
Herbert F. Solow, an executive who helped revive Desilu in the mid-1960s, died this week at 89, Variety said.
Desilu, one a major producer of TV shows, was primarily leasing studio space by the middle part of the 1960s. Solow was brought in to revive production.
The executive sold Star Trek to NBC and Mission: Impossible to CBS for the 1966-67 season.
“This was a particularly sweet time for me,” Solow said in the 1996 book Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, co-authored with Robert H. Justman. Justman worked as associate producer on both pilots and was on the crew for most of Star Trek’s original three-year run.
“Star Trek and Mission were the first projects I’d put into development after I joined Desilu,” Solow said in the book.
Both would be complicated shows to make, especially for a studio that had been relatively inactive. “I’d fought the budget battles and the casting problems, the network egos and the studio’s old-fashioned polices,” he wrote.
A year later, Solow sold another series, Mannix, a private eye drama, to CBS for the 1967-68 season. That would be the final Desilu series. Gulf + Western, then Paramount’s parent company, purchased Desilu from Lucille Ball. Desilu became Paramount Television.
Solow stayed for a time but departed. Paramount management put on more pressure to cut costs.
“It wasn’t the same, so I asked out of my contract,” Solow told Patrick J. White, author of The Mission: Impossible Dossier. Solow ended up at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as an executive.
UPDATE: Here is a YouTube video of Herbert F. Solow and Robert H. Justman reading from their 1996 book. h/t @Stingray_travel for the heads up.
Filed under: The Other Spies | Tagged: Desilu, Herbert F. Solow, Mannix, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Mission: Impossible, Paramount, Star Trek | 2 Comments »