Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
A behind-the-scenes Hollywood memoir by the pioneering co-founder of Creative Artists Agency. Much has been written about Michael Ovitz, the larger-than-life dealmaker and strategist who was known for many years as the most powerful person in Hollywood. But Ovitz has been largely silent about his life and career, despite his huge impact on global entertainment.
Ovitz redefined the role of an agent by pulling together all the elements of high-profile deals for blockbuster movies and TV shows. He helped shape the careers of many of the world's biggest directors and stars, including Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Stanley Kubrick, Meryl Streep, Sean Connery, Dustin Hoffman, Barbra Streisand, and David Letterman.
This memoir tells the whole story, from his first day in the William Morris Agency mailroom to his glory days with CAA, to his controversial tenure as president of Disney.
Synopsis
"In twenty years I went from a complete unknown, to a comer, to being hailed as the most powerful man in Hollywood. After a few years of that, I became the most feared man in town. And once I left CAA, when it was safe for everyone to vent, I became the most hated." Who is Michael Ovitz?
He's a striver who talked his way into the famous mailroom of the William Morris Agency without any connections, then worked his way out of the mailroom in record time.
He's an entrepreneur who left a safe job to launch Creative Artists Agency, growing it from five guys in a rundown office to the most powerful agency in the world.
He's a friend and confidant to megastars such as Steven Spielberg, Tom Cruise, Robert De Niro, David Letterman, Sean Connery, Bill Murray, Paul Newman, and Martin Scorsese.
He's a pioneer who reinvented the role of the agent in packaging actors, directors, writers, and producers, which made CAA the essential hub of countless movies and television shows.
He's a master negotiator who drove historic deals for many of his clients, as well as the acquisitions of two major studios by Sony and Matsushita.
He's a self-taught connoisseur of art and architecture, a generous philanthropist, a devoted father...
And to his detractors he's a world-class jerk and a ruthless manipulator who double-crossed his friends, crushed his enemies, and let nothing stand in his way, ever.
After decades of near silence in the face of relentless controversy, Ovitz finally tells his whole story in this memoir, with remarkable candor and insight. If you're going to read just one book about how show business really works, this is the one.