Bert Stratford began his career as a
singer and actor in 1960. In 1963 he played Hero on Broadway and the
National Tour of "A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum" and
Off-Broadway he played the Boy in "The Fantasticks." He recorded for
Kapp Records, was
Joan Rivers 's opening act
for nearly three years and played more juvenile roles on stage, film
and TV than he cares to remember.
His early theatrical producing career spanned seven years beginning
back in 1976 with The Shirtsleave Theatre Company that produced some
twelve original productions over a two-year run at the well known
Manhattan Theatre Club. On Broadway, Stratford produced "Street Heat"
and "Musical Chairs". Off-Broadway his credits include the
award-winning musicals, "Scrambled Feet " and "Children Of Adam". On
tour his productions included "The Fantasticks", "I Do!, I Do!", "Sugar
Babies", "Hollywood Hotel", "Stars On 45", "Bye Bye Birdie", "The Seven
Year Itch", "Marriage Go Round", "Dick Shawn At Carnegie Hall" and "The
Rainmaker".
As a consultant and TV packager, Stratford worked with Silver Lake
Productions during the mid-80s on several shows for HBO, Showtime, The
British Broadcasting System, Disney Channel, ABC Distribution and
MCA-TV.
His early TV producing credits from the '80s include "The Glen Campbell
Concert" with the BBC, "The Peep Show" for MCA-TV, "Scrambled Feet "
and "Honky Tonk Nights" starring Jackie Gleason, both for for Showtime,
and "The Mainas" for PBS.
Stratford's association and partnership with Romeo Muller date back to
1974. Romeo was one of the most prolific children/family writers whose
credits include such animated classics as "Rudolph The Red Nosed
Reindeer", "Frosty The Snowman", "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town" and
"The Hobbit". Between these them, these two represent seventeen of the
all-time popular network holiday specials.
Has completed successful holiday specials including on NBC "The Twelve
Days Of Christmas", sponsored and tied into a $75 million licensing
program with K-Mart, and the most popular NBC special in five years
entitled "Noel". On ABC, "The Wish That Changed Christmas", sponsored
by McDonald's: in syndication "Peppermint Rose" based on the Mattel
doll, the pilot for Disney's "The Little Mermaid", and "Strawberry
Shortcake", which was tied into a $1.2 billion licensing program.
In a first look deal spanning nearly three years, Stratford developed
several network and cable MOW's with Davis Entertainment Television.
Completed in 1997 were 26 half hours of "Bingo and Molly", a children's
live action/animation pro social series for the Learning Channel, which
won the Cine Golden Eagle Award, The Parents Choice Award, and a Grammy
Award nomination. Also, he produced a series of direct-to-video
animated films for Goodtimes Home Video whose titles include "White
Fang" (wrote/produced) and "The Ten Commandments", and a one-hour crime
drama pilot for CBS and Columbia Tri-Star entitled "The Fugitive
Squad".
Stratford's critically acclaimed Christmas movie entitled "The
Christmas Secret" completed its third consecutive network airing,
starring
Richard Thomas and
Beau Bridges as "Nick" (Santa
Clause). Airing on CBS, this was the third highest-rated movie on TV in
2000, and was sponsored by Johnson & Johnson, General Motors, Nestles,
and K-Mart.
Bruce Graham. who
scripted "Anastasia", Twentieth Century's animated film success,
adapted the screenplay from the critically acclaimed Christmas book
"The Flight Of The Reindeer" by Robert Sullivan.
Stratford is married to actress
Lee Meredith and has two grown
daughters Kim (an artist) and Erica (a nurse).