Tom Fontana

Screenwriter

Birthday September 12, 1951

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Buffalo, New York, United States

Age 72 years old

Nationality United States

#57773 Most Popular

1860

Fontana also co-created Copper, an 1860s police procedural set in the turbulent Five Points neighborhood of New York.

Fontana has received three Emmy Awards, four Peabody Awards, three Writers' Guild Awards, four Television Critics Association Awards, the Cable Ace Award, the Humanitas Prize, an Edgar Award, and the first prize at the Cinéma Tout Ecran Festival in Switzerland.

1951

Tom Fontana (born September 12, 1951) is an American screenwriter, writer, and television producer.

Fontana worked on NBC's Homicide: Life on the Street and created HBO's Oz.

Fontana was born on the west side of Buffalo, New York, and is the fourth of five children in an Italian-American family; he is a cousin of actress Patti LuPone.

He attended Cathedral School, Canisius High School, and Buffalo State College.

1973

He worked at the Studio Arena Theater in Buffalo in various capacities before moving to New York City in 1973.

Having started out as a playwright, Fontana was hired by Bruce Paltrow as a writer for St. Elsewhere.

Fontana has been the creator/showrunner for OZ, Copper, The Jury, The Beat, The Bedford Diaries, The Philanthropist and he was also the showrunner on Homicide: Life on the Street.

Fontana wrote the HBO film Strip Search, directed by Sidney Lumet, and contributed two pieces to the September 11 special, America: A Tribute to Heroes.

He was the executive producer of American Tragedy for CBS, Shot in the Heart for HBO Films, the independent film Jean, and the documentary The Press Secretary for PBS.

Fontana also created the historical drama TV series Borgia for the French premium-pay channel Canal+, produced by Atlantique Productions and EOS Entertainment.

The series recounts the Borgia family's rise to power and subsequent domination of the Vatican during the Renaissance.

1993

Fontana was married to actress Sagan Lewis for 12 years until their divorce in 1993.

2003

In 2003, Fontana was the recipient of the Austin Film Festival's Outstanding Television Writer Award.

Fontana has written articles for such periodicals as The New York Times, TV Guide, and Esquire, and has taught at Columbia, Syracuse, Rutgers, and the State University College at Buffalo, his alma mater, from which he received the Distinguished Alumni Award and an honorary Doctorate of Letters.

Fontana has had numerous plays produced in New York City, where he lives, and at San Francisco's American Conservatory Theater, the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, the Buffalo Studio Arena Theatre, Williamstown Theatre Festival, and McCarter Theatre Company.

Fontana's sister is a nun.

He lives in New York City's West Village in a building that was formerly a branch of the New York Public Library.

The book-lined, two-story main reading room is now a living room where he often hosts fund raisers for arts and civil-rights organizations.

2005

Fontana served as vice president of the Writers Guild of America, East from 2005 to 2007.

He is president emeritus of the WGAE Foundation, commonly known as the Writers Guild Initiative, and serves on the boards of the Acting Company, the Williamstown Theatre Festival, DEAL, the New York City Police Museum, and Stockings With Care, among others.

Detective Joe Fontana, Dennis Farina's character on Law & Order, was named for Tom Fontana, who became close friends with Law & Order creator Dick Wolf while working as writers in the same building, at the same time, on the series St. Elsewhere (Fontana) and Hill Street Blues (Wolf).

2015

Sagan and Fontana remarried on July 10, 2015, and remained together until her death on August 7, 2016.

Fontana has a tattoo of the Oz logo on his upper right arm, which he is shown receiving in the opening credits of the series.

Fontana does not own or use a computer, and writes all of his scripts longhand on a yellow legal pad.

He is a member of the Dramatists Guild, the Producers Guild of America, and the Writers Guild of America, East, from which he received the Evelyn F. Burkey Award for lifetime achievement.