Christopher Lloyd was an American television producer and screenwriter, with a net worth of $200 million. Do not be confused with the actor Christopher Lloyd, Christopher Lloyd made his money as a co-creator of the show “Modern Family.”

He co-created the series with Steven Levitan. He has also written for and executive produced several other famous shows, such as “The Golden Girls,” “Wings,” and “Frasier.” Lloyd received 12 Emmy Awards for his work on “Modern Family” and “Frasier,” setting a series producer record.

Who is Christopher Lloyd?

Christopher Lloyd was born on June 18, 1960, in Los Angeles, CA. His mother was Arline, while his father was television producer and screenwriter David Lloyd, who wrote for such big sitcoms as “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” “Taxi,” “Cheers,” and subsequently “Wings” and “Frasier.” Christopher Lloyd has four siblings: Stephen, Douglas, Julie, and Amy.

How old is Christopher Lloyd?

He is currently 63 years old.

What is Christopher Lloyd’s net worth?

He is estimated to be worth $200 Million.

What is Christopher Lloyd’s career?

Just like his father, Lloyd found his success developing, producing, and writing for television. He began his career in 1986 as a writer on the NBC sitcom “The Golden Girls,” starring Betty White, Beatrice Arthur, Rue McClanahan, and Estelle Getty as four older women sharing a home in Miami, Florida. Lloyd served as a screenwriter on the first four seasons of the series through 1989, penning such episodes as “Second Motherhood,” “Dorothy’s Prized Pupil,” “Mixed Blessings,” “Blind Date,” and “Little Sister.”

Following the Golden Girls, in 1991, Lloyd began writing for another NBC sitcom, “Wings.” The show was set in a fictional airport in Nantucket, Massachusetts, and starred Tim Daly, Steven Weber, Crystal Bernard, Thomas Haden Church, David Schramm, and Rebecall Schull, among others.

Lloyd left Wings in 1993 and went on to create and executive produce his third NBC sitcom, “Frasier.” The show, a spinoff of the sitcom “Cheers,” stars Kelsey Grammer as the titular doctor, who returns to his hometown of Seattle, Washington, to conduct a radio show. “Frasier” went on to be Lloyd’s most successful professional venture, winning a record five straight Emmy Awards for Outstanding Comedy Series. Lloyd departed “Frasier” after the seventh season, but returned for the eleventh and final season in 2004.

Lloyd followed the huge hit “Frasier” with two less popular shows. His first project was the CBS sitcom “Out of Practice,” which he co-created with Joe Keenan. Christopher Gorham, Stockard Channing, Ty Burrell, Jennifer Tilly, Henry Winkler, and Paula Marshall appeared in the film, which was about a dysfunctional doctor family. “Out of Practice” was canceled in its first season in 2006. The next year, Lloyd and Steven Levitan co-created the Fox sitcom “Back to You”. Notably, the show reunited Lloyd with “Frasier” star Kelsey Grammer, who played one of two adversarial television news anchors; Patricia Heaton starred opposite him. “Back to You” was eventually terminated during its first season in 2008.

Source: www.ghgossip.com

Pin It