Jac Venza

He began his career on CBS in the 1950s, where he began to notice the scarcity of programming devoted to the fine arts on television. It was his dream to bring more of it to the home screen on a regular basis, but he did not receive a full opportunity to do so until the creation of National Educational Television, where it soon became possible, thanks largely to Venza, to see great dramatic literature regularly performed by some of the world's most renowned actors. A then-unknown Dustin Hoffman made his first major television appearance in a play—Ronald Ribman's ''The Journey of the Fifth Horse''—on NET in 1966. ''NET Playhouse'' was perhaps the first television anthology to present commercial-free, full-length productions (rather than one-hour or ninety-minute adaptations) of theatrical classics such as Arthur Miller's adaptation of Ibsen's ''An Enemy of the People''. When NET became PBS, Venza quickly launched ''Great Performances'', which is still running today.
Upon his retirement from PBS, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting awarded Venza the Ralph Lowell medal. He held the record for the most Emmy nominations for an individual—fifty-seven—until 2010. Provided by Wikipedia
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2Published 1974Other Authors: “...Venza, Jac...”
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3by Ribman, RonaldOther Authors: “...Venza, Jac...”
Published 1966
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14by Nichols, Peter, 1927-Other Authors: “...Venza, Jac...”
Published 1975
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16Published 2001Other Authors: “...Venza, Jac...”
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17by Cumming, RichardOther Authors: “...Venza, Jac...”
Published 1987
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