Dalton Delan | |
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Born | |
Occupation(s) | Writer, columnist, television producer |
Dalton Delan (born August 5, 1954) is an American writer, syndicated columnist, and television producer. He pens his syndicated column, the Unspin Room, for the Pulitzer Prize winning newspaper The Berkshire Eagle.[1][2][3] His work with PBS and Sundance have won him numerous awards for documentaries and primetime shows.[4] A number of his projects include working alongside notable figures like actor Robert Redford, Ken Burns and Henry Louis Gates Jr. Delan oversaw the production of sixteen In Performance at the White House programs in collaboration with the Obama administration, as well as several under the Bush and Clinton administrations years prior.[5] As executive producer, Delan brought music giants like Bob Dylan,[6] Paul McCartney,[7] Mick Jagger, Stevie Wonder, Paul McCartney, Burt Bacharach, and Carole King to the White House.[8] The final program under the Obama administration, The Smithsonian Salutes Ray Charles, is documented on YouTube as "WETA at the White House", features singers like Demi Lovato, Usher, and Anthony Hamilton.[9]
Delan was an executive producer of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor,[10] presented by the Kennedy Center to notable names in humor and comedy. Delan was also co-creator and was an executive producer of the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Music, whose first recipient, Paul Simon, was presented the award in a ceremony at the Warner Theater. Delan's most recent work had him as the managing director and chief content officer of One Mind All Media, the media division for the brain health non-profit One Mind.[11]