Friday, August 25, 2017

"An Early Frost" TV Producer & Network Executive Perry Lafferty 2005 Westwood Village Cemetery


Perry Francis Lafferty (October 3, 1917 – August 25, 2005) was an American television producer and network television executive who produced several television programs, including the CBS programs All in the Family, M*A*S*H, Maude and The Mary Tyler Moore Show. With NBC, he produced the 1985 television movie An Early Frost, one of the first dramatic films to deal with the subject of HIV/AIDS.



Life and career

Lafferty was born in Davenport, Iowa on October 3, 1917.[1] He attended Davenport Central High School there, graduating in 1935; He was inducted into the school's Hall of Honor in 2009.[2] He attended the Yale School of Music and was trained in piano. Following his graduation, he worked in the radio industry in New York City as a director and producer.[1]



He was hired by CBS in 1965 as the network's West Coast programming department, leaving in 1976. He was hired by NBC in 1979 as its senior vice president of West Coast programs and talent, and was later assigned responsibility for the network's movies and mini-series.[3] In that role, he developed and produced the 1985 made-for-television production of An Early Frost, starring Aidan Quinn as a young man who must let his parents, played by Ben Gazzara and Gena Rowlands, know that he was dying of AIDS. The critically acclaimed film won a Peabody Award and was one of the first network dramatic features to tackle the HIV /AIDS issue.[1]

He also worked on such television series as Star of the Family, The Danny Kaye Show, Robert Montgomery Presents, Studio One, and The Waltons.[1]



Lafferty died at age 87 on August 25, 2005 at his home in Century City, California due to prostate cancer.[3] He was interred in Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery. His 1943 marriage to the former Frances Carden, who had been a radio actress, ended with her death in 1999. Lafferty was survived by a daughter, a son and two grandchildren.[1]



References

1. Staff. "Perry Lafferty, 87, Former TV Producer, Dies", The New York Times, September 18, 2005. 
 2. Wundram, Bill. "3 selected for Central High School Hall of Honor", Quad-City Times, March 16, 2009. 
 3. via Associated Press'. "TV network executive Perry Lafferty, 87", The Hollywood Reporter. September 12, 2005.

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