Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Alexander Woo

Alexander Woo is a Chinese-American , , and recognized for co-creating and serving as on the series 3 Body Problem (2024), an adaptation of Liu Cixin's novel The Three-Body Problem. His contributions to the project involved drawing from personal family experiences during China's to depict historical political violence. Woo's prior television work includes writing and producing episodes of HBO's (2008–2014), a series that earned an Emmy nomination, two Golden Globe nominations, a nomination, and two NAACP Image Award nominations. He also co-created and executive produced (2019), the second season of AMC's historical horror anthology, which centered on Japanese American internment. Additional credits encompass staff writing on series such as , Sleeper Cell, and , as well as co-writing the HBO film (2017). As a playwright, Woo has authored works including Forbidden City Blues, In the Sherman Family Wax Museum, and Debunked, the latter receiving acclaim from The New York Times. The 3 Body Problem series, while lauded for its production scale and effects, faced substantial criticism for narrative changes, such as reimagining central Chinese characters as white Westerners and shifting focus from the novel's scientific and cultural specifics, prompting backlash in China over perceived Americanization of the story.

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Heritage

Alexander Woo was born to immigrant parents whose experiences in profoundly shaped his perspective on historical events like the . His mother, having lived through the era, confirmed the accuracy of the struggle session depicted in the opening of the Netflix series 3 Body Problem, stating it reflected real events in her homeland. Woo has described his family as emblematic of immigrant households, where parents worked extensively, often leaving limited time for direct involvement in daily child-rearing. This heritage as an (ABC) informs Woo's storytelling, particularly in adaptations involving Chinese history, blending personal family trauma with broader historical realism. His parents' post-Cultural Revolution migration underscores a pattern of economic drive common among diaspora families seeking stability in the U.S.

Academic Training

Alexander Woo studied at , graduating with a in 1993. Following his undergraduate education, Woo pursued advanced training in playwriting at the Yale School of Drama, where he earned a degree. This graduate program emphasized dramatic writing techniques, providing foundational skills that Woo later applied to his career in television scripting and production.

Career

Early Writing and Playwriting

Woo pursued formal training in playwriting, earning a Master of Fine Arts degree from the Yale School of Drama following his undergraduate studies in creative writing at Princeton University. His early career centered on stage plays, which explored themes of identity, family, and cultural displacement, often drawing from Asian-American experiences. One of his notable early works, In the Sherman Family Wax Museum, received its world premiere at Circle X Theatre in Los Angeles from April 8 to 11, 1999, under the direction of Wade McIntyre. The play depicts an Asian-American exchange student's surreal encounter with historical figures in a wax museum setting, highlighting intergenerational tensions. In 2002, Woo's Forbidden City Blues was staged by Pan Asian Repertory Theatre in , earning praise from for its clever skewering of China-America relations and interpersonal dynamics amid cultural clashes. The production, directed by Ron Nakahara, ran and marked Woo's rising profile in theater circles. Woo later premiered Debunked, a Frankenstein-inspired , at Triad Stage in , in January 2005, following development at the Bay Area Playwrights Festival. This comedic work further demonstrated his versatility in blending historical and fantastical elements with satirical commentary. These plays established Woo's foundation in dramatic writing before his shift toward television scripting.

Breakthrough in Television: True Blood and Wonderfalls

Alexander Woo entered television writing as a on the series , a fantasy comedy-drama created by and that premiered on March 12, 2004. The show followed a disillusioned young woman receiving messages from inanimate objects, blending quirky humor with existential themes, but was canceled after four episodes aired due to low ratings, though all 13 produced episodes were later released on DVD. Woo contributed to the writing staff during its brief run, including co-writing the episode "Safety Canary," which aired on April 23, 2004, and featured the confronting workplace dangers prompted by a talking canary figurine. Woo's involvement in HBO's , which premiered on September 7, 2008, represented a more sustained engagement with prestige television, where he served as a and producer across multiple seasons. Adapted from Charlaine Harris's novels by creator Alan Ball, the series explored supernatural politics, romance, and social allegory in a rural setting post-vampire "." Woo wrote several episodes, including the season 2 finale "Beyond Here Lies Nothin'" (aired November 16, 2009), which resolved major arcs involving packs and hierarchies, and season 3's "It Hurts Me Too" (aired July 11, 2010), focusing on internal conflicts and character loyalties. His contributions spanned at least 12 episodes, earning him an credit later in the run and contributing to the show's critical acclaim for its bold storytelling and ensemble dynamics. These roles on and established Woo's reputation for crafting intricate narratives in genre television, bridging his playwriting background with serialized drama.

Mid-Career Projects: Manhattan, The Terror, and Others

Following the conclusion of True Blood in 2014, Woo served as consulting producer on the second season of Manhattan, a WGN America drama series depicting the scientific and personal challenges faced by physicists developing the atomic bomb during World War II. In this capacity, he contributed to 10 episodes aired in 2015, including writing the episode "Overlord," which explored tensions within the project's leadership amid escalating pressures from the war effort. Woo advanced to a more prominent role as co-creator, , and for the second season of AMC's series The Terror, subtitled , which premiered on August 12, 2019. The 10-episode season, co-developed with Max Haase, centered on a Japanese American fisherman in , , whose family faces mysterious deaths linked to —vengeful spirits from —against the backdrop of World War II-era events, including the 1941 and the subsequent internment of over 120,000 in U.S. camps. Woo drew on historical records of internment policies enacted by on February 19, 1942, while integrating supernatural elements to examine themes of displacement, cultural erasure, and familial legacy, with input from consultants like actor , who experienced internment as a child. Among other mid-career endeavors, Woo co-wrote the screenplay for HBO's The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, a 2017 television film directed by George C. Wolfe and based on Rebecca Skloot's 2010 nonfiction book. Premiering on April 22, 2017, the adaptation chronicles the life of Henrietta Lacks, an African American woman whose cervical cancer cells—harvested without consent in 1951 at Johns Hopkins Hospital—formed the HeLa cell line, enabling breakthroughs in polio vaccines, gene mapping, and cancer research used in over 11,000 patents worldwide. Woo's script, developed alongside Peter Landesman and Wolfe, emphasized the ethical tensions between scientific progress and patient autonomy, starring Oprah Winfrey as Lacks' daughter Deborah and Rose Byrne as Skloot.

3 Body Problem: Adaptation and Production

Alexander Woo co-created, wrote, and executive produced the series 3 Body Problem alongside and , adapting Liu Cixin's novel trilogy, beginning with The Three-Body Problem. The project was announced on September 1, 2020, as 's first collaboration with the trio following their tenure, with Woo's prior experience on The Terror contributing to the historical and cultural elements of the story set partly during China's . The adaptation condensed and restructured the source material to prioritize character-driven narrative, introducing the "Oxford Five"—a group of scientists derived from figures in later books—to accelerate emotional stakes and humanize the cosmic scale of the alien threat, a decision Woo attributed to the team's character-focused writing approach. The series deviates from the by Westernizing some character origins and emphasizing interpersonal dynamics over pure scientific exposition, while retaining core concepts like the VR simulation of the orbital chaos and the Trisolaran invasion premise. Woo, drawing from his family's experiences with Mao-era persecution, insisted on authentic depiction of the 1960s sequences, including violence against intellectuals, which he argued were underrepresented in due to political sensitivities. Production for the eight-episode first season, with an estimated budget of $20 million per episode totaling around $160 million, involved global filming starting in late 2022, primarily at in , , for interior and set-built scenes like , supplemented by on-location shoots in the UK (e.g., Reading, Windsor), the , and for diverse exteriors. Challenges in included visualizing complex scientific phenomena, such as the unstable and effects, requiring extensive VFX collaboration, which Woo and co-creators described as essential to conveying the novels' "unadaptable" intellectual rigor without diluting its existential themes. The first season premiered on March 21, 2024, with Netflix renewing for additional seasons in May 2024, shifting principal photography for seasons 2 and 3 to , , starting July 2025, to accommodate expanded international scopes from subsequent books.

Reception of 3 Body Problem and Associated Controversies

The Netflix series 3 Body Problem, co-created by Alexander Woo, , and , received generally positive critical reception upon its March 21, 2024 premiere, with a 78% approval rating on based on 115 reviews praising its ambitious visuals, narrative scope, and adaptation of Liu Cixin's novel for a global audience, though some critics noted pacing issues and deviations from the source material. On IMDb, it holds a 7.5/10 rating from over 172,000 user votes as of late 2024, reflecting broad appeal but polarized viewer opinions on its character development and sci-fi elements. IGN awarded it an 8/10, commending the reworking of the trilogy's complex plot into an engaging format suitable for television, while acknowledging potential frustration for purists due to structural changes like time jumps and character consolidations. In , reception was more divided, with state media and online commentators labeling the series "flat and shallow" for its perceived of a culturally , including shifts in setting from to and the internationalization of key protagonists originally scientists. Some viewers criticized plot alterations that positioned Western characters as central to humanity's salvation, viewing them as diminishing the novel's emphasis on perspectives during historical events like the . However, the series' unflinching opening depiction of violence during the 1966 —drawing from Woo's personal family history of political —drew praise from some for its rare onscreen portrayal of Mao-era atrocities, though it fueled nationalist backlash amid broader sensitivities to foreign interpretations of history. A primary controversy centered on accusations of "whitewashing," as the adaptation recast the novel's ensemble of Chinese physicists into a diverse, predominantly Western group led by white British actors like Jess Hong and John Bradley, prompting pre-release petitions and social media campaigns from fans demanding fidelity to the book's ethnic and national origins. Woo and co-creators defended the changes as necessary for narrative efficiency and global accessibility, arguing that the core scientific and philosophical themes remained intact while avoiding a strictly China-centric frame that might limit international viewership; cast members echoed this, asserting the series honors the novel's essence without cultural dilution. Critics of the backlash, including some Western commentators, attributed heightened outrage to Chinese state-influenced censorship and xenophobia rather than substantive adaptation flaws, noting the original trilogy's own alterations in its domestic TV version. Conversely, outlets like Forbes highlighted legitimate concerns over reduced representation of Asian leads, though empirical viewership data showed strong global engagement without correlating decline to diversity complaints. Additional debates arose over the series' handling of sensitive historical content, with conservative U.S. audiences interpreting its Cultural Revolution scenes as an implicit critique of leftist ideologies, while Chinese regulators delayed or censored local streaming, exacerbating perceptions of external bias in the portrayal. Woo emphasized in a June 2024 op-ed that the depiction stemmed from firsthand accounts of familial trauma under Communist rule, prioritizing empirical historical accuracy over sanitized narratives often favored in mainland media. Despite controversies, Netflix reported the series as a top performer in multiple markets, underscoring its commercial success amid polarized discourse.

Awards and Nominations

Writers Guild and Producers Guild Awards

Alexander Woo contributed to True Blood as a writer and executive producer, earning a nomination for the Writers Guild of America Award for Best New Series in 2009. The True Blood team, including Woo, received Producers Guild of America nominations for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Drama in both 2010 and 2011. For the HBO film The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Woo co-wrote the teleplay and shared a 2018 WGA nomination in the Long Form - Original category. As co-creator and showrunner of The Terror: Infamy, Woo was part of the writing team nominated for the WGA Award for Dramatic Series in 2020.

Emmy and Other Recognitions

Alexander Woo received Primetime Emmy Award nominations for Outstanding Drama Series in 2010 for his role as supervising producer on the HBO series True Blood and in 2024 for his work as executive producer on the Netflix series 3 Body Problem. These nominations recognized the overall production quality of the series rather than individual writing or directing contributions. Woo has not received a Primetime Emmy win. Beyond Emmys, Woo earned NAACP Image Award nominations for outstanding writing in dramatic series or television movies. In 2010, he was nominated for the episode "It Hurts Me Too" from . He received another nomination in the same category for 's "Beyond Here Lies Nothin'" episode. A third nomination came in 2018 for co-writing the television film , shared with and . Woo was also nominated for a Scripter Award in 2018 for the television adaptation of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, honoring adapted screenplays from literary sources; the award recognizes both the screenwriter and original author, in this case . This nomination highlighted his contribution to adapting non-fiction narratives for screen. No win was achieved in this category.

Personal Life and Influences

Family and Personal Experiences

Woo, a and , hails from a family with roots in , where his parents were born. This heritage informed his approach to depicting historical events in projects like 3 Body Problem, where he drew directly from intergenerational family trauma stemming from China's —a period of widespread from to that he described as rarely portrayed accurately on screen due to its sensitivity. In reflections on his upbringing, Woo noted that his parents, like many in immigrant families, worked long hours, leaving him to spend significant time alone, which fostered amid limited parental supervision. These early experiences of solitude and familial pressures echoed in his creative work, as Woo has connected them to themes of isolation and in narratives exploring immigrant and minority histories. Currently, he lives in with his wife, children, and two cats that have gained online notoriety.

Cultural and Familial Perspectives on History

Alexander Woo's familial perspectives on Chinese history are deeply informed by his family's direct experiences during the (1966–1976), a period of intense and ideological purges under that targeted intellectuals and disrupted societal structures. As a Chinese-American whose parents were born in , Woo has described how his relatives endured the era's upheavals on the mainland, shaping intergenerational narratives of trauma and . These accounts emphasize the causal role of state-enforced orthodoxy in eroding trust in institutions and expertise, themes Woo explores in adaptations like 3 Body Problem, where opening scenes depict a physicist's fatal at in 1966. Woo's mother provided firsthand validation of the show's portrayal, stating upon viewing the relevant footage, "That's real. This is what really happened," highlighting how familial oral histories serve as unfiltered counters to official narratives often minimized in Chinese state media. This personal connection underscores Woo's view that the remains an under-documented event in global media, despite its profound effects on communities, including displacement and skepticism toward authority. He has stressed the "great responsibility" in authentically rendering such violence, avoiding dilution to preserve causal realism in how historical ruptures propagate doubt and survival strategies across generations. Culturally, Woo's lens as a second-generation immigrant prioritizes empirical fidelity to family testimonies over politicized interpretations, critiquing modern parallels like as echoes of mass denunciations that prioritize ideology over evidence—a pattern he finds "hard to ignore" in reflecting on the Revolution's mechanisms. This approach extends to his broader oeuvre, such as The Terror: Infamy (2019), where he analogizes Japanese-American traumas to universal immigrant plights, but roots his Chinese historical engagement in specific legacies of political fanaticism that demand unflinching examination to comprehend enduring familial caution toward collectivist excesses.

References

  1. [1]
    About - Alexander Woo
    Alexander Woo is a playwright, screenwriter, and writer/producer for television, currently working with Netflix as Co-Creator and Executive Producer of 3 BODY ...
  2. [2]
    Alexander Woo - IMDb
    Alexander Woo is known for True Blood (2008), 3 Body Problem (2024) and The Terror (2018). More at IMDbPro · Contact info · Agent info.
  3. [3]
    The Family Trauma That Went Into '3 Body Problem' (Guest Column)
    Jun 21, 2024 · 3 Body Problem showrunner Alexander Woo writes about portraying the political violence of the Cultural Revolution in China from a personal ...
  4. [4]
    'Flat and shallow': Netflix's 3 Body Problem divides viewers in China
    Mar 22, 2024 · Eight-episode series based on Liu Cixin novels triggers accusations of 'Americanisation' of a Chinese story.
  5. [5]
    '3 Body Problem' cast addresses whitewashing criticism from fans of ...
    Mar 25, 2024 · Amid early criticism and fears of whitewashing, the cast of the highly anticipated sci-fi series “3 Body Problem” says it does justice to the original Chinese ...
  6. [6]
    Netflix's '3 Body Problem' sparks backlash in China over depiction of ...
    Apr 2, 2024 · Chinese state media outlets have accused the show's producer, alleging the use of 'political correctness' as a guise to counteract China's ...<|separator|>
  7. [7]
    Showrunners David Benioff, D.B. Weiss & Alexander Woo Solve The ...
    Jun 20, 2024 · 3 Body Problem is based on the three book series Remembrance of Earth's Past written by Chinese former computer engineer.
  8. [8]
    'The Terror' Showrunner Alexander Woo Talks Next Season Set ...
    Oct 9, 2018 · “We have a writer whose background is as a poet. ... “As was typical in Chinese families, my parents were working all the time,” Woo recalled.Missing: heritage ethnicity
  9. [9]
    How family trauma played a role in '3 Body Problem' - Nikkei Asia
    Jul 15, 2024 · How family trauma played a role in '3 Body Problem'. Cultural revolution scenes haunt show's co-creator Alexander Woo. 202407 N 3 Body Problem.
  10. [10]
    A Zoom with a view: Wintersession offers a virtual journey from the ...
    Feb 1, 2021 · ... writer/producer Alexander Woo, Class of 1993. Day two included ... Equal Opportunity and Non-discrimination at Princeton University: Princeton ...
  11. [11]
    NC's Triad Stage Brings New Frankenstein-Inspired Farce ... - Playbill
    Triad artistic director Preston Lane directs the work by Los Angeles-based playwright Alexander Woo. ... He graduated from Princeton University, where he ...
  12. [12]
    Alexander Woo - Doollee.com
    Alexander Woo: A graduate of Yale Drama and Princeton University, Alex has been a staff writer on the Fox Drama Wonderfalls. - http://www.aatrevue.com.
  13. [13]
    Remembering Nelsan Ellis, who elevated his 'True Blood' role into art
    Jul 14, 2017 · In 2008, a playwright from the Yale School of Drama named Alexander Woo was charged with writing the fifth episode of a new HBO series.
  14. [14]
    Steven Leigh Morris - LA Weekly
    Alexander Woo has settled comfortably into TV as a writer-producer. A graduate of the Yale School of Drama and Princeton University, the ...
  15. [15]
    In the Sherman Family Wax Museum - CIRCLE X THEATRE CO.
    In the Sherman Family Wax Museum · Texarcana Waltz · The Rover · Great Men ... Alexander Woo. Director. Wade McIntyre. 1999. Dates: April 8 – 11, 1999. Location ...
  16. [16]
    THEATER REVIEW; Funny, You Don't Look . . . Uhhh . . . Whatever ...
    Apr 9, 2002 · D J R Bruckner reviews Pan Asian Repertory Theater production of Alexander Woo play Forbidden City Blues, directed by Ron Nakahara (M)
  17. [17]
    Forbidden City Blues on New York City: Get Tickets Now ...
    ... Forbidden City Blues, by Alexander Woo, presents a clever, skewed view of China, America, relationships therein and points in between. Pan Asian Repertory ...
  18. [18]
    "Wonderfalls" Safety Canary (TV Episode 2004) - IMDb
    Rating 7.8/10 (299) Safety Canary · Director. Peter Lauer · Writers. Liz W. Garcia · Alexander Woo · Stars · Caroline Dhavernas · Katie Finneran · Tyron Leitso.
  19. [19]
    Alexander Woo, Zine Tseng, Benedict Wong, Rosalind Chao & Jess ...
    Alexander Woo is a playwright, screenwriter, and writer and producer for television, currently working with Netflix as co-creator and executive producer of 3 ...
  20. [20]
    Alexander Woo | Television Academy
    Alexander Woo, Executive Producer, 3 Body Problem, Netflix, Netflix Studios / Bighead Littlehead / The Three-Body Universe / T-Street / Plan B Entertainment / ...<|separator|>
  21. [21]
    Alexander Woo - Entertainment Executive | Variety.com
    Selected TV Credits ; THE TERROR: INFAMY · Executive Producer, Show Runner, Creator · 2018-2019 ; THE IMMORTAL LIFE OF HENRIETTA LACKS · Writer · 2016-2017 ; MANHATTAN.
  22. [22]
    "Manhattan" Overlord (TV Episode 2015) - IMDb
    Rating 7.6/10 (199) Overlord · Director. Christopher Misiano · Writer. Alexander Woo · Stars · Rachel Brosnahan · Michael Chernus · Christopher Denham.
  23. [23]
    How 'The Terror: Infamy' Blends Real-Life and Supernatural Horror
    Aug 12, 2019 · Woo, who is Chinese-American, said he was hesitant initially to take on the story (Woo and fellow executive producer Max Borenstein are credited ...Missing: heritage ethnicity
  24. [24]
    AMC's 'The Terror: Infamy' brings the horror of Japanese American ...
    Aug 7, 2019 · AMC's "The Terror: Infamy," starring George Takei and Derek Mio, was co-created by Alexander Woo and takes place on Southern California's ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  25. [25]
    The Terror: Infamy Q&A — Alexander Woo (Executive Producer ...
    Oct 15, 2019 · Alexander Woo, the executive producer and showrunner of The Terror: Infamy, talks about the significance of George Takei's involvement in ...
  26. [26]
    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (TV Movie 2017) - IMDb
    Rating 6.4/10 (4,189) An African-American woman becomes an unwitting pioneer for medical breakthroughs when her cells are used to create the first immortal human cell line in the ...
  27. [27]
    NETFLIX AND ALEXANDER WOO INK SERIES OVERALL DEAL
    Feb 10, 2020 · Alexander Woo is a playwright, screenwriter, and writer ... His stage plays include the New York Times-acclaimed “Forbidden City Blues ...
  28. [28]
    3 Body Problem Series on Netflix: Everything You Need To Know
    The story begins in 1960s China when a young woman makes a fateful decision that reverberates across space and time into the present day.
  29. [29]
    Netflix's '3 Body Problem' Adapts the Unadaptable - WIRED
    Mar 21, 2024 · An adaptation of George R. R. ... (L to R) 3 Body Problem executive producers and writers D. B. Weiss, Alexander Woo, and David Benioff.
  30. [30]
    Game Of Thrones Creators' $160 Million Sci-Fi Breaks A Netflix ...
    Mar 2, 2024 · According to the Wall Street Journal (via The Playlist), the cost for each episode of 3 Body Problem season 1 will be around $20 million. With ...
  31. [31]
    Where Was 3 Body Problem Filmed? All Shooting Locations Explained
    Mar 21, 2024 · The cast and crew of 3 Body Problem utilized Shepperton Studios in Shepperton, Surrey, England, for all the scenes they could not film on location.
  32. [32]
    3 Body Problem Begins Production on Season 2 - Netflix Tudum
    Jul 31, 2025 · 3 Body Problem explores how humanity chooses to respond to its gravest threat. Starting off during China's Cultural Revolution in the '60s, the ...
  33. [33]
    Season 1 – 3 Body Problem - Rotten Tomatoes
    Rating 78% (115) Genuinely an amazing show. I'm not sure why people say it's boring, for a show in the "slow burn" category it's pacing had a pretty quick stride to it.115 Reviews · Episode 3 · Episode 7 Aired Mar 21, 2024... · Episode 4
  34. [34]
    3 Body Problem (TV Series 2024– ) - IMDb
    Rating 7.5/10 (172,127) 3 episodes • 2024. Creators. David Benioff · D.B. Weiss · Alexander Woo · All cast & crew · Production, box office & more at IMDbPro. User reviews1.1K. Review.Alexander Woo · Meet the Cast of "3 Body... · Three-Body · Il problema dei 3 corpi
  35. [35]
    3 Body Problem Review - IGN
    Rating 8/10 · Review by Jordan HoffmanMar 9, 2024 · 3 Body Problem reworks Cixin Liu's mammoth book trilogy for a wider audience to great success, though it may annoy some viewers with its far-out sci-fi and ...
  36. [36]
    Netflix blockbuster '3 Body Problem' divides opinion and ... - CNN
    Mar 22, 2024 · Some Chinese viewers criticized the alteration, saying it construed a plot line that glorifies the West for saving humanity from a disaster ...<|separator|>
  37. [37]
    Conservatives see a critique of the left in Netflix's '3 Body Problem ...
    Mar 27, 2024 · Weiss along with Alexander Woo, starts out with a harrowing scene set in Mao Zedong's China in 1966. A physics professor, accused of teaching ...
  38. [38]
    '3 Body Problem' Controversy: Netflix Series Accused Of Whitewashing
    Mar 25, 2024 · The series' stars and creators have defended the series from whitewashing allegations, and are instead praising the diverse casting for ...Missing: backlash | Show results with:backlash
  39. [39]
    3 Body Problem Showrunners Explain Changes Made for Netflix ...
    Jun 15, 2024 · 3 Body Problem Showrunners David Benioff, D.B. Weiss & Alexander Wu explain the reasons for the changes made in adapting Liu Cixin's novels.
  40. [40]
  41. [41]
    Netflix Launches Ambitious, Engaging Adaptation of 3 Body Problem
    Mar 7, 2024 · It's a show that takes massive narrative swings, killing major characters, jumping in time, shifting focus, and changing direction.<|control11|><|separator|>
  42. [42]
    'Mad Men,' '30 Rock' lead WGA noms - The Hollywood Reporter
    Dec 14, 2009 · “Family” made the cut for best comedy series, best new series and best episodic writing for a comedy series. ... True Blood” and “Breaking Bad.
  43. [43]
    True Blood (TV Series 2008–2014) - Awards - IMDb
    2011 Nominee Image Award. Outstanding Writing in a Dramatic Series. Alexander Woo ... 2011 Winner Scream Award. Best Horror Actor. Alexander Skarsgård · Stephen ...
  44. [44]
    'The Social Network,' 'The King's Speech' Earn Producers Guild ...
    Jan 4, 2011 · PGA Awards ... “True Blood” (HBO). Producers: Alan Ball, Brian Buckner, Gregg Fienberg, Mark McNair, Nancy Oliver, Raelle Tucker, Alexander Woo.
  45. [45]
    WGA Awards: The Complete Winners List - Variety
    Feb 11, 2018 · ... Alexander Woo and George C. Wolfe, Based on the book written by Rebecca Skloot; HBO “The Wizard of Lies,” Teleplay by Sam Levinson and John ...<|separator|>
  46. [46]
    2020 Writers Guild Awards
    The Terror: Infamy. Written by Max Borenstein, Alessandra DiMona, Shannon ... Alexander Woo; AMC. Togo. Written by Tom Flynn; Disney+. True Detective.
  47. [47]
    Outstanding Writing in a Television Movie or Special
    ... NAACP Image? The Los Angeles Times has compiled this list and added links to ... Peter Landesman, Alexander Woo and George C. Wolfe · "The Immortal Life ...
  48. [48]
    NAACP Image Awards: Full List of Winners - The Hollywood Reporter
    Jan 14, 2018 · Peter Landesman, Alexander Woo, George C. Wolfe – The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (HBO). Outstanding Writing in a Motion Picture. Photo ...
  49. [49]
    Alexander Woo - Awards - IMDb
    Primetime Emmy Awards (2) Image Awards (NAACP) (3) PGA Awards (2) USC Scripter Award (1) Writers Guild of America, USA (3) 11 nominations
  50. [50]
    USC Libraries name finalists for 30th annual Scripter Awards
    Feb 10, 2025 · Peter Landesman, George C. Wolfe and Alexander Woo for the television film The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks and author Rebecca Skloot. Joe ...
  51. [51]
    China wants to block a Netflix series that looks at the Cultural ...
    Jan 19, 2024 · American Alexander Woo is one of the writers and producers of the US Netflix series; his parents were born in Hong Kong. This series is not ...Missing: background | Show results with:background
  52. [52]
    '3 Body Problem' Draws Fire in China, Praise From U.S. Conservatives
    Mar 23, 2024 · The show's opening is set in 1966 and depicts a Chinese Cultural Revolution struggle session at a Beijing university where a physics professor ...
  53. [53]
    Netflix showrunner says parallels between Chinese cultural ...
    Mar 26, 2024 · Survivor of Mao's Cultural Revolution: It is taking place right here in America ... Alexander Woo, who is also one of the series' three ...Missing: background | Show results with:background