Debateably the most successful alumni of the Night Stalker series (tied with Robert Zemeckis), Chase currently is the creator and writer on "The Sopranos," won an Emmy or two, and is generally doing pretty well. Students of his quirky combination of the Mafia and black humor might want to check out the Stalker episode The Zombie.
TV Guide (week of 1/8-14/00) noted, "Since landing a job on Kolchak: The Night Stalker fresh out of film school in the 1970s, David Chase has been a writer-producer on some of the TV's smartest shows."
"Northern Exposure" (1990) TV Series (executive producer: episodes "A Cup of Joe", "First Snow", "Baby Blues", "Mr. Sandman", "Bolt from the Blue", "Hello, I Love You", "Northern Hospitality", "Una Volta in L'Inverno", "Fish Story", "The Gift of Maggie", "A Wing and a Prayer", "I Feel the Earth Move", "Grand Prix", "Blood Ties", "Lovers and Madmen", "Dinner at 7: 30", "Eye of the Beholder", "Shofar, So Good", "The Letter", "The Robe", "Zarya", "Full Upright Position", "Up River", "Sons of the Tundra", "Realpolitik", "The Big Mushroom", "Mi Casa, Su Casa", "Horns", "The Mommy's Curse", "Lucky People", "Balls", "Ursa Minor", "Let's Dance", "Tranquility Base (Our Town)")
For more info on Mr. Chase, check out his
IMDB page.
From the TV Guide 50th anniversary issue (4/6-12/02), when Mr. Chase talks about his favorite television memory:
David Chase - Creator, the Sopranos: The Twilight Zone was the seminal show for me. It was scary. You never
knew what was going to happen. "Submitted for your approval." You can't do any better than that. It gave me a real taste
for irony. It was hugely influential on '60s-generation kids. I especially like the one with William Shatner and the
little deveil heads. That's the Twilight Zone thing--little towns you couldn't get out of. Then, when I first moved
out to L.A., I was driving in my Volkswagen and I almost hit this guy crossing in the crosswalk. It turned out to be
Rod Serling. I thought, "Wow, it's Rod Serling." And not that I almost killed him." (TV We'll Always Remember, pg. 24)