- Donald Bellisario
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Donald P. Bellisario
Bellisario at Leap Con, 1993Born Donald Paul Bellisario
August 8, 1935
Cokeburg, PennsylvaniaNationality American Alma mater Pennsylvania State University Occupation Television producer and Screenwriter Known for Magnum, P.I., Tales of the Gold Monkey, Airwolf, Quantum Leap, JAG, NCIS, Spouse Vivienne Bellisario (November 27, 1998 – present)
Deborah Pratt (June 30, 1984 – 1991; 2 children)
Lynn Halpern (October 24, 1979 – April 4, 1984; 1 child)
Margaret Schaffran (January 5, 1956 – December 13, 1974)Children David Bellisario, Leslie Ingham, Nick Bellisario, Troian Bellisario, Michael Bellisario, Sean Murray (stepson), Chad W. Murray (stepson) Donald Paul Bellisario (born August 8, 1935) is an American television producer and screenwriter who created and sometimes wrote episodes for the TV series Magnum, P.I., Airwolf, Quantum Leap, JAG, and NCIS. He has often included military veterans as characters.
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Early life
Bellisario was born in Cokeburg, Pennsylvania to a Serbian mother Dana (née Lapcevic) and an Italian father Albert Bellisario,[1] who was born in Gamberale, Abruzzo, Italy. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1955 to 1959, attaining the rank of Sergeant and earning the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal.[citation needed]
Bellisario earned a bachelors degree in journalism at Pennsylvania State University in 1961. In 2001 he was named a Distinguished Alumnus—the highest honor bestowed on a graduate of Penn State. In 2006, Bellisario endowed a $1 million Trustee Matching Scholarship in the Penn State College of Communications. He recalled:
Growing up in a hardscrabble western Pennsylvania coal mining town, I know first hand the sacrifices that are made to give a son or daughter a university education…and as a Marine veteran who returned to Penn State with two small children and little money, I remember all too well that struggle. It's my hope that this scholarship will also ease the financial burden of other young men and women who have defended our country to attain their academic goals.[2]
Bellisario worked in advertising for fifteen years as a copywriter and a creative director. He began working in Lancaster, Pennsylvania before moving to a major agency in Dallas, Texas. From there, he made what he has described as his "big gamble": moving to Hollywood to pursue screenwriting and production.
Hollywood career
After working under such television producers as Glen A. Larson, Bellisario adopted some of their production techniques, most notably utilizing a small pool of actors which he uses for his many productions.[citation needed]
He has created several successful TV series, including Magnum, P.I., Airwolf, Quantum Leap,[3] JAG, and NCIS. Less-known creations include Tales of the Gold Monkey, Tequila & Bonetti, and First Monday. He was also a writer and producer on Black Sheep Squadron and the original Battlestar Galactica. He wrote and directed the 1988 feature film Last Rites.[4]
One common theme running through the majority Bellisario's work is the tendency for the protagonist to be a current or former member of the United States armed forces. Examples are Tom Selleck's character in Magnum, P.I., Thomas Magnum, who is a United States Naval Academy graduate, former SEAL officer and Vietnam veteran; Jan-Michael Vincent's character Stringfellow Hawke a top helicopter combat pilot in Airwolf, also a Vietnam veteran and is still looking for his brother who is missing in action; Commander Harmon “Harm” Rabb, Jr., the main character of JAG, who is also a Naval Academy graduate and former Naval Aviator looking for his father who is missing in action from the Vietnam War; and NCIS's main character, Leroy Jethro Gibbs, who is a retired Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant and Scout Sniper. Although the character Dr. Sam Beckett was not in the armed forces, the other main character in Quantum Leap, former Naval Aviator, Vietnam prisoner of war and retired Rear Admiral Albert "Al" Calavicci, was. Another connection that some of his main characters have is 8 August birthdays. Notably, the last episode of Quantum Leap takes place on 8 August 1953, Sam Beckett's birthday, and the reverse of the last two digits of Bellisario's own birth year. Another common theme in Bellisario's work is religious undertones and comparisons. Bellisario received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2004, which was shown in the Season 9 JAG episode "Trojan Horse".[citation needed]
In an interview with Sci-Fi Channel in the late 1990s, Bellisario said he was inspired to create Quantum Leap in 1988 after reading a novel about time travel.[citation needed] His service alongside John F. Kennedy's assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, was the basis for Quantum Leap's fifth season's double-length episode "Lee Harvey Oswald" (originally aired 22 September 1992). The episode supports the theory that Oswald carried out the assassination on his own, something Bellisario believes.[citation needed]
Based in Los Angeles, his Belisarius Productions serves as the main vehicle for his creations.[5] The company's name recalls the Roman general Belisarius, of whose name Bellisario's own family name is an Italian-language variant.[6]
Personal life
Bellisario was married to actress and producer Deborah Pratt, who starred in several of his shows. He currently resides in Studio City, California with his fourth wife, Vivienne. He has identified himself as socially liberal and fiscally conservative, and especially conservative towards the military.[citation needed]
Bellisario has seven children. From his first marriage to Margaret (m. 1956–1975), he has four children, including daughter Leslie (born c. 1961), son David Bellisario who is a producer on NCIS: Los Angeles, and daughter Julie Bellisario Watson who is a producer on NCIS. From his second marriage, to Lynn Halpern (1979–198?), he has a son, Michael Bellisario (born April 7, 1980), who had a recurring role as Midshipman Michael Roberts on JAG and played Charles 'Chip' Sterling on NCIS. From his third marriage, to Deborah Pratt (1984–1991), he has a son Nicholas Dante Bellisario and a daughter Troian Bellisario (born October 28, 1985), who guest starred on Quantum Leap and plays Timothy McGee's sister Sarah McGee on NCIS. She also has the role of Spencer Hastings on Pretty Little Liars.[7] From his marriage to Vivienne Bellisario (m. November 27, 1998), his stepson Sean Murray plays Timothy McGee on NCIS. Another stepson, Sean's younger brother Chad W. Murray, is an NCIS producer.
Notes
- ^ "Donald P. Bellisario Biography (1935–)". Filmreference.com. 8 August 1935. http://www.filmreference.com/film/57/Donald-P-Bellisario.html. Retrieved 5 May 2011.
- ^ "Bellisario's $1 million gift endows scholarships in College of Communications". Penn State University. 2 October 2006. http://live.psu.edu/index.php?sec=vs&story=19848. Retrieved 5 May 2011.
- ^ O'Connor, John J. (22 November 1989). "Review/Television; An Actor's 'Quantum Leap' Through Times and Roles". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1989/11/22/arts/review-television-an-actor-s-quantum-leap-through-times-and-roles.html?scp=7&sq=Quantum%20Leap&st=cse. Retrieved 12 August 2010.
- ^ Last Rites at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ Belisarius Productions at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ http://www.belisariusproductionsparamount.visualnet.com/
- ^ Pretty Little Liars at the Internet Movie Database
External links
Categories:- 1935 births
- Living people
- People from Cokeburg, Pennsylvania
- American people of Italian descent
- American people of Serbian descent
- American film directors
- American screenwriters
- American television directors
- American television producers
- American television writers
- Edgar Award winners
- Pennsylvania State University alumni
- United States Marines
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