John Stephen Stohn is a Canadian-based, American-born entertainment lawyer and television producer. He is best known for being executive producer of the teen dramaseries . Until 2018 he was the president of Epitome Pictures Inc., which he and his wife Linda Schuyler founded and which was sold to DHX Media in 2014. On June 7, 2019 he was installed as Chancellor of Trent University.
Career
Stohn's work in the entertainment industry commenced with part-time appearances as a performing artist, continuing with active work as a songwriter, and a primary career as an entertainment and copyright lawyer since he was called to the Ontario Bar in 1979. Trent University had barely been built when Stohn attended there starting in 1966. He helped found, and named, Trent's student newspaper Arthur. Stohn also helped found the radio station at Trent, now CFFF-FM, along with Peter Northrop and Christopher Ward. In the early 1990s, he helped found the Songwriters Association of Canada along with Donna Murphy, Terry McManus and internationally acclaimed songwriter Eddie Schwartz. Stohn has executive-produced two feature films, Me? and The Clown Murders. He was also executive producer of Riverdale, English Canada's first prime-time soap opera, and of the lifestyle TV series Savoir Faire and Room Service.
Book
A book of stories from Stohn's life was published by Dundurn Press in March 2018. Entitled Whatever It Takes: Life Lessons from Degrassi and Elsewhere in the World of Music and Television, the book has been written by Stohn with Christopher Ward, and includes a Foreword by Martin Gero.
''Degrassi''
In early 2000, Linda Schuyler and Yan Moore were developing a new teen TV series with the working titleReady, Willing and Wired, based on the already success. One day Yan came up with the brainstorm that baby Emma, who was born to the then 8th-grade student Spike Nelson in Degrassi Junior High, would be the right age now to be attending high school, and why not make her a main character in Ready, Willing and Wired thus turning the new series into a sequel to the original Degrassi. Inspired by his love for the original Star Trek sci-fi TV series, which had spun into ', Stohn suggested ' as the title for the new sequel series. By autumn 2001 the title remained, and ' made its first appearance on air. Stohn co-wrote the opening theme music for ' with Jim McGrath and Jody Colero. He is also the executive producer of Alexz Johnson's debut solo album Voodoo, and the executive producer of all the various Degrassi soundtracks and Instant Star soundtracks.
Other work
For nearly 20 years, until 2009, he was executive producer of the telecast of Canada's music awards show, The Juno Awards, and during that period was a director and then Chair of Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, the organization responsible for The Juno Awards. He was also Chair of MusiCounts, a charity associated with The Juno Awards, which among other things distributes musical instruments to schools in need. From 2004 to 2008 Stohn executive produced the teen drama television series Instant Star about a young woman who wins a singer/songwriter contest. In 2011 and 2012 he executive produced the television series The L.A. Complex for Bell Media in Canada and The CW in the U.S., about young Canadians dreaming of fame and fortune while struggling to survive in an apartment-style hotel in Los Angeles. His recent projects have included the family mystery series Open Heart for YTV in Canada and TeenNick in the U.S. and the latest incarnation of Degrassi, namely for Family Channel in Canada and Netflix worldwide.
Legal background
Stohn's industry experience includes being a partner for 10 years in Canada's largest law firm, McCarthy Tétrault. He graduated from the University of Toronto Faculty of Law and Trent University. He is a founding partner in the Canadian entertainment law firm Stohn Hay Cafazzo Dembroski Richmond LLP, where he provides strategic legal advice to performers, advertising agencies, merchandisers, recording artists, songwriters, multimedia/internet creators, broadcasters and film and television producers. He and two other partners in the firm constitute three of the fourteen entertainment lawyers named in the 2014 Lexpert American Lawyer Guide to the Leading 500 Lawyers in Canada.
Personal life
Stohn was born in Denver, Colorado. He is married to Degrassi creator Linda Schuyler; they have one son, Max.
Awards
Stohn has been nominated 28 times in Canada's national television awards ceremony, the Canadian Screen Awards, and has won 14 times. In 2011 he was nominated for a primetime Emmy Award and won a Peabody Award. He was nominated three more times for a primetime Emmy Award, in 2012, 2014 and 2015.
In August 2005, Stohn received a commendation from the Government of Ontario reading in part: "You are no stranger to Canadian show business, having worked, and excelled, in nearly all facets of the industry. You seem to have worn every possible hat—from performing artist to accomplished entertainment lawyer—and, in doing so, have amassed an incomparable wealth of knowledge and experience. Your skills and expertise have stood you in good stead, propelling you from success to success. Whether producing the internationally acclaimed television series or playing a key role in the development of Epitome Pictures, you take on challenges in a manner appropriately echoed by the words of the legendary Samuel Goldwyn: All opportunities in the world are waiting to grasped by people who are in love with what they are doing.''
On March 10, 2011 he was inducted into the Canadian Music & Broadcast Industry Hall of Fame.
On June 4, 2015 Trent University awarded him an honorary doctorate, Doctor of Letters.