Rod Serling

Best-remembered for creating, producing, hosting and (sometimes) writing the classic TV horror and sci-fi series "The Twilight Zone" (CBS, 1959-64), Serling himself preferred his earlier TV writing. He grew up in the bucolic small town of Binghamton, NY, a milieu he would often return to in his work. After serving as a paratrooper in WWII, Serling wrote radio plays at college and eventually turned pro. He broke into TV in 1951, and was soon supplying scripts for "Kraft Television Theater" (NBC), "Studio One" (CBS), "Matinee Theater" (NBC) and "Playhouse 90" (CBS). Serling's first big hit was the psychological drama "Patterns", shown on "Kraft Television Theater" in 1955 and made into a film that same year. Winning the first of six Emmys, he was signed to a first-purchase rights contract by CBS and went on to pen the Emmy-winning dramas "Requiem for a Heavyweight" (1956) and "The Comedian" (1957), and scores of other TV scripts.

But it took "The Twilight Zone" to make him a star, in a way few writers ever attained. The darkly handsome Serling hosted the clever, adult series, introducing each episode in his own sly, velvety-voiced style. The high quality of the show not only attracted many old-time guest stars (Ed Wynn, Gladys Cooper, Buster Keaton, Burgess Meredith, Franchot Tone), but introduced several newcomers to the public (Robert Redford, Jean Marsh, Inger Stevens, Elizabeth Montgomery, Burt Reynolds, a very young Ann Jillian). When the show went off the air (still at the height of its popularity), Serling never quite regained his footing.

Serling's dark western series, "The Loner", lasted only one season (1965-66) on CBS, and his movie "The Doomsday Flight" (NBC, 1966) tortured him by inspiring an actual hijacking.

Serling's big-screen career never really took off. He wrote a handful of films, among them "Saddle the Wind" (1958), "Seven Days in May" (1964) and "Assault on a Queen" (1966), but his only big hit was the 1968 sci-fi classic "Planet of the Apes" (written with Michael Wilson). He also hosted a game show, "The Liar's Club" (syndicated, 1969), and lent his distinctive voice and image to many documentaries and advertisements. Serling's next series, "Night Gallery" (NBC, 1971-73), was no "Twilight Zone", but it did occasionally shine--the premiere, directed by neophyte Steven Spielberg, brilliantly showcased Joan Crawford. In his last years, Serling wrote the TV movies "A Storm in Summer" and "A Storm in Winter" (both NBC, 1970), and "Oath: The Sad and Lonely Sundays" (ABC, 1976). A heavy smoker, Serling was only 50 when he died during bypass surgery in 1975.

  • Also Credited As:
    Rodman Edward Serling
  • Born:
    December 25, 1924 in Syracuse, New York, USA
  • Died:
    June 28, 1975.
  • Job Titles:
    Screenwriter, Host, Narrator, Boxer
Family
  • Brother: Robert Serling. older; survived him
  • Daughter: Jody Serling. born c. 1950; survived him
  • Daughter: Nan Serling. born 1955; survived him
  • Father: Samuel Lawrence Serling. worked as secretary for General George C. Goethals, supervisor of construction on the Panama Canal; born 1890, died died of heart attack at age 55 in 1945
  • Mother: Esther Serling. died 1958
Education
  • Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio, physical education
Milestones
  • 1948 Worked as manager of Antioch College s radio station
  • 1956 First teleplay adapted for film, The Rack
  • 1958 First credit as screenwriter, Saddle the Wind
  • 1966 Wrote first TV-movie, The Doomsday Flight , for NBC
  • 1969 Hosted the syndicated game show, The Liar s Club
  • 1976 Last writing for TV included the ABC medical anthology drama pilot, Oath: The Sad and Lonely Sundays
  • Created and hosted the NBC horror and fantasy anthology series, Night Gallery/Rod Serling s Night Gallery
  • Created the CBS Western series, The Loner
  • Created the short-lived ABC drama series, The New People
  • Created, executive produced, hosted and often wrote for the CBS horror and fantasy anthology series, Twilight Zone
  • Earliest TV writing experience, creating episodes of the anthology drama programs, Kraft Television Theater and Studio One
  • Served as paratrooper in Pacific, WWII
  • Wrote for the CBS adventure series, Appointment with Adventure
  • Wrote for the CBS suspense anthology series, Pursuit
  • Wrote for the syndicated anthology series, Matinee Theater

Yahoo! Movies: In Theaters - Times & Tickets - Trailers - DVD - News & Gossip - Box Office - Browse Movies - more...
Yahoo! Entertainment: Movies - Music - TV - Games - Astrology - more...

Copyright © 2009 AEC One Stop Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Portions of this page Copyright © 2009 Baseline. All rights reserved.