After relocating to Hollywood as a 19-year-old, he became
CBS Television's youngest producer, and then shortly thereafter was hired by
ABC, where he worked on the development of such programs as
The Flintstones and
The Fugitive.
Talent Associates After a stint in the army, Melnick returned to New York City in the late '50s, becoming a partner in
Talent Associates, a production company founded several years earlier by
David Susskind and
Leonard Stern. Among other productions, TA created the
Emmy Award winning
secret agent satire Get Smart that ran from 1965 to 1970 on CBS and
NBC, as well as the
police drama N.Y.P.D. that ran on the
American Broadcasting Company (ABC) from 1967 to 1969. ABC paid for a
pilot episode, but did not purchase the series, so Melnick turned to
Grant Tinker at
NBC, who had
Don Adams under contract and were looking for a project for the
comedian. Talent Associates produced the
Emmy Award-winning TV productions aired on CBS, with
Ages of Man starring
John Gielgud in 1966, which included readings from
William Shakespeare's works ranging from
Romeo and Juliet to
Richard II, with critic
Jack Gould of
The New York Times calling it "a viewing occasion to be treasured". In 1967 they presented
Arthur Miller's
Death of a Salesman, starring
Lee J. Cobb, a production that Jack Gould of
The Times described as one "that will stand as the supreme understanding of the tragedy of
Willy Loman." The firm,
Talent Associates, was bought out by
Norton Simon, Inc. in August 1968 for an undisclosed price, with the commitment that the unit would operate independently and the principals would stay on in senior positions to manage the company. Together with
Joseph E. Levine of
Embassy Pictures, Susskind and Melnick produced the
Broadway theatre
musical comedy Kelly, by
Eddie Lawrence and
Mark Charlap. Promotion for the play included an event on the Brooklyn Bridge with a series of chorus girls. The play, a story about the 1886 incident of
Steve Brodie who (claimed to have) jumped off the
Brooklyn Bridge and survived, opened on February 16, 1965. The play lasted only one performance on Broadway, which was later described by Melnick's son as "not his favorite moment in history", but nonetheless one he wore with grace. At that time, MGM was in a financial decline with the studio scaling back production but while head of the studio, he produced several well-received films including the 1975
Neil Simon comedy
The Sunshine Boys (1975) and
Paddy Chayefsky's
Network, directed by
Sidney Lumet, a biting satire of television production that was credited with boosting the studio's financial performance during 1976. In 1976, he left MGM to start IndieProductions (later known as The IndieProd Company) at
Columbia Pictures.
Columbia He was hired by
Columbia Pictures as its president in June 1978 to replace
David Begelman, who had resigned in the wake of an embezzlement scandal. There he oversaw the development of the 1978 picture
Midnight Express and the 1979 films
Kramer vs. Kramer and
The China Syndrome. In 1989, the company set up a joint partnership with
Rastar Productions to start a joint venture Rastar/IndieProd at
Carolco Pictures, headed by Nancy Tanen and Tracy Barone, both of them would eventually join
Channel Productions briefly in 1993. In 1992, Carolco sold off IndieProd, becoming an independent production company once again, and received a four-year $350 million distribution pact with
TriStar Pictures and
Japan Satellite Broadcasting in order to invest money into their own films. == Personal life ==