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Herbert B. Leonard, 84, film and TV producer

LOS ANGELES -- Herbert B. Leonard, a film and television producer who brought "The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin" and the classic dramatic series "Naked City" and "Route 66" to television in the 1950s and '60s, has died. He was 84.

Mr. Leonard died of cancer last Saturday at his home in the Hollywood Hills, said his daughter, Gina Leonard.

A former unit production manager at Columbia Pictures, Mr. Leonard launched his career as a producer in the 1950s, developing adventure series for Screen Gems, Columbia's television subsidiary.

Mr. Leonard created and was executive producer of "The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin," the 1954-59 Western series set on a cavalry post and featuring a heroic German shepherd and his young boy companion, Rusty (played by Lee Aaker.)

Mr. Leonard also produced the series "Circus Boy," "Tales of the 77th Bengal Lancers" and "Rescue 8."

Then came "Naked City," the gritty police detective drama that ran on ABC from 1958 to 1963 and initially starred John McIntire and James Franciscus.

"There are 8 million stories in the Naked City," the announcer intoned each week on the series, which executive producer Mr. Leonard insisted be shot on location in New York.

But for many, Mr. Leonard's most memorable series is "Route 66," which ran on CBS from 1960 to 1964.

The show starred Martin Milner as the Yale-educated Tod Stiles and George Maharis as streetwise Buz Murdock, two young men meandering across America in an iconic Corvette. (Maharis was replaced by Glenn Corbett as Vietnam veteran Linc Case in the final season.)

Like "Naked City," "Route 66" was shot on location in about 40 states and frequently featured the writing of cocreator Sterling Silliphant, who also worked with Mr. Leonard on "Naked City."

"Herbert B. Leonard was a key producer, creating unique entertainment on film starting in the late '50s," said Ron Simon, curator of television and radio at the Museum of Television & Radio in New York. "Unlike other producers, he worked to explore contemporary America.

"His `Naked City' reflected the grittiness and realism of 1960s New York. And `Route 66' in many ways brought the spirit of Jack Kerouac's `On the Road' to a television audience. He really helped pioneer a new spirit at Screen Gems."

Robert Thompson, director of the Center for the Study of Popular Television at Syracuse University, said Mr. Leonard's "greatest legacy was to extend the golden age of television into the 1960s through `Naked City' and `Route 66,' which carried the idea of the anthology drama into the era of the modern television series."

Speaking of "Route 66," Mr. Leonard told the Times in 1993: "The stories were about something. They had a theme. They had a point. They had a human spirit. The guys were really testing their values against the people they met on the road."

Mr. Leonard was born in New York City on Oct. 8, 1922. He attended New York University, where he played football, before becoming a Navy pilot and instructor during World War II.

Among Mr. Leonard's movie credits as a producer are "Popi," a 1969 comedy-drama directed by Arthur Hiller and starring Alan Arkin.

Mr. Leonard also produced and codirected "The Perils of Pauline," a 1967 comedy starring Pat Boone; and he produced and directed "Going Home," a 1971 drama starring Robert Mitchum.

In addition to his daughter Gina, Mr. Leonard leaves five other daughters, Michelle, Swan, Victoria, Sophie, and Annie, and three grandchildren. 

© Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company