Matthew Weiner

American writer and producer
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Quick Facts
Born:
June 29, 1965, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. (age 59)

Matthew Weiner (born June 29, 1965, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.) is an American writer and producer who was the creator, a cowriter, and an executive producer of the television series Mad Men (2007–15).

Weiner moved to Los Angeles with his family at age nine. He graduated from Wesleyan University in 1987 and received a master’s degree from the University of Southern California’s film school in 1990. He was an uncredited joke writer on the short-lived television series Party Girl (1996) before joining the writing staff of The Naked Truth (1995–98). In 1999 Weiner became a writer on the sitcom Becker (1998–2004). He also served as a producer of the show from 2000 to 2002, and he was both a writer and a supervising producer on Andy Richter Controls the Universe (2002–03).

During a summer hiatus from Becker, Weiner wrote the pilot script for Mad Men, a drama set in a Madison Avenue advertising firm in the 1960s. His script circulated through show business circles for three years before it came to the attention of David Chase, creator of the critically acclaimed television drama The Sopranos (1999–2007). In 2002 Weiner joined the writing staff of The Sopranos despite the fact that his only previous professional writing experience was on comedies. He worked on the series’ final three seasons, earning two Emmy Award nominations for his writing and winning two Emmys in his capacity as an executive producer of the show (he also acted in a small role in two episodes). As the production of The Sopranos was winding down, Weiner recirculated his Mad Men script, which was picked up by the cable network AMC.

Mad Men debuted in 2007 and was met with almost universal critical acclaim, becoming the flagship program of a channel that had previously been best known for showing classic films and had never before aired a scripted drama. Mad Men developed a sizable (by cable television standards) and dedicated fan base, and the stylish program became a cultural touchstone. The show won the Emmy Award for outstanding drama series and the Golden Globe for best television drama in each of its first three seasons, and during that period Weiner won three Emmys for his work as a writer on the series as well. In 2011, after overseeing the fourth season of Mad Men, which was hailed by many critics as a creative peak, Weiner entered into a protracted and acrimonious contract negotiation with AMC that some media observers speculated could force him off the series or end the show outright. After weeks of highly publicized squabbling, the two parties agreed to a contract that kept Weiner in control of the show for three additional seasons. Later that year Mad Men captured a fourth drama-series Emmy. Its seventh and final season aired 2014–15.

Weiner also wrote and directed the poorly received comedy film Are You Here (2013), which chronicles the misadventures of two dissipated layabouts, played by Owen Wilson and Zach Galifianakis.

In 2017 Weiner published the novella Heather, the Totality, about a wealthy Manhattan couple fixated on their daughter, who in turn becomes the target of a sociopath. The following year he created The Romanoffs, an Amazon series in which each episode follows a different cast of characters who believe they are descendents of the deposed Russian royal family. Weiner also directed the series and cowrote several episodes.

Adam Augustyn The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica