Pross and Gammill started to write comedy sketches together for Saturday Night Live in 1979.[2]
In 1981 they co-wrote Steve Martin's fourth NBC special "Steve Martin's Best Show Ever" with such notable comedy writers as Eric Idle, Dan Aykroyd, and Lorne Michaels. They spent the next few years as part of the original writing staff of "Late Night With David Letterman,"[2] and also contributed short films for the show after leaving the staff.
Tom Gammill and Max Pross joined the Seinfeld writing team during the show's fifth season (1993-1994). They left the show after the seventh season (1995-1996), but took advantage of a loophole in their post-Seinfeld writing contract to script one further episode for the eighth season.[4] On the Seinfeld DVDs, Jerry Seinfeld credits the pair with bringing a "buoyancy" to the writing staff that aided the development of fresh ideas during the show's middle years. Seinfeld mentioned that he and co-creator Larry David were initially worried about Gammill and Pross' writing style, as the pair created stories that were a "level of silliness" that the show had never gone to before. Ultimately the worry was unfounded, as the pair ended up writing some of the most famous Seinfeld shows during the series' run.[citation needed] The episodes they wrote were:
Tom Gammill and Max Pross wrote one episode of The Critic titled "Marty's First Date",[5] in which Marty invites his dad Jay to career day at his school where Marty develops a crush on a Cuban girl named Carmen. They go on a date but when Carmen decides to fly back to Cuba, Marty follows her and Jay must get his son back. It was the second episode of season 1 and aired on 2/2/1994.
Gammill and Pross worked as uncredited writers on Son of the Mask, the Raspberry Award-winning 2005sequel to the 1994 comedy film, The Mask. They are also given story credits on the 2007 comedy Full of It, in which a teenage boy is forced to live out the lies he had told in order to become popular. Dialogue in Ghostbusters II refers to a "Gammill and Pross Infant Acuity Test" though their contribution to the film is unknown.
References
^ abcShen, Edward (May 6, 1996). "State Man Brings His Experiences to TV Show". The Record-Journal. p. 9. Born in Darien, Gammill graduated from Darien High School in 1975.