Award tale couldn’t be written better
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Alicia Robinson
TV viewers’ fascination with life in Orange County lives on.
One of Costa Mesa’s funnier native sons, Mitchell Hurwitz, won an
Emmy Sunday for his work on the Fox satire “Arrested Development,”
about life growing up in Orange County.
Hurwitz grew up in Costa Mesa’s Mesa Verde neighborhood and
graduated from Estancia High School in 1981. Now he’s made good in
Hollywood by making fun of a prosperous and dysfunctional -- and
fictional -- Orange County family.
The show won five Emmy awards Sunday, one of which went to Hurwitz
for his writing. Other Emmys were for best comedy series and best
directing in a comedy series. Hurwitz directs a majority of the
shows, said his mother, Judy Gertner. Hurwitz called her from Los
Angeles after his win Sunday night.
“He was totally surprised,” she said. “I think he was in shock. He
knew that the show had gotten seven nominations, but I don’t think
you ever expect to win.”
“Arrested Development” is the story of the Bluth family, whose
patriarch, George, has been jailed for cooking the books at the
family business. His widower son, Michael, tries to hold the rest of
the family together, while raising his own teenage son.
Before his present success, Hurwitz studied at Georgetown
University and then worked as a bellhop while writing scripts,
Gertner said. He started his television career writing for “The
Golden Girls” in 1985, and he’s worked on Ellen Degeneres’ “The Ellen
Show,” the short-lived “John Larroquette Show” and other comedies.
He’s been hilarious since high school, and it’s no surprise to
those who know him that he’s earned critical acclaim, said Barbara
Van Holt, who was Hurwitz’s drama teacher at Estancia High School.
“From his freshman year, you could see how funny he was going to
be,” Van Holt said. “It did not take a genius to figure out that he
was going to be amazing.”
A multi-faceted student, Hurwitz earned good grades, played water
polo and served in student government, as well acting and writing a
sketch comedy show for Estancia’s drama department, a tradition other
student writers have followed, Van Holt said.
That show, called “Wet Paint,” spoofed disaster films of the late
1970s with a sketch about the panic that ensues from a stopped
escalator, and it included a segment called “Gilligan’s Hot Tub.”
“It set a precedent,” Van Holt said. “I’d give anything to find my
videotape of that.”
Gertner said her whole family is funny, but Hurwitz has always
been especially creative. She watches “Arrested Development” every
week, and she’ll even watch episodes more than once, because the
humor is fast and sophisticated, and she doesn’t want to miss
anything.
“It is about a very dysfunctional family, but I’m sure it’s not
about any family in Orange County,” she said.
While the show he created is set in Orange County, Hurwitz now
lives in Pacific Palisades with his wife, actress Mary Jo Keenen, and
their two daughters. But much of the rest of the family is still
here. Gertner still lives in Mesa Verde, Hurwitz’s father lives in
Corona del Mar, and his brother Michael Hurwitz is a surgeon at Hoag
Hospital.
While Gertner is glad her son was recognized for his work, she
said she would have been happy without the golden statuettes.
“I’ve always been proud of him, no matter what he did,” she said.
“Even if he hadn’t won an Emmy, I’d be proud of him.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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