Glenn Gordon Caron


Glenn Gordon Caron is an American television writer, director and producer, best known for the television series Moonlighting in the 1980s and Medium in the 2000s. He lives in Los Angeles, California.

Biography

Caron was born to a Jewish family in Oceanside, New York. After graduating from the State University of New York at Geneseo in 1975, Caron studied with Del Close and The Second City in Chicago before working at an advertising agency.
While at the ad agency he was invited by NBC to write a pilot for the network. The pilot did not receive a series order, but Caron's work impressed writer-producer James L. Brooks, who invited him to join the writing staff of Taxi, although he only worked on one episode.
Caron subsequently coproduced the first 12 episodes of Remington Steele before leaving to form his own company, Picturemaker Productions. Caron created Moonlighting, a worldwide hit that revitalized the career of Cybill Shepherd and launched the career of Bruce Willis. Between its third and fourth seasons, Caron directed his first feature film, Clean and Sober, starring Michael Keaton. He was fired by ABC from Moonlighting before the start of its fifth season, reportedly because Shepherd demanded it. Caron then directed three more feature filmsWilder Napalm, starring Dennis Quaid and Debra Winger, and written by Vince Gilligan, who later created the AMC series Breaking Bad; the Warren Beatty-Annette Bening vehicle Love Affair, a remake of the 1939 film of the same name; and Picture Perfect, starring Jennifer Aniston — before returning to television in 1999 as the creator of the short-lived series Now and Again.
In 2001 Fox ordered 13 episodes of the Caron-created romantic comedy Fling. Seven episodes were shot, but the network became unhappy with the direction of the series during production and canceled it before any of those episodes could be broadcast. Four years later Caron created Medium for NBC. He also served as executive producer of the show, wrote several episodes and directed the series's pilot episode. It ran for seven seasons, with the last two airing on CBS.
In 2008 Caron wrote a pilot for CBS titled The Meant to Be's, about a woman who dies only to find herself sent back to Earth to help people get their life back on track. However, it wasn't given a series order.
In 2013 Caron wrote a pilot for a proposed Fox series titled The Middle Man. Set in the 1960s, a Boston FBI agent and his Irish-American informant take on the Italian-American mafia. Ben Affleck was attached to direct the pilot episode, but it was never filmed. The following year Fox ordered a pilot for The Cure, a medical drama to be cowritten and coproduced by Caron and New Yorker writer Malcolm Gladwell, but it too was never filmed. Caron was also attached to write a pilot for ITV Studios in 2016 based on Alan Glynn's novel Paradime.
Caron wrote and produced episodes of the first and second seasons of the FX series Tyrant, and in the spring of 2017 he joined CBS's Bull as a consulting producer before becoming the series's showrunner at the beginning of season two.

Awards

Glenn Gordon Caron was the recipient of the 2007 Outstanding Television Writer Award at the Austin Film Festival. He was also nominated for four Primetime Emmy Awards for his work on Moonlighting between 1986 and '87 and won a Writers Guild of America award for his 1985 pilot script for Moonlighting.

Personal life

Glenn Gordon Caron has been married to his second wife, Tina DiJoseph, since 2006; the couple has one child. Caron has three children from his first marriage. He is the founder-owner of Picturemaker Productions.

Controversy

On December 19, 2018, The Boston Globe published an op-ed by actress Eliza Dushku in which she claimed she was fired by Caron from the CBS series Bull in 2017 after she confronted its star, Michael Weatherly, about sexually charged remarks he'd made to her while filming the final three episodes of the show's first season. Caron had been hired as a consulting producer for those three episodes prior to becoming Bull's showrunner and an executive producer for season two; Dushku was also expected to join the series on a full-time basis in its second season. CBS paid her $9.5 million to settle her claims of wrongful dismissal and sexual harassment. Dushku signed a nondisclosure agreement as part of her settlement, but after news of the settlement leaked and Weatherly and Caron gave statements to The New York Times — "The idea that our not exercising her option to join the series was in any way punitive just couldn't be further from the truth," said Caron — Dushku said she felt compelled to respond, writing, "The narrative propagated by CBS, actor Michael Weatherly, and writer-producer Glenn Gordon Caron is deceptive and in no way fits with how they treated me on the set of the television show Bull and retaliated against me for simply asking to do my job without relentless sexual harassment."

Filmography

Television

as Writer

as Producer

as Director

Film

as Writer

as Director