Max Mutchnick
- Writer
- Producer
- Additional Crew
Max Mutchnick is Creator/Executive Producer of "Will & Grace", "Good
Morning, Miami" and Executive Producer, "The Stones". For his work on
"Will & Grace," he has been honored with an Emmy Award for Outstanding
Comedy Series; a People's Choice Award (Favorite New Comedy); four
Golden Globe nominations (Best Comedy Series); four GLAAD Media Awards
(Outstanding TV Comedy Series); a Founders Award from the Viewers for
Quality Television, and the National Award for Excellence from the
Human Rights Campaign. Creative partners Mutchnick and David Kohan
began their careers writing together for "The Dennis Miller Show" and
from there ventured forward into comedy series. Producers Linda
Bloodworth and Harry Thomason gave the future "Will & Grace" Emmy Award
winners their first break into the world of sitcoms when they hired
them to work on "Hearts Afire" and "Evening Shade." Their other
television credits include "Good Advice" with Shelley Long and the
acclaimed "Dream On." In addition to "Will & Grace", they also created
and served as executive producers on the comedy series "Boston Common"
and "Good Morning, Miami." Currently, David and Max serve as Executive
Producers on the new CBS comedy, "The Stones."
Born in Chicago and raised in Los Angeles, Mutchnick hails from a
creative background. His late father was a graphic designer who
launched the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, and his mother is
an entertainment executive and author of children's books. Mutchnick's
older brother followed in their father's footsteps and is also a
graphic designer with a very successful Web business. Mutchnick was
introduced to the behind-the-scenes world of television at an early
age. After school, he would take a taxi to Paramount Studios, where his
mother worked. "I wandered from sound stage to sound stage observing
everything from `Happy Days" to `Mork & Mindy.'" Mutchnick left Los
Angeles after high school to attend Emerson College in Boston.
Intending to major in theater arts, he switched his major to mass
communications. While at Emerson, he quickly became involved in the
school's television program, ultimately running the campus station.
After graduating in 1986, he moved to New York and worked as an
advertising copywriter. A year later he moved back to Los Angeles and
started writing for television. Tired of writing for game shows,
Mutchnick called his childhood friend, David Kohan, and proposed that
they write together. Mutchnick moved to New York, and within a month,
they composed two "spec" scripts, came back to L.A. and acquired an
agent. They have been writing together ever since. "Our relationship is
almost like a marriage," says Mutchnick, "in that we finish each
other's sentences - and we don't have sex." Mutchnick lives in Los
Angeles
Morning, Miami" and Executive Producer, "The Stones". For his work on
"Will & Grace," he has been honored with an Emmy Award for Outstanding
Comedy Series; a People's Choice Award (Favorite New Comedy); four
Golden Globe nominations (Best Comedy Series); four GLAAD Media Awards
(Outstanding TV Comedy Series); a Founders Award from the Viewers for
Quality Television, and the National Award for Excellence from the
Human Rights Campaign. Creative partners Mutchnick and David Kohan
began their careers writing together for "The Dennis Miller Show" and
from there ventured forward into comedy series. Producers Linda
Bloodworth and Harry Thomason gave the future "Will & Grace" Emmy Award
winners their first break into the world of sitcoms when they hired
them to work on "Hearts Afire" and "Evening Shade." Their other
television credits include "Good Advice" with Shelley Long and the
acclaimed "Dream On." In addition to "Will & Grace", they also created
and served as executive producers on the comedy series "Boston Common"
and "Good Morning, Miami." Currently, David and Max serve as Executive
Producers on the new CBS comedy, "The Stones."
Born in Chicago and raised in Los Angeles, Mutchnick hails from a
creative background. His late father was a graphic designer who
launched the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, and his mother is
an entertainment executive and author of children's books. Mutchnick's
older brother followed in their father's footsteps and is also a
graphic designer with a very successful Web business. Mutchnick was
introduced to the behind-the-scenes world of television at an early
age. After school, he would take a taxi to Paramount Studios, where his
mother worked. "I wandered from sound stage to sound stage observing
everything from `Happy Days" to `Mork & Mindy.'" Mutchnick left Los
Angeles after high school to attend Emerson College in Boston.
Intending to major in theater arts, he switched his major to mass
communications. While at Emerson, he quickly became involved in the
school's television program, ultimately running the campus station.
After graduating in 1986, he moved to New York and worked as an
advertising copywriter. A year later he moved back to Los Angeles and
started writing for television. Tired of writing for game shows,
Mutchnick called his childhood friend, David Kohan, and proposed that
they write together. Mutchnick moved to New York, and within a month,
they composed two "spec" scripts, came back to L.A. and acquired an
agent. They have been writing together ever since. "Our relationship is
almost like a marriage," says Mutchnick, "in that we finish each
other's sentences - and we don't have sex." Mutchnick lives in Los
Angeles