- 11 eDoctig magine hearing your musical scores being played on top-rated, prime-time TV shows. Imagine see- ing your scripts being performed on some of the fun- niest and hottest sitcoms. Imagine videotaping Barbara Walters while she interviews some of the coun- try's biggest superstars. While this may sound like fan- tasy to some, it's reality for three talented Detroiters. Bruce Miller, creator of a myriad of television theme songs including "Frasier" and "Wings"; Mark Levin, producer and writer of such hits as "The Wonder Years"; and Ron Herman, production and media consultant, who was a technical operations supervisor for a string of TV celebrity interviews, have all climbed to the top in show business. But, they all admit, behind the glitz, glamour and fame is a lot of hard work. "Breaking into television isn't easy," says Bruce Miller, who after providing the entertainment at his own bar mitzvah started playing the guitar and singing with a band for other bar mitzvahs and parties. "I have worked hard to get to where I am. Although I look at my successes and say that it has a lot to do with being in the right place at the right time, I have spent many years perfecting my craft. And even then, I have gone through some tough times." Miller, 51, graduated from Mumford High in 1962 cy) and Wayne State University in 1966 and played in jazz 1-u clubs in Detroit all through his schooling. His big break came while still in college, when he was playing with the band at the Elmwood Casino. (JD "Paul Anka was performing, and after his first show Lu he called me into his dressing room and asked if I want- ed to go on the road with him," Miller recalls "Of course, 5 I was thrilled and took him up on his offer." After graduation, Miller was drafted into the Army, cc 1-Li but because of an impressive audition, he landed a spot playing the guitar and writing arrangements for an 18- = piece jazz band that included musicians from the Army, - Navy and American and Canadian air forces. "I was very lucky — I could have been sent to Viet- 00 nam," he says. When his stint in the military ended, Miller rejoined Anka, where he spent the next three years conducting and performing with Anka's band. But wanting to branch out on his own, Miller made the difficult decision to move to LA with his new wife, Pam. After a couple of years playing for private parties and doing orchestral arrangements for several Motown artists — including the Temptations, Four Tops and Gladys Knight — he made what turned out to be a fortuitous phone call. "I called a guy I knew who was a composer for "Knots Landing," and I offered to write a new arrangement," he says. "I did, they liked it, and they kept it on the air for a long time." Through that connection, Miller met the people at Lorimar Studios and started arranging and writing mu- sic for them. He soon became known in the field, and of- fers started pouring in. Among the over 150 credits to his name, Miller has composed, arranged and/or conducted theme songs for "Matlock," "Falcon Crest," "Almost Perfect," "Designing Women," "Step By Step," "Highway to Heaven," "The John Larroquette Show," "Cagney & Lacey" and two "Bonanza" movies of the week. He presently writes the music for "Wings" and "Frasi- er," and he just finished an arrangement for a new NBC sitcom that will be debuting this fall called "Something So Right." Miller, who was nominated for an Emmy for "Frasi- er" and the "Sammy Davis Jr. 60th Anniversary Cele- bration," also scored "The Man From Hope," a documentary produced for Bill Clinton's campaign in 1992 that aired on all three networks. Currently, he is composing the music for Clinton's 1996 campaign film. or Mark Levin, the pinnacle of success came at a relatively young age. Yet, it wasn't without perse- verance and years of honing his writing skills. A graduate of Andover High School, Levin at- NBC P HOTO BY GALE M. ADLE R Behind the glitz, glamour and fame is a lot of hard work. Here's how three Detroiters made it in the TV-biz. tended the University of Michigan where he was an English major with a concentration in creative writing. In fact, it was during his days at U-M that he won the coveted Hopwood writing award, the major prize for dramatic literature. "Writing was my passion, and I always wanted to write drama, whether it was for theater, film or televi- sion," says Levin, who at age 7 started a newsletter for his street in Bloomfield Hills and wrote little articles about the environment. Levin went on to Yale School of Drama, where he studied playwriting and earned a master of arts degree. And it wad at Yale, he says, that he made his invalu- able connections. "During the summer of 1989, I was invited by the renowned television producer David Milch to help launch a new show called 'Capitol News,' " says Levin, who adds that the offer to be a story editor was a real coup, since Milch had written for "Hill Street Blues" and "NYPD." Although that show was short-lived, Levin, only 23 at the time, acquired a considerable reputation and was asked to join the staff of "The Wonder Years." "I was always a big fan of the show and thought it had wonderful writing," says Levin, who stayed with the show for 2 1/2 years and rose from story editor to producer. "I worked on about 60 episodes, 14 of which I wrote myself." From there, Levin landed a job on "Going to Ex- tremes," an NBC show about a group of medical stu-