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Chris Kreski
American author and screenwriter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Christopher Raymond Kreski (July 31, 1962 – May 9, 2005) was an American writer, biographer and screenwriter.
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Early life and education
Kreski graduated in 1980, from Butler High School and was inducted into the school's hall of fame in 2018.[1] He graduated with a BFA from New York University in 1984.
Writing
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In 1989, during his tenure as the head writer for Remote Control, Kreski met actor Barry Williams, who was one of three celebrity contestants during a "Brady Day" episode. When Williams said that he'd thought about writing a biography, Kreski struck up a partnership. The resulting book, Growing Up Brady: I Was A Teenage Greg sold more than 300,000 copies and established Kreski as an "as told to" celebrity writer. Kreski went on to co-write three best-selling autobiographies with William Shatner, and one with baseball pitcher David Wells.
MTV
Kreski was associated with MTV Networks for over 15 years, and was a writer and consultant for many of its high-profile series and specials, such as Remote Control, Beavis and Butt-Head, Celebrity Deathmatch, and the channel's annual movie and video music awards shows. He was responsible for many of the channel's distinctive in-house promotional spots during the early 1990s. Kreski was also a head writer of The Daily Show and The Martin Short Show.
Bibliography
- Williams, Barry and Kreski, Chris (1992) Growing Up Brady
- Shatner, William and Kreski, Chris (1993) Star Trek Memories
- Shatner, William and Kreski, Chris (1994) Star Trek Movie Memories
- Kreski, Chris (1998) Life Lessons from Xena, Warrior Princess
- Shatner, William and Kreski, Chris (1999) Get A Life!
- Wells, David and Kreski, Chris (2004) Perfect I'm Not
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Professional wrestling
Following the departures of Vince Russo and Ed Ferrara, Kreski became the head writer of the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) in 1999 during the Attitude Era.[2] He is widely credited with writing captivating and layered storylines, and was the helm of WWF creative in some of its all-time peak years of both ratings and profitability. Kreski was replaced as head writer by Stephanie McMahon following the No Mercy PPV event in October 2000,[3] but remained on the creative team until 2002, when he left to pursue other opportunities.[2]
Death
References
External links
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