Leonard Goldberg, who produced the popular television series “Charlie’s Angels” and “Fantasy Island” with Aaron Spelling in the 1970s and late in life conceived the hit police drama “Blue Bloods,” died on Dec. 4 in a hospital in Los Angeles. He was 85.

His wife, Wendy Howard Goldberg, said the cause was injuries from a fall at his home.

For nearly 60 years, the suave and calm Mr. Goldberg found success as an executive with 20th Century Fox and ABC, where he helped establish the genre of weekly made-for-TV movies.

But he preferred the creative art of producing TV shows. Among the best-known Spelling-Goldberg productions was “Charlie’s Angels,” which became a pop-culture phenomenon and made a star of Farrah Fawcett-Majors as one of three beautiful female detectives. She left after the first season, but the show remained a hit.

As Mr. Goldberg neared his 80s, “Blue Bloods,” which proved to be his longest-running series, made its debut on CBS, in 2010. The show tells the story of the Reagans, a law-enforcement clan led by a New York City police commissioner, played by Tom Selleck. Mr. Goldberg created it as a hybrid of police procedurals, like “Starsky & Hutch,” another Spelling-Goldberg production, and “Family,” the company’s much-praised series about a middle-class family in California.