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Start Over You searched for: Collection Hal Cooper Papers, 1938-2003 (majority within 1970-1990) Remove constraint Collection: Hal Cooper Papers, 1938-2003 (majority within 1970-1990) Date range Unknown Remove constraint Date range: Unknown
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Scrapbooks and Albums

(3 volumes, 1938-1976) There are 3 scrapbooks in this series, which provide biographical information on Hal Cooper and his first wife, Pat Meikle. Scrapbooks [1] and [3] have been disbound.

Scrapbook [1], 1938-1947, contains mostly newspaper clippings, as well as photographs and programs from University of Michigan theater productions and evaluations from one of Hal Cooper's acting classes. The scrapbook documents the early theater careers of Hal Cooper and Pat Meikle, as well as some of Hal Cooper's education at the University of Michigan Theater Department and his service in the U.S. Navy during WWII.

Scrapbook [2] is composed of newspaper and magazine clippings, as well as letters from M.D. Taylor, Chairman of the Board for Taylor-Reed Corp. Most of the scrapbook focuses on the early television career of Pat Meikle as the hostess, creator, and animator of the children's television programs The Magic Cottage and Your Television Baby-Sitter. Hal Cooper was producer and writer for both shows, and also acted in them.

Scrapbook [3] documents Hal Cooper's success as a television director, writer, and producer from 1971 to 1976. The clippings focus on Maude, especially reactions to the controversial episodes on Maude's abortion and Walter's alcoholism. Also included are articles related to the Emmy Award rule changes and the possibility of a Screen Actors Guild strike.

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Interviews

(6 DVDs, 2003) The six DVDs in this series contain the lengthy and in-depth interviews with Hal Cooper conducted by the developers of the Archive of American Television, a project of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. The Archive was created to "preserve the rich history of television, and to educate and inspire future generations by videotaping interviews with pioneers and legends of the medium." The DVDs, reformatted from videotape by the Academy, contain approximately six hours of questions and answers covering topics related to Hal Cooper's life and career. He touches on his boyhood, his early years in the theater, and his experiences directing actors and actresses in some of the most well-known situation comedies of the 1960s through the 1980s.