Andrew Alexander (producer)

Andrew Alexander is a theater and television producer, best known for his previous leadership and co-ownership of The Second City and for co-developing and producing the television show SCTV.

Andrew Alexander
Andrew Alexander at the opening of the Harold Ramis Film School at The Second City Training Center
Born (1944-03-24) March 24, 1944
Known forSCTV tv series, and former executive producer and CEO of The Second City

Early life

Andrew Alexander was born in London, England.[1] His father, who worked in the aeronautics industry, moved the family to Canada in 1951. He studied at Tri-State College in Indiana, and at Ryerson University in Toronto.[1]

Career

Following a year and a half at Ryerson,[1] in 1967, Alexander worked for Thompson Newspapers and the Oakville Beaver newspaper. In the early 1970s, he frequented the Toronto arts scene, working as an editor of Ski Magazine, and for the ill-fated John Lennon Peace Festival. Alexander worked at the Global Village Theatre, co-producing late night shows, along with his marketing and publicity day job at the Toronto Arts Foundation. He was eventually hired by the Ivanhoe Theater in Chicago, where he met Bernie Sahlins, owner and co-founder of The Second City.[1]

The Second City

At the time, The Second City's Toronto location was failing; Alexander then offered to assume its debts, in exchange for the rights to operate The Second City in Canada. Sahlins agreed and, in 1974, Alexander took control of The Second City Toronto.[1] Alexander produced and developed live theatre revues and launched the careers of comedians Gilda Radner, John Candy, Dan Aykroyd, Andrea Martin, Catherine O'Hara, Eugene Levy, Martin Short, Dave Thomas, Joe Flaherty and others. Two years later, Alexander joined Len Stuart in starting The Second City Entertainment Company, a TV and film production company. Their first production was the television show SCTV. After almost a decade of developing the entertainment company, Alexander and Stuart became owners of The Second City Chicago in 1985. He actively led The Second City in Canada and the US until 2020.

Alexander has produced or executive-produced hundreds of Second City revues in Canada and the United States.[2] Over the past 42 years, The Second City has operated resident theater and/or improv training facilities at one time or another in Toronto, Chicago, Detroit, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Edmonton, London, Ontario, and Cleveland. Additionally, Alexander expanded The Second City's Training, Touring and Corporate Services divisions from niche offerings to boutique business lines in their own right. In February 2016 Alexander announced the opening of The Harold Ramis Film School in Chicago with its first term starting in September 2016.[3][4]

On June 6, 2020, during on-going global Black Lives Matter protests, various Second City comedians signed an open letter saying, "erasure, racial discrimination, manipulation, pay inequity, tokenism, monetization of Black culture, and trauma-inducing experiences of Black artists at The Second City will no longer be tolerated."[5] In response, Alexander stepped down as executive producer and admitted that his "unconscious biases" had governed casting and other decisions. Alexander pledged internal reviews and wrote that "The next person to fill the Executive Producer position will be a member of the BIPOC community"; he was immediately replaced by interim executive producer Anthony LeBlanc.[6]

In October 2020, The Second City was put up for sale by Alexander and co-owner D’Arcy Stuart.[7]

TV and film career

During Alexander's career as television producer, he co-developed and executive produced over 185 half-hour shows and produced over 150 hours of television comedy for SCTV. Throughout the length of its run, the series garnered an ACTRA Award, 2 Emmy Awards and 13 Emmy Award nominations.[8]

Alexander has developed television programming for ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox Television, Comedy Central, HBO, Showtime, A&E and CBC. Alexander has had co-production deals with MGM Television, Imagine Films, Disney Studios and United Artists. He has produced movies and television shows with Ed Asner, Dan Aykroyd, James Belushi, Bill Murray, Chris Farley, Bonnie Hunt, Shelley Long, Andrea Martin, Steve Carell, John Candy, Mike Myers, Catherine O'Hara, Harold Ramis, Martin Short, Dave Thomas, Tina Fey and Stephen Colbert.[8]

Alexander produced the Martin Scorsese-directed SCTV documentary for Netflix and for CTV, and was executive producer for The Second City Project, which was nominated for six 2016 Canadian Screen Awards. Alexander executive produced I Martin Short Goes Home as well as Second City's Next Comedy Legend on CBC (2007). He executive produced Canadian feature film Intern's Academy (2004) written by Dave Thomas and featuring Dan Aykroyd, Dave Foley, Dave Thomas and Maury Chaykin.[8]

He was a founding shareholder of the Pay Television service Super Channel, and served on the board of directors.

Alexander served on the Columbia College Board of Trustees. He is an Honorary Member of the Chicago and Toronto Gilda's Club Board and has also served on the Board of the League of Chicago Theaters and Canada's Walk of Fame. In 2008, Alexander facilitated a reunion of the cast of SCTV in Toronto, launching The Second City Alumni Fund, which has since raised over $750,000 to assist actors and support staff during times of illness or economic hardship.[9]

Awards and honors

Alexander has had 2 Emmy Nominations and has received The Canadian Comedy Awards' Chairman's Award, Gilda's Magic Award from Gilda's Club, Chicago Improv Festival Lifetime Achievement Award 2009, The League of Chicago Theater's 2009 Artistic Leadership Award and named 2009 Arts Chicagoan of the Year by Chicago Tribune, Crains Who's Who in Chicago Business 2011, Chicago Magazine's Power 100 - 2012. Since acquiring Chicago Second City in 1985, the Second City under Alexander's leadership has been nominated for 154 Jeff Awards and has won 32 Jeff Awards, 28 Dora Nominations and 2 wins as well as receiving on behalf of Second City, the Lifetime Achievement Award from Just for Laughs, Spirit of Innovation Award 2011, The Big Shoulders Award 2012 from the Chicago Film Critics and The NAB Spirit of Broadcasting Award 2012, Phi Beta Kappa Distinguished Service Award 2014 and Chicago Fifth Star Award 2016. Governor General Performing Arts Award 2018.[1][4][8][10]

References

  1. Sennett, Frank (Nov 26, 2009). "Second Citizen". Time Out Chicago.
  2. Jones, Chris (5 June 2020). "Second City owner Andrew Alexander to exit after accusations of institutionalized racism leveled at theater". Chicago Tribune.
  3. Jones, Chris (Dec 27, 2009). "Alexander Expanded Second City Brand". Chicago Tribune.
  4. Rohter, Larry (Dec 15, 2009). "Second CIty Looks Back in Laughter". New York Times.
  5. Blair, Elizabeth (15 January 2021). "'SNL' And 'Second City' Announce Scholarships For Diverse, Emerging Comic Talent". NPR.
  6. "A Letter from Andrew Alexander", The Second City, June 5, 2020. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
  7. "Second City comedy theater for sale, 2nd time in 60 years". ABC News. 6 October 2020.
  8. "Andrew Alexander". IMDB.
  9. "Andrew Alexander Bio". The Second City. Archived from the original on 2011-07-27.
  10. Andrew Alexander, Theatre Chicagoan of the Year, Chicago Tribune, 2009-12-26
  1. The Second City
  2. SCTV
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