15 Facts About Henry Bromell

1.

Alfred Henry Bromell was an American novelist, screenwriter, and director.

2.

Henry Bromell served as a writer and co-executive producer for the show's third season.

3.

Henry Bromell contributed to writing seven episodes for the season.

4.

Henry Bromell was promoted to executive producer for the fourth season and wrote a further 17 episodes.

5.

Henry Bromell scaled back his involvement with the fifth season and became a consulting producer.

6.

Henry Bromell wrote a further two episodes before leaving the crew at the end of the season in 1997.

7.

Henry Bromell contributed to a total of 26 episodes as a writer over three seasons with the series.

8.

Henry Bromell returned as a co-writer and co-executive producer for the feature-length follow-up Homicide: The Movie in 2000.

9.

Henry Bromell wrote and produced for many television series, including Chicago Hope, Northern Exposure, Homicide: Life on the Street, Brotherhood, Carnivale, and Rubicon.

10.

Henry Bromell was nominated in the same category at the Emmys for his work on the 1993 TV series I'll Fly Away, for which he was awarded a Writers Guild of America Award for the episode titled "Amazing Grace".

11.

Henry Bromell co-wrote the pilot of the USA Network TV series Falling Water, which he co-created with Blake Masters.

12.

Henry Bromell attended Eaglebrook School and the United World College of the Atlantic.

13.

Henry Bromell won the Houghton Mifflin Literary Award for his first novel, The Slightest Distance.

14.

Henry Bromell then married writer Trish Soodik, who died of cancer in January 2009; they had a son, William.

15.

Henry Bromell died March 18,2013, of a heart attack, at UCLA Santa Monica hospital at age 65.