The Cape is an American dramatic TV series, with elements of science fiction , action / adventure , and drama , that was produced for syndication during the 1996–97 television season. The Cape told the story of select members of the NASA Astronaut Corps at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida with a focus on their personal lives as they train for, and execute, Space Shuttle missions. The series stars Corbin Bernsen as USAF Colonel Henry J. "Bull" Eckert, an experienced astronaut who, early in the series, was the Director of Astronaut Training but later in the series was also tasked with the responsibility of Chief of the Astronaut Office .
62-428: MTM Enterprises (also known as MTM Productions ) was an American independent production company established in 1969 by Mary Tyler Moore and her then-husband Grant Tinker to produce The Mary Tyler Moore Show for CBS . The name for the production company was drawn from Moore's initials. With MTM, Moore would become one of the first women to own a television production company. MTM became very successful, producing
124-654: A Play or Musical in 1985 for Joe Egg . In 1986, she was inducted into the Television Hall of Fame . In 1987, she received a Lifetime Achievement Award in Comedy from the American Comedy Awards . Moore's contributions to the television industry were recognized in 1992 with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame . The star is located at 7021 Hollywood Boulevard . On May 8, 2002, Moore
186-618: A bid, but withdrew it a few weeks later after reviewing the accounts of TVS. IFE increased its offer to £45.3M, but continued to be opposed by Julian Tregar, who blocked the deal on technical grounds, alleging that the offer was too low. IFE finally increased the offer to appease the remaining shareholders, and on January 23, 1993, their offer of £56.5M was finally accepted. The deal went into effect on February 1, 1993 (the month after Meridian began its first broadcast). In 1995, Michael Ogiens, formerly running CBS, as well as his production company Ogiens/Kane Company, joined MTM to serve as president of
248-413: A half-hour sitcom. The premise of the single working woman's life, alternating during the program between work and home, became a television staple. After six years of ratings in the top 20, the show slipped to number 39 in season seven. Producers asked that the series be canceled because of falling ratings, afraid that the show's legacy might be damaged if it were renewed for another season. Despite
310-698: A lifelong American Civil War enthusiast, in 1995 Moore donated funds to acquire an historic structure in Shepherdstown, West Virginia , for Shepherd College (now Shepherd University ) to be used as a center for Civil War studies. The center, named the George Tyler Moore Center for the Study of the Civil War , is housed in the historic Conrad Shindler House (c. 1795), which is named in honor of her great-great-great-grandfather, who owned
372-608: A new vision of American womanhood" and "appealed to an audience facing the new trials of modern-day existence". Moore won seven Primetime Emmy Awards and three Golden Globe Awards . She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in Ordinary People . Moore had major supporting roles in the musical film Thoroughly Modern Millie and the dark comedy film Flirting with Disaster . Moore also received praise for her performance in
434-506: A number of successful television programs during the 1970s and 1980s. The Walt Disney Company through its subsidiary, 20th Television owns all of its programs. In 1969, MTM Enterprises was organized by both Mary Tyler Moore and Grant Tinker , and hired James L. Brooks and Allan Burns to create her sitcom. Brooks' show Room 222 has even been credited by the Television Academy Foundation for breaking
496-465: A nun in Change of Habit (1969). Moore's future television castmate Ed Asner appeared in the film as a police officer. Moore returned to the big screen in the coming-of-age drama Ordinary People (1980). She received an Oscar nomination for her portrayal of a grieving mother trying to cope with the drowning death of a son and the suicide attempt of another son (played by Timothy Hutton who won
558-404: A permanent separation in 1979 and divorced two years later. In the early 1980s, Moore dated Steve Martin and Warren Beatty . Another relationship, with Sir Michael Lindsay-Hogg , ended when she wanted to be exclusive and he didn't. On October 14, 1980, Moore's son Richard died of an accidental gunshot to the head while handling a small .410 shotgun. He was 24 years old The same model
620-573: A raise -- and was promptly fired by the show's producers and replaced by Roxane Brooks in the role. However, Moore was able to parlay the publicity from 'revealing' Sam's identity to the press into several flattering articles and profiles, giving her career a boost. About this time, she guest-starred in John Cassavetes ' NBC detective series Johnny Staccato , and also in the series premiere of The Tab Hunter Show in September 1960 and
682-568: A record label, MTM Records . MTM Enterprises produced American sitcoms and drama television series such as Rhoda , Lou Grant and Phyllis (all spin-offs from The Mary Tyler Moore Show) , The Bob Newhart Show , The Texas Wheelers , The Bob Crane Show , Three for the Road , The Tony Randall Show , WKRP in Cincinnati , The White Shadow , Friends and Lovers , St. Elsewhere , Newhart , and Hill Street Blues , and
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#1732794237405744-570: A reunion special, The Dick Van Dyke Show Revisited . In 2006, Moore guest-starred as Christine St. George, the high-strung host of a fictional TV show, in three episodes of the Fox sitcom That '70s Show . Moore's scenes were shot on the same sound stage where The Mary Tyler Moore Show was filmed in the 1970s. She made a guest appearance on the season two premiere of Hot in Cleveland , which starred her former co-star Betty White . It marked
806-557: A story of the eternal cycle of man. If viewers don't want to follow the story, they can just enjoy the music and dancing." In 1978, she starred in a second CBS special, How to Survive the '70s and Maybe Even Bump Into Happiness , where she received significant support from a strong lineup of guest stars: Bill Bixby , John Ritter , Harvey Korman and Dick Van Dyke. In the 1978–79 season, Moore also starred in two unsuccessful CBS variety series. The first, Mary , featured David Letterman , Michael Keaton , Swoosie Kurtz and Dick Shawn in
868-439: A string of films in the late 1960s (after signing an exclusive contract with Universal Pictures ), including Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967), as a would-be actress in 1920s New York who is taken under the wing of Julie Andrews ' title character, and two films released in 1968, What's So Bad About Feeling Good? with George Peppard , and Don't Just Stand There! with Robert Wagner . She starred opposite Elvis Presley as
930-705: A ventilator the week before. She was interred in Oak Lawn Cemetery in Fairfield, Connecticut , in a private ceremony. In addition to her acting work, Moore was the International Chairperson of JDRF (the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation). In this role, she used her celebrity status to help raise funds and awareness of diabetes mellitus type 1. In 2007, in honor of Moore's dedication to
992-485: A viewer of his show and that her political views had leaned conservative in recent years. In a Parade magazine article from March 22, 2009, Moore identified herself as a libertarian centrist who watched Fox News . She stated: "when one looks at what's happened to television, there are so few shows that interest me. I do watch a lot of Fox News. I like Charles Krauthammer and Bill O'Reilly... If McCain had asked me to campaign for him, I would have." In an interview for
1054-573: A weekend house call, after Moore and her mother returned from a visit to the Vatican where they had a personal audience with Pope John Paul II . Moore and Levine remained married for 34 years until her death in 2017. Moore struggled with alcohol addiction much of her life but quit drinking in 1984 when she admitted herself into the Betty Ford Center . One year after getting sober, she quit her three-pack-a-day cigarette habit. Moore
1116-514: A weekly series based on Reiner's own life and career as a writer for Sid Caesar 's television variety show Your Show of Shows , telling the cast from the outset that it would run for no more than five years. The show was produced by Danny Thomas ' company, and Thomas himself recommended her. He remembered Moore as "the girl with three names" whom he had turned down earlier. Moore's energetic comic performances as Van Dyke's character's wife, begun at age 24 (eleven years Van Dyke's junior), made both
1178-719: The Bachelor Father episode "Bentley and the Big Board" in December 1960. In 1961, Moore appeared in several big parts in movies and on television, including Bourbon Street Beat ; 77 Sunset Strip ; Surfside 6 ; Wanted: Dead or Alive with Steve McQueen ; Steve Canyon ; Hawaiian Eye ; Thriller and Lock-Up . She also appeared in a February 1962 episode of Straightaway . In 1961, Carl Reiner cast Moore in The Dick Van Dyke Show ,
1240-592: The 4th Virginia Infantry in Jackson's Stonewall Brigade . During the 1960s and 1970s, Moore had a reputation as a liberal or moderate, although she endorsed President Richard Nixon for re-election in 1972 . She endorsed President Jimmy Carter for re-election in a 1980 campaign television ad. In 2011, her friend and former co-star Ed Asner said during an interview on The O'Reilly Factor that Moore "has become much more conservative of late". Bill O'Reilly , host of that program, stated that Moore had been
1302-561: The Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance). Moore appeared in only two more films during the next fifteen years: Six Weeks (1982) and Just Between Friends (1986). She appeared in the independent hit Flirting with Disaster (1996). Moore was in the television movie Run a Crooked Mile (1969) and starred in several television movies including First, You Cry (1978), which brought her an Emmy nomination for portraying NBC correspondent Betty Rollin 's struggle with breast cancer. Her later TV movies included
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#17327942374051364-577: The Ellen DeGeneres sitcom Ellen . The storyline of the episode includes Moore honoring Ellen for trying to save a 65-year-old lobster from being eaten at a seafood restaurant. She was also a co-founder of Broadway Barks , an annual animal adopt-a-thon held in New York City. Moore and friend Bernadette Peters worked to make it a no-kill city and to encourage adopting animals from shelters. In honor of her father, George Tyler Moore,
1426-556: The Lifetime made-for-TV film Stolen Babies . On Broadway , Moore received a Special Tony Award for her performance in Whose Life Is It Anyway? in 1980, and was nominated for a Drama Desk Award as well. In addition, as a producer, she received nominations for Tony Awards and Drama Desk Awards for MTM's productions of Noises Off in 1984 and Benefactors in 1986, and won a Tony Award for Best Revival of
1488-711: The Neil Simon play Rose's Dilemma at the off-Broadway Manhattan Theatre Club in December 2003 but quit the production after receiving a critical letter from Simon instructing her to "learn your lines or get out of my play". Moore had been using an earpiece on stage to feed her lines to the repeatedly rewritten play. Moore made her film debut as a nurse in the Jack Lemmon comedy Operation Mad Ball (1957). Her first speaking part came in X-15 (1961). Following her success on The Dick Van Dyke Show , she appeared in
1550-671: The Royale Theatre on February 24, 1980, and ran for 96 performances, and in Sweet Sue , which opened at the Music Box Theatre on January 8, 1987, later transferred to the Royale Theatre, and ran for 164 performances. During the 1980s, Moore and her production company produced five plays: Noises Off , The Octette Bridge Club , Joe Egg , Benefactors , and Safe Sex . Moore appeared in previews of
1612-584: The television film Heartsounds . Moore was an advocate for animal rights , vegetarianism and diabetes awareness and research. Moore was born in the Brooklyn Heights neighborhood in Brooklyn , New York City, in 1936 to Marjorie (née Hackett) and George Tyler Moore. Her father was a clerk. Her Irish-Catholic family lived in a rental apartment in Brooklyn's Flatbush neighborhood, then
1674-417: The "new narrative ground" which developed MTM Enterprises' "major sitcom factories of the 1970s." In 1971, co-founder Grant Tinker was forced to quit 20th Century Fox Television due to conflicts with how to run MTM, in order to maintain a full-time job at the company. In 1976, MTM teamed up with Metromedia Producers Corporation to start a variety show, a first for first-run syndication. Earlier that year,
1736-460: The 2013 PBS series Pioneers of Television , Moore said that she was recruited to join the feminist movement of the 1970s by Gloria Steinem , but did not agree with Steinem's views. Moore said she believed that women have an important role in raising children and that she did not believe in Steinem's view that women owe it to themselves to have a career. In February 1981, Moore was nominated for
1798-688: The Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in the drama film Ordinary People but lost to Sissy Spacek for her role in Coal Miner's Daughter . In 1981, she won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Drama for that role. Moore received a total of seven Emmy Awards, including two for her portrayal of Laura Petrie on The Dick Van Dyke Show and four for portraying Mary Richards on The Mary Tyler Moore Show . In 1993 she won an Emmy for her portrayal of Georgia Tann in
1860-751: The Broadway play ), with Dick Van Dyke. Moore starred in Like Mother, Like Son (2001), playing convicted murderer Sante Kimes . Moore wrote two memoirs. In the first, After All , published in 1995, she acknowledged being a recovering alcoholic, while in Growing Up Again: Life, Loves, and Oh Yeah, Diabetes (2009), she focuses on living with type 1 diabetes . In 1969, Moore and her husband Grant Tinker founded MTM Enterprises , Inc., which produced The Mary Tyler Moore Show and other successful television shows and films. It also included
1922-695: The Foundation, JDRF created the "Forever Moore" research initiative which will support JDRF's Academic Research and Development and JDRF's Clinical Development Program. The program works on translating basic research advances into new treatments and technologies for those living with type 1 diabetes. Moore advocated for animal rights for years and supported charities like the ASPCA and Farm Sanctuary . She helped raise awareness about factory farming methods and promoted more compassionate treatment of farm animals. Moore appeared as herself in 1996 on an episode of
MTM Enterprises - Misplaced Pages Continue
1984-590: The MTM shows, and subsequently courted to continue its relations with syndicator Jim Victory to sell off-network rights to MTM's shows like Hill Street Blues and WKRP in Cincinnati , all the way up until the late 1980s as part of a contract settlement. In 1988, MTM was sold to UK broadcaster and independent station for the South and South East of England TVS Entertainment for $ 320 million. A year afterwards, MTM Television Distribution began producing its own programming for
2046-485: The actress and her signature fitted capri pants extremely popular, and she became internationally known. When she won her first Emmy Award for her portrayal of Laura Petrie, she said, "I know this will never happen again." As Laura Petrie, Moore often wore styles that recalled the fashion of Jackie Kennedy , such as capri pants, echoing an ideal of the Kennedy administration's Camelot . In 1970, after performing in
2108-560: The age of 47 from kidney cancer. Moore's television career began in 1955 with a job as "Happy Hotpoint", a tiny elf dancing on Hotpoint home appliances in TV commercials that ran during breaks on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet . After appearing in 39 Hotpoint commercials in five days, she received approximately $ 6,000 (equivalent to $ 55,000 in 2023). She became pregnant while still working as "Happy", and Hotpoint ended her work when it became too difficult to conceal her pregnancy with
2170-537: The city's visitor center during renovations; it was reinstalled in its original location in 2017. Moore was awarded the 2011 Screen Actors Guild 's lifetime achievement award. In New York City in 2012, Moore and Bernadette Peters were honored by the Ride of Fame and a double-decker bus was dedicated to them and their charity work on behalf of "Broadway Barks", which the duo co-founded. Notes The Cape (1996 TV series) The series focused on authenticity and
2232-652: The company had hired Bud Rifkin to launch a syndicated division. In 1977, Ed. Weinberger , James L. Brooks, David Davis , Allan Burns, and Stan Daniels left MTM Enterprises for Paramount Pictures and started the John Charles Walters Company . Tinker oversaw MTM's operation until leaving the company. In 1981, Tinker became the chairman of NBC . Lawyers backing NBC's then-owner RCA convinced Tinker to sell his remaining shares of MTM. Moore and Arthur Price, her business manager and company vice president, bought Tinker's shares; Price subsequently
2294-797: The company in hopes that MTM would be restored to its independent production glory. The following year, Josh Kane, fellow partner of the Ogiens/Kane Company joined MTM as vice president for the East Coast offices. In 1997, MTM hit layoffs at the syndication unit after the cancellation of the show The Cape . In 1997, International Family Entertainment was sold to News Corporation , and folded into its subsidiary Fox Kids Worldwide , eventually renamed to Fox Family Worldwide (a joint venture between Fox and Saban Entertainment ). MTM's library assets however, were transferred over to 20th Television who retained them, even after Fox Family Worldwide
2356-767: The decline in ratings, the 1977 season won its third straight Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy. In seven seasons, the program won 29 Emmys and Moore won three awards for Best Lead Actress in a sitcom. The record was unbroken until 2002, when the NBC sitcom Frasier won its 30th Emmy. On January 22, 1976, while season six of The Mary Tyler Moore Show was in progress, Moore appeared in Mary's Incredible Dream , an experimental musical/variety special for CBS, and which also featured Ben Vereen . She described it as "a totally different concept from anything ever attempted on television... We go from song to dance to song and back again, telling
2418-476: The elf costume. Moore was an uncredited photographic model for record album covers, many for the Tops Records label, and auditioned for the role of the elder daughter of Danny Thomas for his long-running TV show , but was turned down. Much later, Thomas explained that "she missed it by a nose ... no daughter of mine could ever have a nose that small". Moore's first regular television role
2480-596: The family later lived in a rented apartment at 144-16 35th Avenue in Flushing, Queens . Moore was the oldest of three children, with a younger brother John and a younger sister Elizabeth. Moore's paternal great-grandfather, Confederate Lieutenant Colonel Lewis Tilghman Moore, owned the house that is now the Stonewall Jackson's Headquarters Museum in Winchester, Virginia . When Moore was eight years old,
2542-524: The family relocated to Los Angeles, California in 1945, at the recommendation of her uncle, an employee of MCA . She was raised Catholic and attended St. Rose of Lima Parochial School in Brooklyn until the third grade. In Los Angeles, Moore attended Saint Ambrose School and Immaculate Heart High School in the Los Feliz neighborhood. Moore's sister Elizabeth died at age 21 "from a combination of ... painkillers and alcohol." Her brother died at
MTM Enterprises - Misplaced Pages Continue
2604-451: The first big hit for film and television producer James L. Brooks , who would also do more work for Moore and Tinker's production company. Moore's show proved so popular that three regular characters, Valerie Harper as Rhoda Morgenstern, Cloris Leachman as Phyllis Lindstrom , and Ed Asner as Lou Grant spun off into their own three separate series playing the same characters, albeit with Lou Grant being an hour-long drama instead of
2666-448: The first time that White and Moore had worked together since The Mary Tyler Moore Show ended in 1977. In the fall of 2013, Moore reprised her role on Hot in Cleveland in a season four episode that reunited Moore and White with former Mary Tyler Moore Show cast members Cloris Leachman , Valerie Harper and Georgia Engel . The reunion coincided with Harper's public announcement that she had been diagnosed with terminal brain cancer and
2728-476: The first-run syndication market. After TVS lost its franchise to broadcast on the ITV network to Meridian Broadcasting , a number of American companies (and to a lesser extent, Meridian) were interested in acquiring MTM, with Pat Robertson 's International Family Entertainment making the first offer. A small number of shareholders, including Julian Tregar, rejected the offer from IFE. In November, TCW Capital made
2790-415: The iconic moment in the show's opening credits where Moore tosses her tam o' shanter in the air, in a freeze-frame at the end of the montage. While Dayton's is clearly seen in the opening sequence, the store in the background of the hat toss is actually Donaldson's , which was, like Dayton's, a locally based department store with a long history at 7th and Nicollet. In late 2015, the statue was relocated to
2852-694: The medical drama Heartsounds (1984) with James Garner , which brought her another Emmy nomination, Finnegan Begin Again (1985) with Robert Preston , which earned her a CableACE Award nomination, the 1988 mini-series Lincoln , which brought her another Emmy nomination for playing Mary Todd Lincoln , and Stolen Babies , for which she won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in 1993. Later she reunited with former co-stars in Mary and Rhoda (2000) with Valerie Harper, and The Gin Game (2003) (based on
2914-623: The one-hour musical special Dick Van Dyke and the Other Woman , Moore and husband Grant Tinker successfully pitched a sitcom that centered on Moore to CBS . The Mary Tyler Moore Show was a half-hour newsroom sitcom featuring Ed Asner as her gruff boss Lou Grant . The Mary Tyler Moore Show bridged aspects of the Women's Movement with mainstream culture by portraying an amiable, independent woman whose life focused on her professional career rather than marriage and family. The show marked
2976-511: The production crew. Moore said she asked network to pull the show because she was unhappy with the direction and production. Moore also starred in the short-lived Annie McGuire in 1988. In 1995, after another lengthy break from TV series work, Moore was cast as tough, unsympathetic newspaper owner Louise "the Dragon" Felcott on the CBS drama New York News , the third series in which her character
3038-483: The rights of most of MTM's shows. MTM Enterprises also included a record label , MTM Records — distributed by Capitol Records — which was in existence from 1984 to 1988. Mary Tyler Moore Mary Tyler Moore (December 29, 1936 – January 25, 2017) was an American actress, producer, and social advocate. She is best known for her roles on The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961–1966) and especially The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970–1977), which "helped define
3100-445: The structure from 1815 to 1852. Moore also contributed to the renovation of a historic house in Winchester, Virginia , that had been used as headquarters by Confederate Major General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson during his Shenandoah Valley campaign in 1861–62. The house, now known as the Stonewall Jackson's Headquarters Museum , had been owned by Moore's great-grandfather, Lieutenant Colonel Lewis Tilghman Moore, commander of
3162-511: The supporting cast. After CBS canceled that series, it brought Moore back in March 1979 in a new, retooled show, The Mary Tyler Moore Hour . Described as a "sit-var" (part situation comedy/part variety series), it had Moore portraying a TV star putting on a variety show. The program lasted just 11 episodes. In the 1985–86 season, Moore returned to CBS in a sitcom titled Mary , which suffered from poor reviews, sagging ratings, and strife within
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#17327942374053224-492: Was as 'Sam' a mysterious and glamorous telephone switchboard operator/receptionist in the series Richard Diamond, Private Detective with David Janssen . Sam's sultry voice was heard talking to Richard Diamond from her switchboard; however, only her legs and occasionally her hands appeared on camera -- never her face, adding to the character's mystique. After creating a minor sensation by appearing as Sam in 12 episodes of Richard Diamond as an uncredited player, Moore asked for
3286-492: Was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in 1969. In 2011, she had surgery to remove a meningioma , a benign brain tumor. In 2014, friends reported that Moore had heart and kidney problems and was nearly blind from complications related to diabetes. Moore died at the age of 80 on January 25, 2017, at Greenwich Hospital in Greenwich, Connecticut , from cardiopulmonary arrest complicated by pneumonia after having been placed on
3348-563: Was elevated to president. Tinker later regretted leaving MTM, believing that the company started to decline without him. Most of MTM's programs aired on CBS. For many years, MTM and CBS co-owned the CBS Studio Center in Studio City California, where a majority of their programs were filmed and videotaped. In 1986, MTM launched its own syndicated arm MTM Television Distribution, to handle off-net syndication of
3410-563: Was filmed in and around Cape Canaveral, Florida . Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin also served as technical consultant. Composers John Debney and Louis Febre won Emmy Awards for their music on The Cape in 1997. The series was also nominated in the Outstanding Sound Editing For A Series and Outstanding Main Title Music for a series in 1997. This article relating to a drama television series in
3472-581: Was given only a few months to live. Moore appeared in several Broadway plays. She was the star of a new musical version of Breakfast at Tiffany's in December 1966, but the show, titled Holly Golightly , was a flop that closed in previews before opening on Broadway. In reviews of performances in Philadelphia and Boston, critics "murdered" the play in which Moore claimed to be singing with bronchial pneumonia. She starred in Whose Life Is It Anyway? with James Naughton , which opened on Broadway at
3534-403: Was involved in the news media. Moore was disappointed with the writing of her character and was negotiating with producers to get out of her contract for the series when it was canceled. In the mid-1990s, Moore appeared as herself on two episodes of Ellen . She guest-starred on Ellen DeGeneres 's The Ellen Show , in 2001. In 2004, Moore reunited with her Dick Van Dyke Show castmates for
3596-513: Was later sold to Television South , an ITV Franchise holder in 1988. The MTM logo resembles the Metro Goldwyn Mayer logo, but includes a cat named Mimsie instead of a lion. Currently, the shows of MTM Enterprises are distributed by 20th-Century Fox , which is owned by The Walt Disney Company . At age 18 in 1955, Moore married her next-door neighbor, 28-year-old cranberry juice salesman Richard Meeker, and within six weeks she
3658-460: Was later taken off the market because of its "hair trigger". Three-and-a-half weeks earlier, Ordinary People had been released where she played a mother who was grieving over the accidental death of her son. Moore married 29-year-old cardiologist Robert Levine on November 23, 1983, at the Pierre Hotel in New York City. They met in 1982 when he treated Moore's mother in New York City on
3720-448: Was pregnant with her only child, Richard Carleton Meeker Jr., born on July 3, 1956. Meeker and Moore divorced in 1962. Later that year, Moore married Grant Tinker , a CBS executive and later chairman of NBC, and in 1969 they formed the television production company MTM Enterprises , which created and produced the company's first television series, The Mary Tyler Moore Show . After a 1973 breakup and patch-up, Moore and Tinker announced
3782-615: Was present when cable network TV Land and the City of Minneapolis dedicated a statue in downtown Minneapolis of Mary Richards, her character in The Mary Tyler Moore Show . The statue, by artist Gwendolyn Gillen , was chosen from designs submitted by 21 sculptors. The bronze sculpture was located in front of the Dayton's department store, later Macy's , near the corner of 7th Street South and Nicollet Mall . It depicts
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#17327942374053844-405: Was sold to The Walt Disney Company in 2001. Until then, The Pretender and Good News were the last surviving shows to be produced by MTM, as 20th Century Fox Television inherited both shows in 1997 (when News Corporation purchased MTM) and 1998 (when MTM ceased operations) respectively. MTM's library became property of Disney following its acquisition of 20th Century Fox in 2019. Disney holds
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