Eric A. Stillwell

Eric A. Stillwell

Birthday: 9 November 1962, Okinawa, Japan
Eric began working at Disney Consumer Products in 2014. Prior to that, he worked at FOX Broadcasting Company in the Alternative Entertainment department and worked on shows including American Idol, So You Think You Can Dance, The X Factor, the 2011 Primetime Emmys, the 2nd Annual American Country Awards and other specials and reality shows which ai... Show more »
Eric began working at Disney Consumer Products in 2014. Prior to that, he worked at FOX Broadcasting Company in the Alternative Entertainment department and worked on shows including American Idol, So You Think You Can Dance, The X Factor, the 2011 Primetime Emmys, the 2nd Annual American Country Awards and other specials and reality shows which air on the FOX television network. In 2006, Eric served as an associate producer and head writer on the children's series Nanna's Cottage. Previously he served as associate producer on USA Network's hit television series, The Dead Zone and the hit ABC Family series Wildfire. Stillwell also served as Vice President of Operations for Piller2, the production company of father & son producers Shawn & Michael Piller (1999-2005). Previously, Stillwell served as Script Coordinator for the feature film Star Trek: Insurrection (1998) and the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1992), and was also a production associate on Star Trek: Voyager (1995-1996). During his tenure with the Star Trek franchise, Eric co-wrote the TNG story for the highly acclaimed episode "Yesterday's Enterprise" (1989) which garnered three Emmy nominations, and co-wrote the Star Trek: Voyager episode "Prime Factors" (1994) which was nominated for a Sci-Fi Universe Award. Stillwell also shares a story credit on "The 34th Rule", a Star Trek: Deep Space Nine novel written with Armin Shimerman ("Quark"), which was published in 1999. The book remains one of the best selling DS9 novels published by Pocket Books. Stillwell started his Hollywood career in Oregon where he worked for Warner Bros. Television on the Hallmark Hall of Fame movie-of-the-week Promise, starring James Garner and James Woods, which became the most honored single program in the history of television with 5 Emmys, 2 Golden Globes, a Christopher Award, a Peabody Award, and the Humanitas Prize. Show less «
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