Jan Spencer Scott (September 26, 1914 – April 17, 2003) was an American production designer and art director. She won 11 Primetime Emmy Awards, more than any woman in the history of television and more than any other production designers. Scott was nominated for Emmy Awards a record total of 29 times. She was also a president of the Society of Motion Picture Art Directors and also served as a vice-president, second vice-president and governor of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.[1]
Early years
Scott was born in Water Valley, Mississippi, in 1914. Her family moved to Carbondale, Illinois, while Scott was an infant. Her father worked for a railroad, and her mother was an artist who died when she Scott was one-and-a-half or two years old. She attended Carbondale Community High School and then studied architecture at the University of Chicago.[2]
Art directing
NBC Chicago
While still studying at the University of Chicago, Scott began working at NBC in Chicago. She did design, scenic painting, carpentry, and lighting work for local television programs.[2] Among others, she worked on a news show with Hugh Downs and a cooking show.[3] She did internships at WPTZ in Philadelphia and another at MIT.[2]
She received an Emmy nomination for her art direction on the 1958 production Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates, broadcast as part of the Hallmark Hall of Fame series. For Hans Brinker, she designed an ice rink in Brooklyn. She was also nominated on her work for Big Deal in Loredo.[4]
1960s and 1970s
In 1960, she worked on Sidney Lumet's Emmy-nominated production of Sacco-Vanzetti Story. Scott's work on that production included the courtroom and the jail.[4]
She worked on a television productions of several musicals in the late 1960s, including Brigadoon, Carousel, Kismet, and Kiss Me Kate. She won Emmy Awards for her work on Kismet and Kiss Me Kate.[4][5]
In 1972, she art directed for the PBS production The Scarecrow. Scott later said that it was her favorite production. Her work included interiors for a large New England house.[6]
In 1974, she worked on The Lie for Playhouse 90, another production for which she won two Emmy Awards.[7]
In 1976, she worked on the Roots miniseries. She stayed for the first six episodes. She left the production due to conflicts with Hutu members of the cast.[8]
She moved to Los Angeles in the 1970s, purchasing in a house in the Hollywood Hills.[8]
1980s and 1990s
She next won an Emmy Award for her work on the Evergreen (1985), a miniseries that spanned the history of a Jewish family over a 50-year period. Evergreen was shot partly in Israel and partly in New York's Lower East Side.[8] She won an Emmy Award for Evergreen. She also won Emmy Awards for Foxfire (1987), I'll Be Home for Christmas (1988), and Harvest of Fire (1996).[5]
Later years
Scott died in 2003 at age 88 at her home in the Hollywood Hills.[1] She was posthumously inducted into the Art Directors Guild Hall of Fame in 2006.