Phoef Sutton

Robert Christopher "Phoef" Sutton (born September 11, 1958) is an American writer and producer. His film credits include ''Mrs. Winterbourne'' and ''The Fan'', both released in 1996. Phoef — the first name that he uses both personally and professionally — is pronounced "feef", and was a childhood nickname given to him in infancy by his brothers.

Sutton was born in Washington, D.C. and grew up in Virginia. A 1981 graduate of James Madison University, he began his career writing scripts for ''Newhart''. He later became a writer for and executive producer of ''Cheers''. He collaborated with Bob Newhart again on the 1992 TV series ''Bob'' and worked as a creative consultant on 1990s TV series ''Almost Perfect'' and ''NewsRadio''. With Mark Jordan Legan he wrote and produced the cult comedy series ''Thanks'' about the Pilgrims' first years in America and co-wrote a 2017 episode of ''Kevin Can Wait''. He was also the showrunner and producer for the NBC series ''The Fighting Fitzgeralds'' and the American version of ''Coupling''. In 1999, he published the novel ''Always Six O'Clock''. In 2012, he published the novel ''The Dead Man: The Midnight Special'' and ''The Dead Man: Reborn''. In May 2015, his novel ''Fifteen Minutes to Live'' was published by Brash Books. His other novels include ''Crush'', and the two sequels ''Heart Attack & Vine'' and ''Colorado Boulevard'', as well as two books co-authored with Janet Evanovich: ''Wicked Charms'' and ''Curious Minds''.

From 2005 to 2009, Sutton was a consulting producer for ''Boston Legal''. In 2010, Sutton became a staff writer on the FX series ''Terriers'' starring Donal Logue. He was also a writer and consulting producer for the Rob Schneider sitcom ''Rob'', the SyFy Channel series ''Defiance'', and the showrunner and writer for the TV Land original sitcom ''The Soul Man''. He is an adviser to the American Shakespeare Center. Provided by Wikipedia

Showing 1 - 7 results of 7 for search 'Phoef Sutton'

Refine results

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7