Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jacqueline Babbin was born on July 26, 1926, in New York City, in the borough of Manhattan. She entered high school at the age of eleven and Smith College at fifteen. She worked as an assistant to the renowned literary agent Audrey Wood in 1943, and Irene Selznick. She was briefly married to a Warner Bros. executive.

  2. Oct 12, 2001 · Jacqueline Babbin, a television writer and producer who won Emmy and Peabody awards, has died. She was 80. She died Saturday at her home in Kent, Conn., after a short illness.

  3. Jacqueline Babbin. Producer: Sybil. Jacqueline Babbin was born on 26 July 1921 in New York City, New York, USA. She was a producer and writer, known for Sybil (1976), All My Children (1970) and 'Way Out (1961).

    • Jacqueline Babbin
    • October 6, 2001
    • July 26, 1921
  4. Oct 14, 2001 · Jacqueline T. Babbin, a television producer who won an Emmy Award for ''Sybil,'' a 1976 TV drama, died on Oct. 6 at her home in Kent, Conn. She was 80. The cause was cancer, said Shirley E. Herz ...

  5. Babbin, Jacqueline (1921–2001) American producer. Born Jacqueline T. Babbin, July 26, 1921, in New York, NY; died Oct 6, 2001, in Kent, Connecticut; graduate of Smith College, 1941; m. Alan Shayne (president of Warner Bros. Television, div.); no children. Theater, film and tv producer, was one of the 1st women head producers, presenting ...

  6. Mar 20, 2020 · Jacqueline Babbin and Barbara Schultz were two of the very few women of their generation to build long and prolific careers in television’s executive ranks. In 1969, serving as executive producer, Schultz launched CBS Children’s Hour with the episode "J.T.," produced by Babbin and written by Jane Wagner, a heart-wrenching tale about a ...

  7. Produced on videotape by Swift’s fellow trailblazer, Jacqueline Babbin, “The Haunting of Rosalind” stands today as a moody, atmospheric time capsule of ‘70s television horror (with associated frights and chills) and a lasting testament to the extreme talents of the women who made it.

    • 40 min
    • 1076
    • UCLA Film & Television Archive
  1. People also search for