Description
The John Sacret Young Collection, 1960-2019, consists of scripts, development material, production material, notes, correspondence,
multimedia, book manuscripts, extensive research, and other materials related to Young’s work primarily as a dramatic television
writer. The bulk of the collection consists of material from his work on TV series and movies including China Beach, The West
Wing, Firefly Lane, Thanks of a Grateful Nation, Romero, and A Rumor of War.
Background
John Sacret Young, a writer, director, and producer of TV dramas was perhaps best known for co-creating the Vietnam War series
China Beach. Born May 24th, 1946 in Montclair, NJ, Young attended College High School before attending Princeton where as
a freshman he played football, hockey, and lacrosse. While at Princeton, he chose to earn a degree in religion as it allowed
him to write a novel as his senior thesis. The winter after he graduated from Princeton John Sacret Young’s cousin Doug Young
was killed in combat during the Vietnam War. His family’s emotional response to the death is chronicled in Young’s 2005 memoir
Remains: Non-Viewable. War and its requisite tolls would become a prevailing theme throughout Young’s career.
After graduating from Princeton, Young moved out to Los Angeles and tested to become an LAPD officer and while he never joined
the force, he got his start in Hollywood shadowing police officers as an embedded researcher for Police Story. He went on
to write three episodes of the series in 1976, the same season the show won an Emmy award for Best Drama. Young would go on
to win a Writers Guild Award for his 1980 TV miniseries adaptation of Philip Caputo’s memoir A Rumor of War. He published
his first novel, The Weather Tomorrow in 1982. In 1983 the Young penned drama Testament told the story of the unraveling of
a small suburban town after nuclear war nuclear war. Originally made for TV, it was given a theatrical release when Paramount
Pictures decided to debut it in theaters rather than on PBS’s American Playhouse. Testament would net Young two Christopher
Awards as well as garnering a Best Actress Oscar nomination for Actress Jane Alexander.
Toward the end of the 1980s Young teamed up with Vietnam veteran William Broyles Jr. to create China Beach for ABC. China
Beach¬ was notable not only for its stark look at the stress and trauma of war told through the eyes of women serving at a
field hospital during the Vietnam War but also for staffing a writer’s room where four of six writers were women. The show
lasted four seasons and garnered a WGA award for the Young written and directed episode Souvenirs, as well as four other WGA
award nominations, a Peabody award, a Golden Globe Award, A People’s Choice Award, and Five Emmy nominations.
Amid the critical success of China Beach Young wrote the screenplay for the feature film Romero, a 1989 biographical film
dramatizing the life and subsequent assassination of Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero. Through the 1990s Young would go
on to work as a writer, director, and producer on Keys, Vr.5, Sirens, Orleans, and Humanitas prize-winning Gulf War mini-series
Thanks of a Grateful Nation. In the 2000s Young would go on to write Muhammad Ali biopic King of the World as well as write
and producing on cybercrimes thriller Level 9. Following that he wrote and produced two seasons of The West Wing, resulting
in further Emmy and Writers Guild Award nominations. In 2017 he released another memoir, Pieces of Glass: An Artoire, this
time focusing on art appreciation and the effect it has had on his life. In 2018 Young was awarded the Kieser Award for lifetime
achievement in film and television by the Humanitas Prize. Following that he wrote a 2019 episode of the anthology series
Dolly Parton’s Heartstrings, before writing and producing on Firefly Lane.
Aside from his television and movie work, Young taught classes at Claremont McKenna College as well as at his alma mater Princeton,
where he established the John Sacret Young ’69 Fund for Visiting Filmmakers. Young served on the Board of Directors of the
Humanitas and The Writers Guild Foundation.
Young died June 3rd, 2021, and is survived by his wife Claudia Sloan, brother Mason, children Jacy, Jake, Julia, and Riley,
and three grandchildren.