
Terry Louise Fisher, a creator of ‘L.A. Law,' dies at 79
She quickly grew disillusioned with a revolving-door criminal justice system that seemed to her to boil down to a jousting match between opposing lawyers, with little regard for guilt or innocence.
Advertisement
In a 1986 interview with The San Francisco Examiner, she recalled being handed an almost certain victory in an otherwise weak case involving a knife killing because of an oversight by the defense: 'I felt really challenged, and my adrenaline was pumping. I realized I could win this case. And I slept on it. I went, 'My God, has winning become more important than justice?''
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Her unflinching view of the system informed her tenure in television. In 1983, she began writing for 'Cagney & Lacey,' bringing depth and realism to a CBS series that shook up the traditional knuckles-and-nightsticks cop-show genre by focusing on two female New York City police detectives, Christine Cagney (Sharon Gless) and Mary Beth Lacey (Tyne Daly).
Advertisement
One episode that year drew directly from Ms. Fisher's days as a prosecutor, portraying a dying woman forced to submit to a searing round of questioning by the defense in a rape trial. 'It was the first case I saw at the DA's office,' she said in a 1986 interview with the Los Angeles Times.
By portraying the characters not only as savvy crime fighters but also as three-dimensional humans, 'Cagney & Lacey' demonstrated what female companionship looked like, that 'women don't have to compete or be idiots,' Ms. Fisher said in a 1985 interview with The Chicago Tribune, and that it was 'OK for them to fight and still like each other. They're striving for love, work, and friendship, which everyone is striving for.'
She also served as a producer on the show and received her first Emmy Award in 1985.
In addition to her job as a prosecutor, Ms. Fisher put in time in the slicker end of the law field, working as an entertainment lawyer for film companies including 20th Century Fox, the studio behind 'L.A. Law,' before establishing her career in television.
'L.A. Law' represented a major opportunity: It teamed her up with Bochco, who had upended the television landscape with his provocative 1980s series 'Hill Street Blues,' known for its unvarnished look at the messy realities -- emotional and otherwise -- of a big-city police precinct.
On the surface, 'L.A. Law,' with an ensemble cast that included Corbin Bernsen, Jill Eikenberry, Jimmy Smits, and Susan Dey, was the quintessence of 1980s Los Angeles sheen, marked by upscale automobiles, artful coiffures, and a veritable runway of tailored suits and dresses with shoulder pads.
Advertisement
But to her, style was hardly the point. The show (and Ms. Fisher) won multiple Emmys and ran for eight seasons on NBC. In her view, 'L.A. Law' was something less than a love letter to the juris doctor class -- 'I have to admit I'm not the biggest fan of lawyers,' she told the Los Angeles Times -- and more of a vehicle for pushing the prime-time envelope, tackling thorny issues including abortion, sexual harassment, capital punishment, and AIDS.
'My parents told me they always could tell which scenes I wrote and which ones Bochco wrote,' she recalled. 'They knew I had written the sensitive scenes about the AIDS patient whose lover was dying, and that Bochco had written all that smut about the 'Venus butterfly'' -- a potent, if unspecified, sexual technique that was discussed in a 1986 episode, sparking endless speculation.
In fact, she said, Bochco wrote the AIDS scenes in question and 'I did all the smut.'
Terry Louise Fisher was born on Feb. 21, 1946, in Chicago, the younger of two children of David and Norma Fisher.
Coming of age in the 1950s, she saw 'no positive role models for women on TV except 'Lassie,'' Ms. Fisher joked in a 1987 interview with the Miami Herald. 'Men did all the interesting things, and the women waited for them at home.'
After receiving a bachelor's degree from the UCLA, she earned a law degree from the university in 1971 and joined the district attorney's office.
During roughly a decade of practicing law, she also published two novels: 'A Class Act' (1976), about a female screenwriter trying to carve out a Hollywood career, and 'Good Behavior' (1979), about a woman who lands in prison after an art heist with her ex-con lover. Wearied by her efforts to sell a third novel, she pivoted to writing for television.
Advertisement
During her mid-1980s heyday, Ms. Fisher and Bochco also teamed up on an unusually sunny cop show: 'Hooperman' (1987-89), an ABC comedy-drama starring the prince of pratfalls, John Ritter, as a wisecracking San Francisco plainclothes detective.
'I wanted to do something that hasn't been done before,' Ms. Fisher said in a 1988 interview with the Los Angeles Times. 'Just by not starting with the assumption that life is bleak and hopeless, you're bound to have a different show.'
Their fertile working relationship, however, soon went off the rails. Bochco fired Ms. Fisher in 1987 following creative and financial disputes, according to the Los Angeles Times. Ms. Fisher fired back with a $50 million breach-of-contract lawsuit, which was settled out of court. The terms were not disclosed.
'It's kind of like a divorce,' she said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times that year. 'You go through a bad period, then you want to remember the good things.' The two patched things up enough to collaborate as writers on the 2002 television film 'L.A. Law: The Movie.'
Information about survivors was not immediately available.
She tended to be philosophical about the ups and downs of the television business.
'I've always had no problem letting go with projects,' she said in a 1991 interview with the newspaper The Oregonian. 'Creating the world,' she added, 'it's a most godlike feeling. I love it. I get sort of bored once it's all in place.'
This article originally appeared in
Advertisement
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

4 hours ago
Joy Behar on why she never thought she'd work with Barbara Walters
"The View" co-host Joy Behar worked alongside legendary broadcast journalist Barbara Walters for over two decades, a working relationship she said she never imagined would happen. Behar recalled Monday on " Good Morning America" that she was first seen by Walters when she performed stand-up at a birthday party for actor Milton Berle in the late 1990s. "After the thing, I said to my husband, 'How was it?' And he said, 'Well, everyone was laughing except Barbara,'" Behar recalled. "And I said, 'Oh, well, I'm not going to work with her ... I'll never work with Barbara Walters, so what if she wasn't laughing?'" Not long after the party, Behar said she got a call to become a co-host on "The View," a role Behar has held for nearly 30 years. Walters' creation of "The View" is just one of her many career milestones, all examined in the new documentary "Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything," streaming now on Hulu and Hulu on Disney+. The documentary features the voices of those who worked closest to Walters in her groundbreaking 50-year career, including Behar and her executive producer at "20/20," David Sloan. Sloan said Monday on "GMA" that he thinks what made Walters stand out among journalists was her willingness to go there with her interview subjects. "I think it was on her ability to ask cringey questions other people might avoid, like asking [former New Jersey Gov.] Chris Christie if he was too overweight to be president, or asking [Barbra] Streisand, 'Why didn't you get a nose job?'" Sloan said. "And you kind of were cringing, but people wanted to know that kind of thing. She knew that it would be grabby, and she went there." He added of Walters' lasting impact, "She kind of taught me how to ask questions, and all of America to ask questions and be fearless about it ... with dignity." Sloan noted that many of the hard-hitting questions Walters posed to celebrities and newsmakers were a window into her own insecurities. He cited as an example the time Walters asked music superstar Taylor Swift how she would find a man as someone who is rich and famous. "That was one of her worries, 'How am I going to find someone?'" Sloan said of Walters, who married three different men in her lifetime. Walters died at age 93 in 2022. She joined ABC News in 1976, becoming the first female anchor on an evening news program. Three years later, she became a co-host of "20/20," and in 1997, she launched "The View." Her career spanned five decades, during which she earned 11 Emmy Award nominations, winning three. She made her final appearance as a co-host of "The View" in 2014, but remained an executive producer of the show and continued to do some interviews and specials for ABC News.

5 hours ago
What we know about 'The Bear' ahead of season 4 premiere
The heat is back in the kitchen for the intense fourth season of "The Bear," as Carmen "Carmy" Berzatto and the culinary cast of characters work to chase perfection for their Chicago fine dining restaurant. What to expect on new season of 'The Bear' In the official trailer that dropped last month, Carmy, played by Emmy winner Jeremy Allen White, says in a voiceover, "People go to restaurants to be taken care of, to relax, to not have to think about anything else for a minute." He paces slowly into the kitchen and turns the lights on before palpable pressure from his Uncle Jimmy builds, reminding him he is up against a ticking clock. "It's hard and it's brutal, and that's what makes it special," Carmy says later over a montage of a perfectly plated dish. Liza Colón-Zayas, who won her first Emmy Award last year for her portrayal of chef Tina, joined "Good Morning America" on Monday and said her character will continue to evolve in the new season. "Reckoning," Colón-Zayas said when asked what we can expect from the new episodes. "Everyone -- individually and as the Bear fam -- is gonna have some major reckoning, accountability, and stress. We kind of do that really well. I think people are gonna get more of what they're addicted to." Tina's transformation was a standout arc in season 3, as viewers got a glimpse of her backstory and watched her step into a larger role in the kitchen. This season, Colón-Zayas told "GMA" that journey deepens. "She's come through the other side and is really invested in raising her game and bringing everybody with her. We'll see her take on challenges, face her weaknesses and lean into her courage," she said. Colón-Zayas said she can relate to nearly every part of Tina's story. "All of it. It's like my life, except in a kitchen," she said. "I know what it feels like to struggle, to feel like your time is up, or that you're no longer needed. To have this reinvention and these blessings? I feel that -- just like Tina." As fans get ready for another high-octane season, Colón-Zayas described her character's relationship with Carmy as "loving" and "respectful," then laughed, adding, "Every now and then I gotta give him a thank-you." The full ensemble cast returns for season 4 with Ebon Moss-Bachrach as Richie, Abby Elliott as Sugar, Lionel Boyce as Marcus, Matty Matheson as Neil, and Jamie Lee Curtis reprising her role as Carmy's mom Donna. Behind the scenes, showrunners Christopher Storer and Joanna Calo continue to guide the series, alongside culinary producer chef Courtney Storer. Edebiri and Boyce both co-wrote an episode this time around. When does The Bear season 4 air? All 10 episodes will be streaming Wednesday, June 25, 2025, at 8 p.m. ET via FX on Hulu, as well as Hulu on Disney+ globally.


Boston Globe
7 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Terry Louise Fisher, a creator of ‘L.A. Law,' dies at 79
She quickly grew disillusioned with a revolving-door criminal justice system that seemed to her to boil down to a jousting match between opposing lawyers, with little regard for guilt or innocence. Advertisement In a 1986 interview with The San Francisco Examiner, she recalled being handed an almost certain victory in an otherwise weak case involving a knife killing because of an oversight by the defense: 'I felt really challenged, and my adrenaline was pumping. I realized I could win this case. And I slept on it. I went, 'My God, has winning become more important than justice?'' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Her unflinching view of the system informed her tenure in television. In 1983, she began writing for 'Cagney & Lacey,' bringing depth and realism to a CBS series that shook up the traditional knuckles-and-nightsticks cop-show genre by focusing on two female New York City police detectives, Christine Cagney (Sharon Gless) and Mary Beth Lacey (Tyne Daly). Advertisement One episode that year drew directly from Ms. Fisher's days as a prosecutor, portraying a dying woman forced to submit to a searing round of questioning by the defense in a rape trial. 'It was the first case I saw at the DA's office,' she said in a 1986 interview with the Los Angeles Times. By portraying the characters not only as savvy crime fighters but also as three-dimensional humans, 'Cagney & Lacey' demonstrated what female companionship looked like, that 'women don't have to compete or be idiots,' Ms. Fisher said in a 1985 interview with The Chicago Tribune, and that it was 'OK for them to fight and still like each other. They're striving for love, work, and friendship, which everyone is striving for.' She also served as a producer on the show and received her first Emmy Award in 1985. In addition to her job as a prosecutor, Ms. Fisher put in time in the slicker end of the law field, working as an entertainment lawyer for film companies including 20th Century Fox, the studio behind 'L.A. Law,' before establishing her career in television. 'L.A. Law' represented a major opportunity: It teamed her up with Bochco, who had upended the television landscape with his provocative 1980s series 'Hill Street Blues,' known for its unvarnished look at the messy realities -- emotional and otherwise -- of a big-city police precinct. On the surface, 'L.A. Law,' with an ensemble cast that included Corbin Bernsen, Jill Eikenberry, Jimmy Smits, and Susan Dey, was the quintessence of 1980s Los Angeles sheen, marked by upscale automobiles, artful coiffures, and a veritable runway of tailored suits and dresses with shoulder pads. Advertisement But to her, style was hardly the point. The show (and Ms. Fisher) won multiple Emmys and ran for eight seasons on NBC. In her view, 'L.A. Law' was something less than a love letter to the juris doctor class -- 'I have to admit I'm not the biggest fan of lawyers,' she told the Los Angeles Times -- and more of a vehicle for pushing the prime-time envelope, tackling thorny issues including abortion, sexual harassment, capital punishment, and AIDS. 'My parents told me they always could tell which scenes I wrote and which ones Bochco wrote,' she recalled. 'They knew I had written the sensitive scenes about the AIDS patient whose lover was dying, and that Bochco had written all that smut about the 'Venus butterfly'' -- a potent, if unspecified, sexual technique that was discussed in a 1986 episode, sparking endless speculation. In fact, she said, Bochco wrote the AIDS scenes in question and 'I did all the smut.' Terry Louise Fisher was born on Feb. 21, 1946, in Chicago, the younger of two children of David and Norma Fisher. Coming of age in the 1950s, she saw 'no positive role models for women on TV except 'Lassie,'' Ms. Fisher joked in a 1987 interview with the Miami Herald. 'Men did all the interesting things, and the women waited for them at home.' After receiving a bachelor's degree from the UCLA, she earned a law degree from the university in 1971 and joined the district attorney's office. During roughly a decade of practicing law, she also published two novels: 'A Class Act' (1976), about a female screenwriter trying to carve out a Hollywood career, and 'Good Behavior' (1979), about a woman who lands in prison after an art heist with her ex-con lover. Wearied by her efforts to sell a third novel, she pivoted to writing for television. Advertisement During her mid-1980s heyday, Ms. Fisher and Bochco also teamed up on an unusually sunny cop show: 'Hooperman' (1987-89), an ABC comedy-drama starring the prince of pratfalls, John Ritter, as a wisecracking San Francisco plainclothes detective. 'I wanted to do something that hasn't been done before,' Ms. Fisher said in a 1988 interview with the Los Angeles Times. 'Just by not starting with the assumption that life is bleak and hopeless, you're bound to have a different show.' Their fertile working relationship, however, soon went off the rails. Bochco fired Ms. Fisher in 1987 following creative and financial disputes, according to the Los Angeles Times. Ms. Fisher fired back with a $50 million breach-of-contract lawsuit, which was settled out of court. The terms were not disclosed. 'It's kind of like a divorce,' she said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times that year. 'You go through a bad period, then you want to remember the good things.' The two patched things up enough to collaborate as writers on the 2002 television film 'L.A. Law: The Movie.' Information about survivors was not immediately available. She tended to be philosophical about the ups and downs of the television business. 'I've always had no problem letting go with projects,' she said in a 1991 interview with the newspaper The Oregonian. 'Creating the world,' she added, 'it's a most godlike feeling. I love it. I get sort of bored once it's all in place.' This article originally appeared in Advertisement