DGA Past President Jud Taylor to Receive Robert B. Aldrich Award at 55th Annual DGA Awards Celebration.Entertainment Editors LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 19, 2003 DGA DGA Directors Guild of America (movie directors union) DGA Délégation Générale pour l'Armement (France) DGA Directeur-Grootaandeelhouder (Dutch: Managing Director and Major Shareholder) past President Jud Taylor Judson (Jud) Taylor (born February 25, 1940) is an American actor and television director, who sometimes also used the name Alan Smithee. Taylor is perhaps best known for his directorial work on 1960s television classics such as , The Man from U.N.C.L.E. will be the recipient of the Directors Guild of America Robert B. Aldrich Achievement Award, DGA President Martha Coolidge and Awards Committee Chairperson Howard Storm announced today. The Aldrich Award, given for extraordinary service to the Guild and to its membership, will be presented to Taylor at the DGA Awards on March 1, 2003. "Jud Taylor's dedication and service to the Guild and its members has spanned three decades, resulting in immeasurable rewards that our membership continues to reap to this day," said Coolidge. "The Robert B. Aldrich Award is the highest award given by the DGA for service to the Guild and our members -- and Jud is most certainly a deserving recipient." Taylor started his career in the entertainment industry as an actor playing a small part in the 1956 feature film, "Attack," directed by Robert Aldrich. His acting career eventually gave way to a growing desire to work behind the camera, however, and in 1964 he joined the Guild. Taylor attended DGA Directors Councils as well as DGA National Board meetings, where he began serving as an alternate member and subsequently was elected National Board Member. In 1973, Taylor took part in his first negotiations as a member of the Creative Rights Committee, and in 1981 served as chairman of the Negotiating Committee. The 1981 contract provided significant gains for Guild members, including improved economic and creative rights as well as affirmative action affirmative action, in the United States, programs to overcome the effects of past societal discrimination by allocating jobs and resources to members of specific groups, such as minorities and women. provisions for women and ethnic minorities. Taylor was DGA Vice President from 1977 to 1981, and under Robert Aldrich's presidency spearheaded a committee to analyze the DGA pension and health plans. That six-month study led to recommendations resulting in significant improvements in the Guild's pension and health plans. Taylor was elected DGA President and served from 1981-1983. He continues to serve as an ex-officio member An ex-officio member was a member of a colonial legislative council or an executive council. They were civil servants who served in a colonial government, appointed to sit in a council or both councils alongside with unofficial members. of the Western Directors Council. The veteran of more than 40 made-for-TV movies, Taylor won the Directors Guild of America Outstanding Directorial Achievement Award for his direction of "Foxfire fox·fire n. A phosphorescent glow, especially that produced by certain fungi found on rotting wood. " (1987), and an Emmy Award Emmy award Annual presentation for outstanding achievement in U.S. television. Its name is taken from the nickname “immy” for the image orthicon, a television camera tube. nomination for his direction of "Tail Gunner (Mil.) A member of the crew of a bomber airplane who operates the defensive gun at the rear of the airplane. - W. C. Russell. See also: Gunner Joe" (1977). Taylor's other made-for-television movies include "Clover" (1997), "The Old Man and the Sea" (1990), "Out of the Darkness" (1985), "A Question of Honor" (1982), "Flesh & Blood" (1979) and "The Last Tenant" (1978). He also directed numerous television series including "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit," "Love, American Style Love, American Style was an hour-long television anthology which originally aired between September 1969 and January 1974. For the 1971 and 1972 seasons it was a part of an ABC Friday prime-time lineup that also included Brady Bunch, The Partridge Family ," "The Man from U.N.C.L.E.," "The Fugitive," and several episodes of "Star Trek." The Robert B. Aldrich Award was established in 1984 to recognize extraordinary service to the Directors Guild of America and to its membership. Robert Aldrich served as DGA President from 1975-1979. Past recipients include Robert E. Wise, Elliot Silverstein, George Sidney, Sheldon Leonard, Gilbert Cates n. pl. 1. Provisions; food; viands; especially, luxurious food; delicacies; dainties. Cates for which Apicius could not pay. - Shurchill. Choicest cates and the fiagon's best spilth. - R. Browning. , George L. Schaefer, Larry Auerbach, Milt Felsen, Jack Shea, Gene Reynolds, John Rich, Burt Bluestein, Max A. Schindler, Daniel Petrie, Delbert Mann, Martha Coolidge, Arthur Hiller, Tom Donovan and Edwin Sherin. |
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