Walt Disney Network Television/Touchstone Television
After the cancellation of the three prime-time series on CBS in 1983, Disney ventured back into primetime television.[10] The Touchstone Films banner was used for television by then-new Disney CEO Michael Eisner in the 1984–1985 television season, with the short lived western Wildside.[11] By 1985, Disney signed an agreement with sitcom producers Witt-Thomas-Harris Productions.[12] In the next season, Disney's television production unit produced a hit in The Golden Girls using the Touchstone Films brand.[13] The Touchstone name would be used for more mature shows, while the Disney name would be used for more family friendly series.
By the 1986–1987 television season, Disney was producing two shows for the fall season, Sidekicks, produced under the Walt Disney Network Television label; and The Ellen Burstyn Show, produced under the Touchstone Television label. Both were cancelled after the fall 1986 season, to be followed up by two more shows produced by Touchstone, the ABC show Harry, and the Fox show Down and Out in Beverly Hills.[14][15][16] In 1987, Randy Reiss was named president of both television units.[17] In the fall of 1987, Disney sold its third television drama, The Oldest Rookie, to CBS.[18] In late 1988, after Witt/Thomas/Harris pulled out of the TeleVentures production unit (they were co-founders along with Tri-Star Pictures and Stephen J. Cannell Productions), Disney began selling, marketing and distributing Witt/Thomas programs exclusively.
On April 18, 1989, Walt Disney Network Television and Touchstone Television were grouped together under Garth Ancier, the then-president of network television for Walt Disney Studios.[22] The following week, Disney struck development deals with upstart Wind Dancer Productions (headed by Roseanne alumnus Matt Williams), and KTMB Productions (backed by The Golden Girls writers Kathy Speer, Terry Grossman, Barry Fanaro and Mort Nathan).[23] The first projects were Wind Dancer's Carol & Company and KTMB's The Fanelli Boys, both of which aired on NBC.[24][25] That same year, Disney signed a long-term contract with producer Michael Jacobs and his production company. Among the first projects under the collaboration was Singer & Sons, for NBC in 1990. The company also had a contract with producer Terry Louise Fisher, after she quit L.A. Law due to disputes with co-creator Steven Bochco and studio 20th Television, then-known as 20th Century Fox Television.
With difficulties of selling in the off-network syndicated market, Disney television executives decided in late September 1990 that Hull High, then on NBC, or a potential NBC mid-season replacement in Disney Action-Adventure Hour, would be its last hour-long drama. High's pilot cost the company $4.5 million.[28] The company also had another drama in collaboration with Stephen J. Cannell, The 100 Lives of Black Jack Savage, which was produced under the Walt Disney Network Television label.[29][30] In 1991, Disney collaborated with Michael Jacobs and Jim Henson Productions on a primetime sitcom with puppets by Jim Henson's Creature Shop, Dinosaurs, which debuted on ABC.[31] In 1992, the Touchstone Television label moved into producing longer forms for television, focusing on more adult-oriented fare with its first telefilm for CBS about Edna Buchanan, a Miami Herald crime reporter who won a Pulitzer Prize.[32]
In 1992, KTMB Productions left Disney for Paramount. Eventually the team split into two separate production companies, one led by Speer and Grossman, the other led by Fanaro and Nathan.[34] Within that same year, Wind Dancer Productions had received an exclusive deal with the ABC television network, with Disney serving as distributor of their series.[35] And also that year, Michael Jacobs had renewed his deal with the studio.[36] Also in May of that year, the company signed a deal with Grant/Tribune Productions, a joint venture between ex-CBS broadcaster Bud Grant and Tribune Broadcasting (who was subsequently renamed to Bud Grant Productions after Tribune pulled out)[37] to distribute their programming, with Cutters the only one that came out of the deal.[38] In 1993, Disney had reached a deal with comedian Sinbad and his David & Golitah Productions company for a film and television deal.[39]
On August 24, 1994, with Jeffrey Katzenberg's resignation, Richard Frank became head of Walt Disney Television and Telecommunications, a new group taking in Touchstone Television and other television units of the Disney studios.[40] In 1995, they returned to producing dramas with Nowhere Man.[41] That same year, Wind Dancer was signed to a new deal with Disney, following the expiration of their contract with ABC.[42]
In April 1996, with the ongoing post-Disney-CC/ABC merger and the retirement of its president, Walt Disney Television and Telecommunications' divisions were reassigned to other groups, with Walt Disney Television and Touchstone Television transferred to the Walt Disney Studios.[43] In 1997, Disney struck a deal with Imagine Entertainment to launch a television venture.[44] On November 1, 1997, David Neuman assumed the presidency of Touchstone Television while retaining his post as president of Walt Disney Network Television.[45] In March 1998, Touchstone Television was placed under Buena Vista Television Productions, a newly formed group under chairman Lloyd Braun, along with Walt Disney Network Television.[46] In June 1998, former ABC chief Greer Shephard and NYPD Blue director Michael M. Robin launched a production company with an exclusive agreement at the studio.[47] In May 1999, J.J. Abrams, who created Felicity
ABC Studios
In February 2007, Disney announced that Touchstone Television would be renamed ABC Television Studio as part of Disney's push to drop secondary brands like Buena Vista in favor of the Disney, ABC and ESPN brands.[67][11] By the time the name change was implemented that fall, the new name had been modified to ABC Studios.
On August 4, 2008, Lionsgate completed a deal with Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment, the distributor of ABC Studios/Touchstone Television shows on DVD, to acquire the distribution rights to several shows including According to Jim, Reaper, Hope & Faith, 8 Simple Rules and Boy Meets World.[68] At the same time, new DVDs of ABC and ABC Family shows phased out the Buena Vista Home Entertainment logo at the beginning of the disc and replaced it with the ABC Studios and ABC Family logos, respectively.
In June 2009, ABC Entertainment announced a new organization, effective immediately as ABC Entertainment Group, while consolidating back office functions like business affairs, distribution and scheduling of ABC Studios and ABC Entertainment and retaining separate creative units.