Michael Piller(1948-2005)
- Writer
- Producer
- Additional Crew
Michael went to school in New York before taking a creative writing
course. The professor for this course told everyone, "There are enough
bad writers out there. There needn't be anymore". Michael recalls that
the professor would rip up his writing and he would be so
broken-hearted. This professor eventually chased him into journalism,
where Michael won two Emmys for his work as a news producer. Michael
went back to New York for a few years before seeing a "Chorus Line"
show and deciding to pursue his writing career. He originally came back
to Los Angeles as a censor for CBS in the late seventies. He eventually
started writing spec scripts for such TV series as
Simon & Simon (1981) and
Cagney & Lacey (1981) before
landing a role as a producer on
Simon & Simon (1981). He worked
his way through the producer ranks and jumped from series to series
before being called in by long-time friend,
Maurice Hurley, who was, at the
time, writing and producing episodes of
Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987).
Michael wrote a few episodes for season three (1989-90) before becoming
a full-fledged Executive Producer. In 1992, Piller and
Rick Berman (who was also Executive
Producer) decided to create a new series based in the "Star Trek
Universe". Thus,
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993)
was created. Piller oversaw the writing, casting, budget, etc. for two
season before Paramount called him in again to create a new series
after
Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)
ended in 1994.
Star Trek: Voyager (1995),
created by Jeri Taylor, Pillar and
Rick Berman, was born into the
television universe, as the flagship for the new United Paramount
Network (UPN), running until 2001. Piller left
Star Trek: Voyager (1995)
in 1996, after nine years of working in the Star Trek franchise. He
created the ill-fated, but critically-acclaimed, western for UPN called
Legend (1995), starring
Richard Dean Anderson and
John de Lancie. Also in 1996, Piller
successfully sold his first feature film script entitled, "Oversight"
(1998). It has yet to be produced. In 1997, he co-wrote
Star Trek: Insurrection (1998),
with Rick Berman, which was released
in 1998. His most successful post-Trek outing was developing the
Stephen King property, "The Dead
Zone", along with his son Shawn Piller, for
television. Piller died from cancer on November 2, 2005.