Erik Oleson

Erik Oleson
Occupation Television writer, producer
Years active 2002 - present

Erik Oleson is an American television writer and producer.

He is well known for his work on the CBS procedural Unforgettable, and for The CW superhero series Arrow.

Career

His first effort in show business was on the Canadian/American drama Andromeda, writing an excerpt for the episode "The Things We Cannot Change". He would also write another installment of the series, "The Prince".[1]

Oleson went on to write for such series as The Agency, Jack & Bobby, E-Ring, Chase, The Mob Doctor, Crisis and Kings.[1]

He co-wrote the 2008 TV movie Blue Blood, with Neil Tolkin, for director Brett Ratner.

Unforgettable

In 2011, Oleson joined the CBS drama Unforgettable, as a writer and co-executive producer. He ultimately contributed to four episodes ("Up in Flames", "With Honor", "Trajectories", "Blind Alleys") before his departure in 2012.

Arrow

In summer 2014, Oleson was hired as a writer and co-executive producer on The CW's Green Arrow origin series Arrow. His first contribution being the third season episode "Corto Maltese", which he co-wrote with Beth Schwartz. He and co-producer Keto Shimizu co-wrote the sixth episode of the season, "Guilty". He and executive producer Marc Guggenheim co-wrote the first installment of 2015, and the 10th episode of the third season, "Left Behind". It introduced the Green Arrow nemesis Brick. He and Guggenheim co-scripted the fourteenth episode of the season, "The Return". It was a flashback centric installment; featuring the reappearance of Slade Wilson (Manu Bennett). He, along with co-producer Ben Sokolowski, co-wrote a teleplay, based on a story by Sokolowski and co-executive producer Wendy Mericle, for the seasons fifteenth installment, "Nanda Parbat". His final outing for the season was with the 22nd episode, "This Is Your Sword", which he wrote the story for; while Brian Ford Sullivan and Sokolowski co-wrote the teleplay and Wendey Stanzler directed.

He departed the series after a one-year tenure, stating that he would be moving on to develop a new potential series for Jack & Bobby and Arrow co-creator Greg Berlanti.[2]

References

External links

Erik Oleson at the Internet Movie Database

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