Master of the sitcom, Marshall dies at 81

LOS ANGELES -- Writer-director Garry Marshall, whose deft touch with comedy and romance led to a string of TV hits that included Happy Days and Laverne & Shirley and the box-office successes Pretty Woman and Runaway Bride, has died. He was 81.

Marshall died Tuesday at a hospital in Burbank, Calif., of complications from pneumonia after a stroke, his publicist, Michelle Bega, said in a statement.

The director also had an on-screen presence, using his New York accent and gruff delivery in colorful supporting roles that included a practical-minded casino boss unswayed by Albert Brooks' disastrous luck in Lost in America and a crass network executive in Soapdish.

Henry Winkler, who starred as Fonzie on Happy Days, saluted Marshall in a tweet as "larger than life, funnier than most, wise and the definition of friend."

Richard Gere, who starred opposite Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman, said in a statement that "everyone loved Garry. He was a mentor and a cheerleader and one of the funniest men who ever lived. He had a heart of the purest gold and a soul full of mischief. He was Garry."

Marshall, brother of actress-director Penny Marshall, earned a degree in journalism from Northwestern University and worked at the New York Daily News. But he found he was better at writing punch lines.

He began his entertainment career in the 1960s selling jokes to comedians, then moved to writing sketches for The Jack Paar Tonight Show in New York. He caught the eye of comic Joey Bishop, who called him to Los Angeles to write for The Joey Bishop Show.

Sitcoms quickly proved to be Marshall's forte. He and then-writing partner Jerry Belson turned out scripts for the most popular comedies of the '60s, including The Lucy Show, The Danny Thomas Show and The Dick Van Dyke Show.

Marshall and Belson detoured into screenwriting in 1967 with How Sweet It Is, starring Debbie Reynolds, and followed it up with The Grasshoppers (1970) with Jacqueline Bisset. But the two men kept their hand in TV.

In 1970, they turned Neil Simon's Broadway hit, The Odd Couple, into a sitcom starring Jack Klugman and Tony Randall and produced by Marshall. It ran for five seasons and proved the beginning of a TV sitcom empire.

In January 1979, Marshall had three of the top five comedies on the air with Happy Days, which ran from 1974-84; Laverne & Shirley (1976-83), which starred Penny Marshall and Cindy Williams, and Mork and Mindy (1978-82) with newcomer Robin Williams.

"I believe that television was, and still is, the only medium that can truly reach society's lowest common denominator and entertain those people who maybe can't afford a movie or a play. So why not reach them and do it well?" he said in a 1995 autobiography.

After cranking out what Marshall once estimated to be 1,000 sitcom episodes, he switched his focus to the big screen with 1984's The Flamingo Kid, a coming-of-age story starring Matt Dillon, which Marshall wrote and directed.

He concentrated on directing with his later films, including 1986's Nothing in Common, with Tom Hanks and Jackie Gleason; Overboard (1987) starring Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell; Beaches (1988) with Bette Midler and Barbara Hershey; Pretty Woman (1990) and Dear God (1996) with Greg Kinnear.

Marshall is survived by his wife, Barbara, and the couple's three children, Lori, Kathleen and Scott.

Funeral services will be private but a memorial is being planned for his birthday on Nov. 13, his publicist's statement said.

Information for this story was contributed by Andrew Dalton and Sandy Cohen of the Associated Press.

A Section on 07/21/2016

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