Kenny Solms
- Writer
- Producer
- Actor
Kenny Solms began his professional career in New York, teamed with New
York University classmate Gail Parent to write revue material for
Leonard Sillman's Broadway revue New Faces of 1968 and for New York's
famed Upstairs at the Downstairs. His association with Ms. Parent
subsequently became one of the most successful collaborations in
American comedy. Following the runway success of three comedy albums
(including Our Wedding Album, a hilarious spoof of the Luci Baines
Johnson wedding) and a season on Steve Allen's Comedy Hour, Solms
created and wrote the first four seasons of the Emmy Award-winning
Carol Burnett Show for which he received an award from the Writers
Guild of America. He wrote numerous television specials for such stars
as Julie Andrews, Ann-Margret, Mary Tyler Moore, Bing Crosby, Dick Van
Dyke, Anne Bancroft, and Bill Cosby. His writing of Sills and Burnett
at the Met earned him a Peabody Award. Solms wrote and produced The
Smothers Brothers Show, Three Girls Three and two HBO specials starring
Carol Burnett and Martin Mull. Solms wrote the book for the Jule
Styne/Comden & Green musical Lorelei, which starred Carol Channing. He
was reunited with Gail Parent when they adapted her novel Sheila Levine
is Dead and Living in New York into a motion picture starring Roy
Scheider and Jeannie Berlin. Solms has been head writer and producer
for numerous television variety specials including Disneyland's 30th
Anniversary Celebration and Neil Diamond's Hello Again. Solms also
wrote and produced the HBO special The Return of Bruno, Burnett
"Discovers" Domingo for CBS, This Is Your Life, Kelsey Grammer Salutes
Jack Benny, and is a frequent contributor to Touched by an Angel. He
has recently finished writing a new musical for Broadway, Ain't That a
Kick in the Head, based on the songs of Sammy Cahn.