Robert and Michelle King

Robert and Michelle King

LOS ANGELES–Michelle and Robert King (The Good Wife) were awarded the 2014 Caucus Honors for Producer, and Alex Graves (Game of Thrones) won the Caucus Honors for Director at The Caucus for Producers, Writers and Directors 32nd annual Awards honoring outstanding creative television and new media, held December 11 at the Skirball Cultural Center, announced Norman S. Powell, Chair of The Caucus, and Chuck Fries, President of the Foundation.

Fred Willard and  Michelle King. Photo © Steve Cohen

Fred Willard and
Michelle King.

Host Fred Willard (Modern Family) presented the Producer Honors Award to Michelle King (Robert was filming an episode in New York). “The path of producing is puttingtogether a great team,” said King in her acceptance speech. “We’re lucky to have an amazing, talented cast led byJulianna Margulies, a room full of some of the smartest writers in the business, a terrific roster of directors likeRosemary Rodriguez, and a fantastic hardworking crew. So thank you so much for honoring the 22 episodes a year of fabulousness.”

Alex Graves was presented with the Director Honors Award by Charles Floyd Johnson (NCIS) and told a story describing a somewhat typical day of shooting Game of Thrones in Morocco, with dragons firebombing a plaza, a huge performance by Emilia Clarke dressed as Khaleesi on horseback, and 8,000 Unsullied soldiers marching against the perfect seven minutes of sunset. “We had nine minutes to do the seven minute sunset shot, and we went out and got it,” said Graves. “The thing about it is, whether it’s the cast of 40 major characters and crew of a couple hundred in Croatia, Iceland, Northern Ireland, Africa, and now Spain, the one word you never hear on that show is ‘can’t’.”

Charles Floyd Johnson and Alex Graves. Photo © Steve Cohen

Charles Floyd Johnson and Alex Graves. Photo © Steve Cohen

Caucus Award recipients also celebrated at the gala were executive producer Vin Di Bona, presented with the Caucus Lifetime Achievement Award by Robert Papazian, the 2013 Lifetime Award honoree; Sony Pictures Television President Steve Mosko for Executive of the Year, presented and accepted by his son, Matt; producer-director Lee Miller, presented with the Caucus Chair’s Award by Norman S. Powell; producer Scott Carrey, presented with the Caucus Distinguished Service Award by producer Sharon Arnett; and Variety Co-Editor-in-Chief Andrew Wallenstein, presented with the Caucus Journalism Award by his colleague Claudia Eller.

The Caucus Foundation’s Gold Circle Awards were presented to two student filmmaker grant recipients, Ryan Moody of UCLA took the First Place prize of a $60,000 Panasonic camera package for his film Obituaries, and Ko-Rely Pi of Columbia University won the Second Place award of a $20,000 Illuminate post-production package for Pitter Patter Goes My Heart. Writer and producer David Weddle (CSI) presented the inaugural Television and New Media Award to Chapman University – Dodge College of Film and Media Arts for the television pilot Sharp Left Turn, accepted by Associate Producer Jacob Moncrief.

A significant portion of the proceeds from the dinner will benefit The Caucus Foundation, which has provided grants and awards of $1.3 million to 138 worthy students to complete their film, television or new media projects.

Robert Papazian and   Vin Di Bona. Photo © Steve Cohen

Robert Papazian and
Vin Di Bona. Photo © Steve Cohen

“These awards are a representation of the 41 years that The Caucus has worked to elevate the quality and diversity of television and to protect the creative freedom of the television and new media creative community,” said Fries. “The Caucus has been in the forefront of supporting aspiring filmmakers and education in the growth of digital, mobile and the vast expansion of technology through industry-wide panels and mentorship programs.”

Among the other nominees in the Producer category were Mara Brock Akil, Noah Hawley, Callie Khouri, Nic Pizzolatto, and Matthew Weiner. Director nominees included Alan Carter, Ryan Murphy, Tyler Perry, Rosemary Rodriguez, and Daniel Sackheim.

Presenters included TV personality Tanya Hart, writer-director Shilpi Roy, and veteran TV producers Dennis Doty and Syd Vinnedge; entertainment by Chris Hardin Band. Chuck Fries chaired the dinner; Lee Miller and Vin Di Bona were vice chairs and producers; Dennis Doty and Norman S. Powell were consultants; and Barry Greenberg was talent producer. Wine sponsored by Mis En Bouteille Wine Company.

 Alex Graves

Alex Graves

The Caucus for Producers, Writers & Directors 2014 Award Recipients:

Producer Honors Award Winner
Michelle & Robert King (The Good Wife)

Director Honors Award Winner
Alex Graves (Game of Thrones)

Caucus Lifetime Achievement Award
Vin Di Bona, CEO, Vin Di Bona Productions Foundation and Chairman, FishBowl Worldwide Media

Caucus Executive of the Year Award

Steve Mosko

Steve Mosko

Steve Mosko, President, Sony Pictures Television

Caucus Chair’s Award
Lee Miller, President, Lee Miller Productions and Treasurer of The Caucus

Caucus Distinguished Service Award
Scott Carrey, Digital Media/Technology Specialist and New Media Chair of The Caucus

The Caucus Journalism Award
Andrew Wallenstein, Co-Editor-in-Chief, Variety

2014 Caucus Gold Circle Awards:

Vin Di Bona

Vin Di Bona

First Place Winner
Ryan Moody, UCLA, for Obituaries

Second Place Winner
Ko-Rely Pi, Columbia University, for Pitter Patter Goes My Heart

2014 Caucus Television and New Media Award
Chapman University – Dodge College of Film and Media Arts for the television pilot Sharp Left Turn

Husband-and-wife Michelle and Robert King are the co-creators and executive producers of the electrifying political drama, The Good Wife. The show has received widespread critical acclaim and won numerous awards, including five Emmys, and the 2014 Television Critics Association award for Outstanding Achievement in Drama.

Lee Miller

Lee Miller

Emmy and Humanitas award winner Alex Graves is a producer and director for film and television. He has helmed some of the most gripping dramas on television including The West Wing, The Newsroom and the dark and brilliant Game of Thrones. Nominated with awards recognizing directing, writing, cast, visual effects or overall quality, Game of Thrones has received 42 Emmy Award nominations, including four consecutive Outstanding Drama Series nominations, with ten wins.

As president of Sony Pictures Television, Steve Mosko oversees all television operations for Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) worldwide. An SPE executive for more than two decades,Mosko leads the largest

independent television studio, a company that ranks as a leader in the production and distribution of programming around the world. Mosko also oversees pay cable, video-on-demand, pay per view, digital networks, advertiser sales, and the studio’s international networks. Under Mosko’s direction, SPT programming has been awarded the industry’s top honors including Primetime and Daytime Emmys, Golden Globe Awards, and Peabody awards, among others.

Andrew Wallenstein

Andrew Wallenstein

A pioneer in comedic reality programming and a 35-year entertainment industry veteran, Peabody and four time Emmy Award-winning executive producer Vin Di Bona is CEO of Vin Di Bona Productions and Chairman of FishBowl Worldwide Media. He is the creator of America’s Funniest Home Videos, the longest-running primetime entertainment show on ABC, currently in its 25th year on the air. Not only credited with bringing the reality genre to network broadcasting, 25 years later, it is evident that Di Bona also set the stage for today’s universal YouTube culture by creating an appetite and platform for user-generated content. Di Bona has produced and directed television movies, broadcast and cable series and network specials including Entertainment TonightMacGyver, Trump Unauthorized, Sherman Oaks, For the Love of

Nancy and most recently Upload with Shaquille O’Neal and Tone It Up.

Lee Miller is president of Lee Miller Productions and treasurer of The Caucus. Miller has had a most varied television career as both producer and director, with more than 2,000 hours of diverse television programming, including film dramas, variety specials and series, situation comedies, news documentaries, medical television, and live event specials such as The Tony Awards, The Oscars, The Emmys, The People’s Choice Awards, and the 1991-2011 Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy 20-hour Telethons.

Scott Carrey

Scott Carrey

Boasting a unique hybrid of business, technological and creative expertise, Scott Carrey has been intrinsically involved in entertainment and technology-based businesses for more than 20 years and is considered a leading expert in digital workflows. His vast experience has overlapped many types of projects from traditional film and television productions, to new media and special venue applications. Carrey serves as The Caucus New Media Chair.

Andrew Wallenstein is co-editor-in-chief, digital, of Variety.com and Variety magazine. He has been with the publication since 2011, where he oversees coverage of the entertainment industry, with a focus on technology. He was at The Hollywood Reporter from 2002-10, where he held various top posts including editor of THR.com. Wallenstein has been an on-air contributor for NPR’s All Things Considered for nearly a decade and also hosted the TV Guide Channel’s Square Off, in 2006-07.