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Steven Ronald Bochco (December 16, 1943 – April 1, 2018) was an American television writer and producer. He developed a number of television series, mostly crime dramas, including Hill Street Blues ; L.A. Law ; Doogie Howser, M.D. ; Cop Rock ; and NYPD Blue .
In 1986, Martin revealed that Steven Bochco had written LaRue's first season plotline with the goal of encouraging Martin to seek help for his real-life alcoholism. He explained that the episodes "Rites of Spring" and "Jungle Madness" where LaRue confronts his worsening addiction and eventually joins AA "were written as a message of love to me.
2, including Jesse Bochco Barbara Bosson (November 1, 1939 – February 18, 2023) was an American actress and writer. She is best known for her roles in the television series Hill Street Blues (1981–1986) and Murder One (1995–1997), for both of which she received six Primetime Emmy Award nominations.
L.A. Law is an American legal drama television series created by Steven Bochco and Terry Louise Fisher for NBC. [1] It ran for eight seasons and 172 episodes from September 15, 1986, to May 19, 1994.
Brochtrup has been a series regular on three Steven Bochco shows: CBS sitcom Public Morals, ABC drama Total Security, and seven seasons on the ABC drama NYPD Blue. He has appeared on television shows as varied as Dexter , Without a Trace , the animated children's series The Wild Thornberrys (as the voice of a dolphin), Major Crimes (as Dr. Joe ...
Steven Bochco was a writer/producer on the show, [8] and Michael Kozoll was also a series writer. Four years after Delvecchio was cancelled, Boccho and Kozoll created the police drama Hill Street Blues , which featured (amongst many others) Delvecchio regulars Charles Haid, Michael Conrad, and James B. Sikking.
Steven Bochco developed and co-created Cop Rock with William M. Finkelstein In the early 1980s, a Broadway producer offered Steven Bochco a proposal to convert his series Hill Street Blues into a musical.
The series was created by Steven Bochco and Terry Louise Fisher, who were the team responsible for creating L.A. Law. Though not the first comedy drama, Hooperman was considered the vanguard of a new television genre when it premiered, and critics coined the term " dramedy " to describe it.