David Simkins(I)
- Producer
- Writer
- Additional Crew
David Simkins began his career in film and television while still in
high school in South Bend, Indiana. David was a member of the award
winning and nationally recognized Junior Achievement sponsored comedy
television show
Beyond Our Control (1968).
Four years of writing, directing, editing, acting, and cutting math
class led him to the University of Iowa where he majored in film and
broadcasting. After realizing he'd learned more about film and
broadcasting in
Beyond Our Control (1968)
than any college course could ever teach him, he coasted into the
theater department, acted in almost a dozen plays, wrote short stories
under the guidance of folks from the Writers' Workshop (not a member,
just a hanger-on), and made some oddball narrative films to satisfy his
grumbling professors. A few years later, he gathered his BA degree and
headed for Los Angeles. David, with the help of producer
Donald P. Borchers (a fellow BOC
alum), landed a job at Sandy Howard Productions. After six months
answering phones, gophering, and doing script breakdowns for upcoming
productions David joined Don at New World Pictures. It was there, as a
development executive, that David assisted in the production of such
genre classics as
Children of the Corn (1984),
and Crimes of Passion (1984).
After successfully putting two original ideas into development at New
World, David pitched a third idea that was rejected. He returned to his
office, closed the door, began writing and two weeks later got his spec
script,
Adventures in Babysitting (1987),
to Stacey Sher who gave it to producers
Lynda Obst and
Debra Hill. In short order, David
quit his job at New World and began his career as a writer for film.
After the Disney release of
Adventures in Babysitting (1987),
there followed a several year run of production rewrites, optioned
originals, and sold pitches. It was a meeting with screenwriter
Jeffrey Boam and television producer
Carlton Cuse that started David in his
second career in television. Boam and Cuse had sold a concept for a
western to the Fox Network. David wrote the pilot,
The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. (1993)
(shared credit with Boam and Cuse) and the series was launched.
Ambitious and fun, "Brisco" didn't catch fire with enough of an
audience to keep it on the air and after one season it was gone. But
David was back in the TV business. During the past few seasons he's
sold (unproduced) pilots to CBS and Fox, consulted, written, and
produced for
Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (1993),
Dark Angel (2000),
Roswell (1999), and
Charmed (1998), as well as
co-creating two series in the same year,
Vengeance Unlimited (1998),
and Mercy Point (1998). Latest
exploits include helping Syfy get Warehouse 13 out of development and
on the air (pilot and two seasons as Executive Producer) and a season
on Fox's Human Target.