The production company was founded in 1972 by program executive Thomas L. Miller and former film editor Edward K. Milkis as
Miller-Milkis Productions. The company had an exclusive deal with
Paramount Television to produce television shows. The company bought its first big hit, that of
Happy Days in 1974, which ran for 11 seasons over 10 years, and spawned a lineup of spinoffs. In 1979, the company became
Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions once Robert L. Boyett (who was a creative consultant of
Happy Days at the time) joined the company, before adopting the Miller-Boyett name five years later following Milkis' resignation. Most of the series the company produced for
ABC during the Miller-Boyett era aired on the network's Friday night lineup (known as
TGIF from 1989 to 2000). The company brought out hits that were deemed to be popular, and wanted stronger attention. and the company had six sitcoms on the air during that same season, along with
The Hogan Family (which had moved to
CBS, after a five-season run on
NBC) and the short-lived
The Family Man. Around 1997, Michael Warren, longtime Miller-Boyett associate and co-creator of
Family Matters and
Step by Step, broke his partnership with producer partner William Bickley after twenty-one years and joined
Miller-Boyett Productions; the company was renamed
Miller-Boyett-Warren Productions and produced its last shows,
Meego and
Two of a Kind. After both shows were cancelled, the company was shut down. For the 1997–98 season, a majority of the shows went to CBS through their short-lived
Friday Night Block Party sitcom block, although an attempt to do a sitcom for
The WB collapsed. Originally, the company was set up at
Paramount Television when the company was formed. After Milkis left the company, Miller and Boyett left Paramount to work for
Lorimar Television in 1985, which was folded into
Warner Bros. Television in 1993. Despite the fact that the company shut down as Miller-Boyett-Warren Productions, it was, and still is, referred to as "Miller-Boyett Productions" (or just simply "Miller-Boyett"). In 2013, Boyett returned to television producing under his own production nameplate, Robert L. Boyett Productions. With veteran producer Robert Horn, he co-created the
FX sitcom
Partners, which was co-produced by his company, along with Robert Horn Productions,
Grammnet Productions, and
Debmar-Mercury, among other contributors. Robert L. Boyett Productions alone was originally said to be in development with Jeff Franklin Productions for the upcoming 2016
Full House sequel series,
Fuller House. However, when a front cover image of the first
Fuller House shooting script was made public in late July 2015, both Miller and Boyett were listed as executive producers on the script, with Miller-Boyett Productions being listed at the bottom of the cover page—thus confirming that the production company has been effectively resurrected. ==Production team members==