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Hal Cooper
Hal Cooper
Hal Cooper
General Information:
Occupation: Producer, Director and Screenwriter
Sex: Male
Date of birth: (1923-03-23)23 March 1923
Born in: The Bronx, New York City
Died: 11 April 2014(2014-04-11) (aged 91)
Died in: Beverly Hills, California
Series/character information
Appeared on/in
and/or involved with:
I Dream of Jeannie
Job on series: Director, 54 episodes (Seasons 1-5)
Appears as Eddie in "The Second Greatest Con Artist in the World" (Season 3)
Appears as voice of Dog in "Jeannie and the Great Bank Robbery" (Season 5)

Hal Cooper (23 March 1923 - 11 April 2014) directed a total of 54 episodes of I Dream of Jeannie, beginning with the Season 1 episode "Is There an Extra Genie in the House?" and ending with "Jeannie & the Mad Home Wrecker" in Season 5. He also appears as Eddie in "The Second Greatest Con Artist in the World" (Season 3), and provides the voice of Dog in "Jeannie and the Great Bank Robbery" (Season 5).

Biography[]

A famed television director and executive producer who worked primarily on sitcoms. After establishing himself as a pioneer of the Golden Age of Television,[1] Cooper became a regular director on many of the popular and enduring shows of the 1960s, '70s and '80s. He was perhaps best known for directing 54 episodes of I Dream of Jeannie between 1966 and 1969 and 126 of the 141 episodes of Bea Arthur-starred CBS-TV sitcom series Maude, on which he also served as executive producer from 1975 through 1978. His work on the latter series earned. Cooper two Emmy Award nominations as well as three nominations from the Directors Guild of America Awards.

Life and Career[]

Born in The Bronx, New York, Hal began his entertainment career at the age of nine, becoming part of the acting troupe on the children's radio show Rainbow House. When he wasn't on microphone, Cooper spent his time in the control room, learning about directing from the show's producer and director, Bob Emery. One day in 1936, Emery fell ill two hours before the show was to go live and he chose Cooper to fill in for him, resulting in Cooper directing his first live broadcast at the age of thirteen.[1]

In 1940, Cooper began attending the University of Michigan, where he met his first wife, Pat Meikle, whom he married in 1944. His education was interrupted by World War II in 1943, when he was commissioned as a lieutenant (junior grade) into the U.S. Naval Reserve and served in the Pacific Theater of Operations. He returned to the university in 1946 and graduated with a B.A. that same year, after which he set out on a career in live television. He wrote, produced and acted in the pioneering live daytime children's series Your Television Babysitter for the DuMont Network. This show, which was co-written and hosted by Cooper's wife, Pat Meikle, aired on DuMont's first full day television broadcasting and led to a spin-off, The Magic Cottage, which Cooper also produced.[1]

From 1950 to 1957, Hal directed and produced a number of daytime soap operas, including Search for Tomorrow. He moved to Los Angeles, California in 1958 and broke into network television sitcoms in 1962, starting with two episodes of The Dick Van Dyke Show.[2] Over the next three decades, he amassed an extensive number of directing credits, which, in addition to I Dream of Jeannie and Maude, included 38 episodes of Mayberry RFD, 23 episodes of That Girl, 27 episodes of The Courtship of Eddie's Father, 11 episodes of The Odd Couple, 8 episodes of The Brady Bunch, 81 episodes of Gimme a Break!, 19 episodes of Empty Nest and 67 episodes of Dear John. He was also an executive producer on the latter three series.

Later Years[]

Cooper retired in 1996; his final screen credit as director was a January 1997 episode Something So Right. He died of heart failure at his home in Beverly Hills on 11 April 2014. He was 91.[1]

References[]

External Links[]

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