2000–2001
- Co-head writer: 2000 (with Jonathan Estrin) PhillyMag
Life In General/Greenville General (web series/pilot (Strike.TV)
- Creator/head writer/Producer: October 28, 2008
- Writer: 1994–1996
- Co-executive producer/writer: 1989
- Writer: 1985
- Writer/story editor/producer: 1979–1983
Other TV series: Jack London's Tales of the South Seas; Largo Winch
Awards and nominations
- Nominations: (1995–1997, 2008; Best Writing; General Hospital)
- Wins: (1995; Best Writing; General Hospital)
Writers Guild of America Award
- WGA wins: (1995, 1996, 1998; Best Daytime Serial; General Hospital) (shared with writer team)[2]
- WGA nominations: (1995, 1996, 1997, 1998; Best Daytime Serial; General Hospital)
Preceded by Claire Labine |
Co-head writer of General Hospital (with Robert Guza Jr.: March–October 1996) (with Richard Culliton: October 1996–May 1997) March 1996–May 1997 |
Succeeded by Richard Culliton |
Preceded by Scott Hamner |
head writer of Port Charles (with Jonathon Estrin: January 2000–March 2000) (with Barbara Bloom: May 2000–November 2000) January 2000–November 2000 |
Succeeded by James Harmon Brown Barbara Esensten |
References
- ↑ "Strike.TV Launches Largest Web Network of Original Hollywood Shows" Hollywood Reporter, October 28, 2008, retrieved on November 1, 2008
- ↑ "Writers Guild of America official site". Archived from the original on 2012-05-25., retrieved on March 22, 2008
External links
- Karen Harris at the Internet Movie Database
- JohnAugust
- Newsweek
- Post-Gazette
- DeadLineHollywood
- LifeInGeneral