Lou Grant
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Lou Grant
Summary
Lou Grant is a television series[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of television_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,110 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Lou Grant is the creator of James L. Brooks[3].
- Lou Grant is the creator of Q4730499[4].
- Lou Grant is the creator of Gene Reynolds[5].
- Lou Grant's instance of is recorded as television series[6].
- Lou Grant's composer is recorded as Patrick Williams[7].
- Lou Grant's genre is drama television series[8].
- Lou Grant's based on is recorded as The Mary Tyler Moore Show[9].
- A cast member of Lou Grant was Ed Asner[10].
- A cast member of Lou Grant was Robert Walden[11].
- A cast member of Lou Grant was Linda Kelsey[12].
- A cast member of Lou Grant was Mason Adams[13].
- A cast member of Lou Grant was Jack Bannon[14].
- A cast member of Lou Grant was Daryl Anderson[15].
- A cast member of Lou Grant was Nancy Marchand[16].
- A cast member of Lou Grant was Rebecca Balding[17].
- The original language of Lou Grant was English[18].
- Lou Grant's Commons category is recorded as Lou Grant (TV series)[19].
- Lou Grant's original broadcaster is recorded as CBS[20].
- Lou Grant's country of origin is recorded as United States[21].
- Lou Grant comprises Lou Grant, season 1[22].
- Lou Grant comprises Lou Grant, season 2[23].
- Lou Grant comprises Lou Grant, season 3[24].
- Lou Grant comprises Lou Grant, season 4[25].
- Lou Grant comprises Lou Grant, season 5[26].
- Lou Grant began on September 20, 1977[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Cast members include Ed Asner[10], Robert Walden[11], Linda Kelsey[12], Mason Adams[13], Jack Bannon[14], and Daryl Anderson[15]. Created works include James L. Brooks[3], a screenwriter[28], b. 1940[29], of United States[30], awarded the Writers Guild of America Award[31]; Q4730499[4], a screenwriter[32], 1935–2021[33], of United States[34], awarded the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series[35]; and Gene Reynolds[5], an actor[36], 1923–2020[37], of United States[38], awarded the Writers Guild of America Award[39].
Publication
The original language of Lou Grant was English[18]. Its genre is drama television series[8].
Why It Matters
Lou Grant ranks in the top 8% of television_series entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,110 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[40]