American Masters

American Masters
Created by Susan Lacy
Theme music composer Jonathan Tunick (1986–1995)
Country of origin United States
Original language English
No. of seasons 36
No. of episodes 279 (as of January 11, 2022) (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers Susan Lacy (1986–2013), Michael Kantor (2014–present)
Producer WNET
Original release
Network PBS
Release June 22, 1986 –
present
Previous logo

American Masters is a PBS television series which produces biographies on enduring writers, musicians, visual and performing artists, dramatists, filmmakers, and those who have left an indelible impression on the cultural landscape of the United States. It is produced by WNET in New York City. The show debuted on PBS in 1986.

Groups or organizations featured include: Actors Studio, Algonquin Round Table, Group Theatre, Sweet Honey in the Rock, Women of Tin Pan Alley, Negro Ensemble Company, Juilliard School, the Beat Generation, the singer-songwriters of the 1970s, Sun Records, vaudeville, and Warner Bros.

History

American Masters, a series "devoted to America's 'greatest native-born and adopted' artists", was originally scheduled to premiere in September 1985; for "logistical scheduling reasons" the premiere was delayed until summer 1986, though on October 16, 1985, an American Masters "special" called Aaron Copland: A Self-Portrait was aired.

The first of the 15 first-season episodes was Private Conversations, a "cinema-verite documentary by Christian Blackwood done in that trickiest of cinematic forms: a film about a film, in this instance the television version of Death of a Salesman, directed by Volker Schlöndorff". It aired on June 23, 1986, as one of two episodes not specifically commissioned for the show's first season.

Susan Lacy, American Masters creator and former executive producer, selected each subject, matched them to the specific filmmakers, and oversaw a first-season budget of $8 million. Before creating the series Lacy had been the senior programmer for Great Performances and one of the "architects" of American Playhouse, having written the original proposal for the latter. At the time of the show's premiere, she was also the East Coast head of the Sundance Institute.

In 2014, Michael Kantor succeeded Lacy as executive producer. As an independent producer, Kantor had directed one American Masters episode (Quincy Jones: In the Pocket, season 16, episode 4) and produced and directed the Emmy Award-winning series, Broadway: The American Musical and Make 'Em Laugh: The Funny Business of America with WNET. As head of the American Masters series, Kantor created the American Masters podcast in 2016 and the theatrical imprint, American Masters Pictures, in 2016, which brought ten films to the Sundance Film Festival over a period of five years.

After the show's first two seasons, American Masters began producing most of its episodes; in those cases, it hires directors, arranges for funding, manages the budget, and supervises the editing; the show reserves the right to make the final cut on every film it produces. The American Masters production company occasionally plays a more limited role and co-produces some of its episodes, such as the 2005 documentary on Bob Dylan, No Direction Home, and then in 2010 The Doors, When You're Strange.

Episodes

Season Episodes Originally aired
First aired Last aired
1 12 June 23, 1986 September 8, 1986
2 10 July 6, 1987 November 25, 1987
3 8 July 11, 1988 June 26, 1989
4 10 July 3, 1989 December 20, 1989
5 8 July 2, 1990 September 17, 1990
6 9 July 1, 1991 May 1, 1992
7 3 March 14, 1993 March 24, 1993
8 2 December 8, 1993 May 13, 1994
9 4 November 30, 1994 March 22, 1995
10 5 November 29, 1995 May 22, 1996
11 5 November 25, 1996 June 25, 1997
12 6 September 17, 1997 June 17, 1998
13 7 October 28, 1998 August 18, 1999
14 7 November 1, 1999 May 31, 2000
15 7 September 27, 2000 April 23, 2001
16 8 October 7, 2001 March 1, 2002
17 8 October 2, 2002 July 30, 2003
18 8 September 3, 2003 August 18, 2004
19 7 May 11, 2005 September 27, 2005
20 8 May 10, 2006 January 3, 2007
21 5 April 4, 2007 July 25, 2007
22 7 September 12, 2007 May 7, 2008
23 8 September 23, 2008 July 1, 2009
24 7 September 2, 2009 July 21, 2010
25 8 September 20, 2010 June 1, 2011
26 9 October 21, 2011 May 14, 2012
27 6 September 24, 2012 May 20, 2013
28 9 September 10, 2013 August 29, 2014
29 7 September 23, 2014 July 10, 2015
30 9 September 4, 2015 May 27, 2016
31 7 October 25, 2016 May 26, 2017
32 9 September 1, 2017 August 31, 2018
33 12 September 7, 2018 August 2, 2019
34 7 September 13, 2019 July 10, 2020
35 12 October 20, 2020 July 27, 2021
36 8 January 11, 2022 December 27, 2022
37 3 to date January 24, 2023 TBD

Reception

Jevon Phillips of Los Angeles Times called the episode "Amy Tan: Unintended Memoir", "Fantastic."