Twin Peaks co-creator Mark Frost is paying tribute to his friend and longtime collaborator David Lynch, whose death was announced today. He was 78.
The ABC show was a surprise cultural and ratings phenomenon when it aired in 1990, and it changed television forever
“Twin Peaks” was his ultimate portrait of a land of terror and beauty.
Gary Levine shares funny anecdotes about working with David Lynch on Twin Peaks, talks about filmmaker's profound impact on the television medium.
If you've never heard of Twin Peaks, you’re missing out on one of the most groundbreaking TV shows of all time.
He was my north star. He watched me grow up. He watched me become a mother. He cheered me on when I stepped into the director’s chair,” Madchen Amick said about David Lynch.
David Lynch, who co-created “Twin Peaks” and directed films such as “Blue Velvet” and “Mulholland Drive,” has died. He was 78. Lynch’s family revealed his passing via social media on Thursday.
Lynch, who was born in Montana in 1946, was a writer, director and painter who studied at the American Film Institute. He first broke into the movie scene in 1977 when he turned his thesis project into his first feature film "Eraserhead," a black-and-white surrealist indie film that quickly gained notoriety as a midnight movie.
We won’t see his like again. The man from another place has gone home.” Frost and Lynch co-created Twin Peaks, which aired for two seasons on ABC from 1990-1991. It returned for a third season ...
When it debuted in the spring of 1990, David Lynch and Mark Frost’s Twin Peaks was inarguably the strangest show to have ever been made for American television. It was, simultaneously ...
I loved him, and I will hold our laughter and shared love for the medium he mastered as few have ever done forever in my heart and soul,” said Frost in a statement to Deadline. More from Deadline David Lynch Dies: ‘Twin Peaks’, ‘Blue Velvet ...
For those who want to watch Twin Peaks following the death of co-creator David Lynch, it’s not going to be easy. Premiering in 1990 on ABC, the series follows an investigation led by Kyle MacLachlan’s FBI special agent Dale Cooper into the murder of local teenager Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee).