Redford earned a degree in history and literature from Harvard University in 1980.[9] While at Harvard, he wrote for The Harvard Lampoon and appeared in numerous plays, including experimental work by classmate Peter Sellars.[10]
After college, Redford spent 10 years acting in regional theater productions[9] for groups like the Boston Shakespeare Company[10] and the Denver Center Theatre Company (DCTC)[11] before moving to Hollywood.[9]
Career
Early career
In the early 1990s, Redford divided his time between writing for television and acting in commercials.[9] During this time, he co-wrote — with Ed Redlich — the Lifetime Television Christmas movie Ebbie, which starred Susan Lucci.[12] His first job writing scripts for prime-time television was for the 1995 Fox TV sitcom Partners.[9]
Redford and Sorkin were again nominated for the WGA Award 60-minute episodic drama in 2001 for The West Wing: "Somebody's Going to Emergency, Somebody's Going to Jail," and in 2002 for The West Wing: "Game On."
Redford was promoted to supervising producer in the second season of The West Wing. He and his fellow producers won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series for The West Wing in 2003. The production team was nominated for an Emmy Award again for work on The West Wing in 2004, the series’ fifth season.[14]
Other Work
Redford worked as an executive producer for LAX, The Unit, and Vanished. He was a consulting producer on Kevin Falls’ series Journeyman.
In 2008, Redford joined the crew of Dirty Sexy Money as a writer and co-executive producer.
In 2010, he wrote the Big Love fourth-season episode “The Greater Good” and was the co-executive producer for two episodes in the series.
Redford and the writing team for The Newsroom (Brendan Fehily, David M. Handelman, Cinque Henderson, Ian Reichbach, Amy Rice, Aaron Sorkin, Gideon Yago) were nominated for the 2012 Writers Guild of America Award for Television: New Series.[15]
^ abO'Connor, John; Goodland, Katharine (9 December 2010). A Directory of Shakespeare in Performance 1970–1990: Volume 2, USA and Canada. London: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 1377. ISBN978-0230546776.