NEW YORK, NY.- Martin Starger, who as a senior executive at ABC in the 1970s helped bring Happy Days, Roots, Rich Man, Poor Man and other shows to the small screen and the network nearly to the brink of No. 1 in prime time before turning to producing movies, most notably Robert Altmans Nashville, died May 31 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 92.
His death was confirmed by his niece, Ilene, a casting director.
Starger joined ABC in the mid-1960s and rose to positions of increasing importance, culminating in his promotion to president of ABC Entertainment in 1972.
Entertainment mogul Barry Diller, who was one of his proteges at ABC, described Starger in an email as the quintessential television executive of the 1970s. He was, Diller said, the essence of NY smarts: suave, sophisticated and funny. He was culturally ahead of his audience but was pragmatic in his programming choices, but ever striving for better.
Stargers time at ABC was characterized by the networks long struggle to break out of last place in prime time, behind CBS and NBC, in what was then a three-network universe.
Starger and other executives balanced middlebrow programs, including Marcus Welby, M.D. and The Six Million Dollar Man, with TV movies such as The Missiles of October (1974), which dramatized the Cuban missile crisis, and prestigious miniseries such as Roots, based on Alex Haleys book about his family history.
Roots which ran for eight consecutive nights in 1977, although it did not air until after Starger left ABC was a colossal ratings smash and won nine Emmys. It was part of Stargers strategy to adapt bestselling books such as Leon Uris novel QB VII (1974), which was developed into a two-night, six-hour event, and Irwin Shaws novel Rich Man, Poor Man (1976), the basis of a nine-part miniseries.
Stargers penchant for putting brainier-than-usual programs on ABCs schedule prompted John Carmody, a television reporter for The Washington Post, to describe Starger in 1973 as the intellectual of the three network programming chiefs.
Ultimately, Starger had to find a way to beat NBC and CBS. In 1974, he added 12 new series to ABCs schedule to replace unsuccessful ones.
He said that in the battle to gain ground against ABCs rivals, he had three rules of engagement: Each night had to have at least one returning show; returning shows had to be strong enough to help new ones; and the network had to counterprogram CBS and NBC with appealing alternatives.
The plan did not work. ABC finished far behind its rivals.
After three years as president of ABC Entertainment, Starger left in 1975 to start his own production company, with a deal to create programs exclusively for the network.
Nonetheless, some of the programming he left behind for his successor, Fred Silverman, was responsible for ABCs rise to the top spot in prime time for the 1976-77 season. Seven of the 10 top-rated shows that season were on ABC, including Happy Days, The Six Million Dollar Man and Baretta, holdovers from Stargers time there.
John J. OConnor, a TV critic for The New York Times, took note. Ironically, he wrote in 1977, the foundation for ABCs current programming pattern had been laid by Martin Starger, who was dismissed shortly before the ratings began to climb. (Some reports said he was pushed out, others said he resigned to take on a new challenge.)
Martin Starger was born May 8, 1932, in the New York City borough of the Bronx. His father, Isidore, was a factory leather worker who made handbags (which were purchased by, among others, Eleanor Roosevelt). His mother, Rose (Stamler) Starger, managed the household.
After graduating from the City College of New York in 1953 with a bachelors degree in motion picture techniques, Starger was drafted into the Army. He served for two years in the motion picture division of the Signal Corps; for some of that time, he was based in Honolulu, where he wrote, directed and edited films.
After his discharge, he joined the advertising agency Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborn (now known as BBDO) as an assistant projectionist, at a time when agencies produced television shows. He was later an account executive and vice president.
He was recruited to ABC and held vice-presidential positions at the network before becoming president of ABC Entertainment.
When he left ABC, he had a major project in hand. While at the network, he had agreed to have ABC finance Nashville (1975), Robert Altmans multilayered drama set against the background of the country music industry. Starger and Jerry Weintraub were the films executive producers. It was nominated for five Oscars and won for the best original song, Im Easy.
A series that Starger created for ABC, Westside Medical, about a clinic in Southern California, had a brief run in 1977.
For the next two decades, Starger produced theatrical and television films, some in partnership with British entertainment mogul Lew Grade and some for his own company, Marstar Productions. The numerous films on which he was a producer or executive producer included two Muppet movies, Sophies Choice (1982), Mask (1985), Escape From Sobibor (1987) and Love Letters (1999).
Starger was executive producer of Friendly Fire, a 1979 TV movie based on the true story of a couple (played by Carol Burnett and Ned Beatty) who fought the government to learn the truth about the killing of their son, a soldier during the Vietnam War. It won the Emmy Award for outstanding drama or comedy special, which Starger shared with his co-producers Fay Kanin, who also wrote the script, and Philip Barry Jr.
He also produced several Broadway shows, including three in the 1980s: Merrily We Roll Along, Stephen Sondheims cult flop, which closed after 16 performances in 1981 but became a hit when it was revived on Broadway last year; Starlight Express, Andrew Lloyd Webbers musical about steam engines, with actors performing on roller skates; and the comedy Lend Me a Tenor.
Stargers marriage to Judith Newburg ended in divorce in 1975 after eight years. No immediate family members survive.
One of Stargers passion projects was resuscitating Omnibus, an ambitious culture, entertainment and information series hosted by Alistair Cooke, which premiered on CBS in 1952 and lasted nine years. Starger said that Omnibus inspired him to work in the television business, and that the memory of it led him to acquire the rights to revive it on ABC.
My feeling is that we ought not to do an occasional Omnibus special, he told the Times in 1980, shortly before the first episode aired, but rather to have something of its caliber and quality in a regular recurring spot. Thats if theres receptivity. And I think there will be.
But there was not. ABC showed only a few episodes through 1981. And Starger moved on. Two of the films he produced, Red Flag: The Ultimate Game, a military drama, and The Last Unicorn, an animated fable, would soon be released.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.