Erin Levy is an American television writer. She has worked on the AMC drama Mad Men and has won an Emmy Award and a Writers Guild of America (WGA) Award.
Biography
Daughter of television writer Lawrence H. Levy, Erin Levy took a screenwriting seminar at USC in high school, which sparked her interest in following in her father's footsteps.
Levy attended USC undergraduate for screenwriting, where one of her professors was Matthew Weiner. The two kept in touch, and when Weiner needed a writing assistant, Levy joined the crew of AMC drama Mad Men as a writing assistant for the third season in 2009.[1] The first episode she co-wrote was the season finale, "Shut the Door. Have a Seat." Levy and the writing staff won the Writers Guild of America (WGA) Award for Best Drama Series at the February 2010 ceremony for their work on the third season.[2][3]
"The Chrysanthemum and the Sword" is her first episode where she is given solo writing credit.
In 2010, she and the rest of the writing staff won an Emmy Award for her writing in the AMC drama Mad Men.
She is credited as a writer for the 2017-2019 Starz series Counterpart.
References
External links
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| 1950s | |
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| 1970s |
- Richard Levinson & William Link for "My Sweet Charlie" (1970)
- Joel Oliansky for "To Taste of Death But Once" (1971)
- Richard Levinson & William Link for "Death Lends a Hand" (1972)
- John McGreevey for "The Scholar" (1973)
- Joanna Lee for "The Thanksgiving Story" (1974)
- Howard Fast for "Benjamin Franklin: The Ambassador" (1975)
- Sherman Yellen for "John Adams: Lawyer" (1976)
- William Blinn & Ernest Kinoy for "Show #2" (1977)
- Gerald Green for "Holocaust" (1978)
- Michele Gallery for "Dying" (1979)
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Writers Guild of America Award for Television: Episodic Drama |
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| 1960s |
- William Spier for "The Unhired Assassin" (1960)
- Barry Trivers for "The Fault in Our Stars" (1961)
- Howard A. Rodman and Kenneth M. Rosen for "Today the Man Who Kills The Ants is Coming" (1962)
- Lawrence B. Marcus for "Man Out of Time" (1963)
- Arnold Perl for "Who Do You Kill?" (1964)
- John D. F. Black for "With a Hammer in His Hand, Lord, Lord!" (1965)
- David Ellis for "No Justice for the Judge" (1966)
- Harlan Ellison for "The City on the Edge of Forever" (1967)
- Robert Lewin for "To Kill a Madman" (1968)
- Robert Lewin for "An Elephant in a Cigar Box" (1969)
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| 1970s |
- David W. Rintels for "A Continual Roar of Musketry" (1970)
- Herb Bermann & Thomas Y. Drake & Jerrold Freedman & Bo May for "Par for the Course" (1971)
- Herman Miller for "King of the Mountain" (1972)
- Harlan Ellison for "Phoenix Without Ashes" (1973)
- Jim Byrnes for "Thirty a Month and Found" (1974)
- Stephen Kandel & Arthur Ross for "Prior Consent" (1975)
- Loring Mandel for "Crossing Fox River" (1976)
- Mark Rodgers for "Pressure Point" (1977)
- Seth Freeman for "Prisoner" (1978)
- Leon Tokatyan for "Vet" (1979)
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| 1980s |
- Stephen J. Cannell for "Tenspeed and Brown Shoe" (1980)
- Steven Bochco & Michael Kozoll for "Hill Street Station" (1981)
- Michael Wagner for "The World According to Freedom" (1982)
- David Milch for "Trial By Fury" (1983)
- Steven Bochco & Mark Frost & Karen Hall & Jeff Lewis & David Milch & Michael Wagner for "Grace Under Pressure" (1984)
- Georgia Jeffries for "An Unusual Occurrence" / Anthony Yerkovich for "Brother's Keeper" (1985)
- Debra Frank & Carl Sautter for "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice" / Tom Fontana & John Masius & Bruce Paltrow for "Remembrance of Things Past" (1986)
- Georgia Jeffries for "Turn, Turn, Turn" / Debra Frank & Carl Sautter for "It's a Wonderful Job" (1987)
- Susan Shilliday for "Therapy" / Marshall Herskovitz & Edward Zwick for "Pilot" (thirtysomething) (1988)
- Karl Schaefer for "Rolling" (1989)
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| 1990s |
- John Sacret Young for "Souvenirs" (1990)
- Racelle Rosett Schaefer for "Photo Opportunity" (1991)
- Henry Bromell for "Amazing Grace" (1992)
- Tom Fontana & Frank Pugliese for "The Night of the Dead Living" (1993)
- Tom Fontana & David Mills & David Simon for "Bop Gun" (1994)
- Lance Gentile for "Love's Labor Lost" (1995)
- Bill Clark & Theresa Rebeck for "Girl Talk" (1996)
- René Balcer & Richard Sweren for "Entrapment" (1997)
- Bill Cain for "Proofs for the Existence Of God" (1998)
- Jason Cahill for "Meadowlands" (1999)
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| 2000s | |
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| 2010s | |
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| 2020s |
- Miki Johnson for "Fire Pink" (2020)
- Tony Roche and Susan Soon He Stanton for "Retired Janitors of Idaho" (2021)
- Thomas Schnauz for "Plan and Execution" (2022)
- Georgia Pritchett and Will Arbery for "Living+" (2023)
- Rachel Kondo and Justin Marks for "Anjin" (2024)
- R. Scott Gemmill for "7:00 A.M." (2025)
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| Authority control databases: Artists | |
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