Sara James Tarses (March 16, 1964 – February 1, 2021) was an American television producer and television studio executive. She was the president of ABC Entertainment from 1996 to 1999, the first woman and one of the youngest people to hold such a post in an American broadcast network.[1]
Early life
Tarses was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the daughter of television writer Jay Tarses and Rachel Tarses (née Newdell), on March 16, 1964.[2][3] Her younger sister, Mallory Tarses, is a fiction writer and high school English teacher,[4] and a younger brother, Matt Tarses, is a producer and screenwriter (The Goldbergs,Scrubs,Sports Night).[5]
After graduating from college, Tarses became an assistant to the talent executive on the 1985–1986 season of Saturday Night Live. She then worked as a casting director for Lorimar Productions, filling roles for mid-run Perfect Strangers.[8]
Tarses left NBC in 1996 amidst a significant amount of press coverage.[10][11] From 1996 to 1999, she was president of ABC Entertainment.[12][13][14] She resigned in August 1999 with two years remaining on her contract.[2] At the time of her departure she had one sitcom, one comedy, and one legal drama on ABC's schedule. [15]
Tarses was the subject of what Bill Carter of The New York Times called an "unflattering profile" written by Lynn Hirschberg in The New York Times Magazine in July 1997, in which she "was portrayed as an embattled executive whose competence and professionalism was being questioned in Hollywood show business circles".[13][16][17]
Amanda Peet, who played Jordan McDeere, the head of fictional network NBS on the NBC show Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, said her character "is loosely based" on Tarses.[18][19] Tarses was a consultant for Studio 60.
In 2005, Tarses partnered on a production company called Pariah Productions with producer Gavin Polone.[20] Later, she had a company called FanFare Productions at Sony Pictures Television.[21]
She served on the board of directors and the advisory board of directors for Young Storytellers, an arts education nonprofit organization based in Los Angeles.[2][29] She was a volunteer at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.[2]
Death
Tarses had a stroke in the fall of 2020, spent time in a coma, and then died in Los Angeles on February 1, 2021, at age 56 from what a family spokesperson called "complications of a cardiac event".[25][30]
^Perry, Matthew; Kudrow, Lisa (2022). Friends, lovers, and the big terrible thing: a memoir (First U.S. edition, first International ed.). New York: Flatiron Books. ISBN978-1-250-86644-8.
^"Board of Directors". youngstorytellers.com. Archived from the original on February 1, 2021. Retrieved February 1, 2021.