Edward Kitsis
Edward Kitsis | |
---|---|
Kitsis in March 2012. | |
Born |
Edward Lawrence Kitsis February 4, 1971 [1] Minnesota |
Notable work |
Lost Once Upon a Time |
Edward Lawrence "Eddie" Kitsis (Born February 4, 1971) is an American television writer and producer, best known for his work with his writing partner Adam Horowitz on the popular ABC drama series Lost and Once Upon a Time.
Career
Kitsis and Horowitz joined the crew of Lost midway through the first season as a writer and producer team in 2005. They were promoted to supervising producers for the second season in fall 2005. Kitsis, Horowitz and the writing staff won the Writers Guild of America (WGA) Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2006 ceremony for their work on the first and second seasons.[2] They were promoted to co-executive producers for the third season in the 2006-2007 television season. They returned as a co-executive producers and writers for the fourth season in 2008. Kitsis and Horowitz were nominated for the WGA Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2009 ceremony for their work on the fourth season of Lost.[3] They were promoted to executive producers for the fifth season in 2009. The writing staff was nominated for the WGA award for Best Dramatic Series again at the February 2010 ceremony for their work on the fifth season.[4] Kitsis and Horowitz remained as executive producers and regular writers for the sixth and final season in 2010.
Many of his episodes have been co-written with Adam Horowitz. He and Horowitz are both alumni of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and met in their "Introduction to Film" class. After graduating with a bachelor's degree in radio, television, and film in 1993, Kitsis travelled with Horowitz to Los Angeles. They initially started working as assistants and messengers until landing a job writing scripts for the remake of Fantasy Island. It was cancelled after 13 episodes, but they went on to write for both Felicity and Popular, before joining Lost halfway into the first season.
Kitsis was born to Tybe and Arlen Kitsis of Minneapolis. In May 2002, it was announced that he was engaged to Jennifer Susman, a TV/film graduate of University of Texas in 1999.[5] They married on March 29, 2003 in Scottsdale, Arizona.[6]
Kitsis also wrote Tron: Legacy, the sequel to the film Tron, with his partner Horowitz[7] and wrote with the same co-writer the book for Universal Pictures future project "Ouija Board".[8]
Kitsis and Horowitz are the creators of the fantasy drama series Once Upon a Time, which began airing on ABC October 23, 2011. The show focuses on a town which is actually a parallel world populated by fairytale characters who are unaware of their true identity. The two came up with concept seven years prior joining the staff of Lost, but wanted to wait until it ended before they focused on this project.[9][10] He also co-created the Once Upon a Time spin-off, Once Upon a Time in Wonderland, along with partner Adam Horowitz, Zack Estrin and "Once" writer and Consulting Producer, Jane Espenson. The series, which began airing on ABC October 10, 2013, focuses on Alice searching for her true love, a genie named Cyrus, who is being kept from her by the Red Queen and Aladdin villain, Jafar, in a post-cursed Wonderland.
Credits
- Dead of Summer, 2016 (with Adam Horowitz)
- Episode 1.01 "Patience" (also with Ian Goldberg)
- Episode 1.03 "Mix Tape"
- Episode 1.04 "Modern Love"
- Episode 1.10 "She Talks to Angels"
- Once Upon a Time in Wonderland, 2013–2014 (with Adam Horowitz)
- Episode 1.01 "Down the Rabbit Hole" (also with Zack Estrin and Jane Espenson)
- Episode 1.08 "Home" (also with Zack Estrin)
- Episode 1.13 "And They Lived..." (also with Zack Estrin)
- Once Upon a Time, 2011–present (with Adam Horowitz)
- Episode 1.01 "Pilot"
- Episode 1.02 "The Thing You Love Most"
- Episode 1.07 "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter"
- Episode 1.10 "7:15 A.M." story with Horowitz, teleplay by Daniel T. Thomsen
- Episode 1.14 "Dreamy"
- Episode 1.18 "The Stable Boy"
- Episode 1.22 "A Land Without Magic"
- Episode 2.01 "Broken"
- Episode 2.05 "The Doctor"
- Episode 2.09 "Queen of Hearts"
- Episode 2.14 "Manhattan"
- Episode 2.19 "Lacey"
- Episode 2.22 "And Straight On 'til Morning"
- Episode 3.01 "The Heart of the Truest Believer"
- Episode 3.06 "Ariel"
- Episode 3.11 "Going Home"
- Episode 3.12 "New York City Serenade"
- Episode 3.19 "A Curios Thing"
- Episode 3.22 "There's No Place Like Home"
- Episode 4.01 "A Tale of Two Sisters"
- Episode 4.07 "The Snow Queen"
- Episode 4.11 "Heroes and Villains"
- Episode 4.12 "Darkness on the Edge of Town"
- Episode 4.21/22 "Operation Mongoose"
- Episode 5.01 "The Dark Swan"
- Episode 5.05 "Dreamcatcher"
- Episode 5.11 "Swan Song"
- Episode 5.12 "Souls of the Departed" (100th episode)
- Episode 5.23 "An Untold Story"
- Episode 6.01 "The Savior"
- Episode 6.05 "Street Rats"
- Episode 6.10 "Wish You Were Here"
- Episode 6.11 "Tougher Than the Rest"
- Lost, 2005–2010 (with Adam Horowitz)
- Episode 1.22 "Born to Run" teleplay with Adam Horowitz, story by Javier Grillo-Marxuach
- Episode 2.04 "Everybody Hates Hugo"
- Episode 2.12 "Fire and Water"
- Episode 2.18 "Dave"
- Episode 2.22 "Three Minutes"
- Episode 3.04 "Every Man for Himself"
- Episode 3.10 "Tricia Tanaka Is Dead"
- Episode 3.14 "Exposé"
- Episode 3.18 "D.O.C."
- Episode 3.21 "Greatest Hits"
- Episode 4.03 "The Economist"
- Episode 4.07 "Ji Yeon"
- Episode 4.10 "Something Nice Back Home"
- Episode 5.02 "The Lie"
- Episode 5.05 "This Place Is Death"
- Episode 5.10 "He's Our You"
- Episode 5.14 "The Variable"
- Episode 6.02 "What Kate Does"
- Episode 6.07 "Dr. Linus"
- Episode 6.12 "Everybody Loves Hugo"
- Episode 6.16 "What They Died For" with Horowitz and Elizabeth Sarnoff
- Confessions of an American Bride, 2005
- One Tree Hill, 2004
- Episode 1.20 "What Is and What Should Never Be" with Adam Horowitz
- Life as We Know It, 2004
- Episode 1.08 "Family Hard-ships" with Adam Horowitz
- Black Sash, 2003
- Episode 1.04 "Prodigal Son" with Adam Horowitz
- Birds of Prey, 2002–2003
- Episode 1.03 "Prey for the Hunter" teleplay with Adam Horowitz, story by Adam Armus & Kay Foster
- Episode 1.06 "Primal Scream" teleplay with Adam Horowitz, story by Adam Armus & Kay Foster
- Episode 1.07 "Split" teleplay with Adam Horowitz, story by Adam Armus & Kay Foster
- Episode 1.08 "Lady Shiva" teleplay with Adam Horowitz, story by Adam Armus & Kay Foster
- Episode 1.11 "Reunion" with Adam Horowitz
- Popular, 2000–2001
- Episode 1.08 "Tonight's the Night" with Adam Horowitz and Ryan Murphy
- Episode 1.15 "Booty Camp" with Adam Horowitz
- Episode 1.21 "What Makes Sammy RuÊn" with Adam Horowitz
- Episode 2.02 "Baby, Don't Do It" with Adam Horowitz
- Episode 2.07 "Ur-ine Trouble" with Adam Horowitz
- Episode 2.12 "The Shocking Possession of Harrison John" with Adam Horowitz
- Episode 2.15 "It's Greek to Me" with Adam Horowitz
- Episode 2.20 "You Don't Tug on Superman's Cape...You Don't Spit into the Wind...You Don't Pull the Mask off the Ol' Lone Ranger...And You Don't Mess Around with Big Bertha Muffin" with Adam Horowitz
- Felicity, 2001
- Episode 4.03 "Your Money or Your Wife" with Adam Horowitz
- Episode 4.10 "Fire" with Adam Horowitz
- Blackout (2012)
- The Renegade: Part 2 (2012) (story)
- The Renegade: Part 1 (2012) (story)
- Beck's Beginning (2012)
- Story/ Screenplay 2010
Awards
- 2005, Writers Guild of America, Dramatic Series - Television, Lost (co-writer)[11]
References
- ↑ Minnesota Department of Health. Minnesota Birth Index, 1935-2002 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2004.
- ↑ "Awards Winners". Writers Guild of America. Archived from the original on May 25, 2012. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
- ↑ "2009 Writers Guild Awards Television, Radio, News, Promotional Writing, and Graphic Animation Nominees Announced". WGA. 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-12.
- ↑ "2010 Writers Guild Awards Television, Radio, News, Promotional Writing, and Graphic Animation Nominees Announced". WGA. 2009. Retrieved 2010-04-15.
- ↑ "Engaments". Jewish News of Greater Phoenix. 2002-05-31. Retrieved 2008-08-15.
- ↑ "Wedding Announcements". Jewish News of Greater Phoenix. 2003-08-29. Retrieved 2008-08-15.
- ↑ "Tron 2". slashfilm.com. 2008-07-31. Retrieved 2008-10-17.
- ↑ "Universal's Ouija Points to Writers". DreadCentral.
- ↑ Goldberg, Lesley (May 31, 2011). "Jane Espenson, Liz Tigelaar Join ABC's Once Upon a Time". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 12, 2011.
- ↑ Levine, Stuart (October 28, 2010). "EXCLUSIVE: 'Lost' exec producers Horowitz, Kitsis sell pilot to ABC". Variety. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
- ↑ http://www.altfg.com/Awards2005/writers.htm
External links
- Edward Kitsis at the Internet Movie Database
- "Lost writers found in Madison", March 7, 2006, interview with Kitsis and Horowitz at the Hillel Foundation at the University of Wisconsin