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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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time
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090693
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09069928.000
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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT2192>
<title>
Sep. 06, 1993: Requiem for a Heavyweight
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Sep. 06, 1993 Boom Time In The Rockies
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SPECTATOR, Page 73
Requiem for a Heavyweight
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In Sam Cohn's show-business realm, the good old days keep on
ending
</p>
<p>By Kurt Andersen
</p>
<p> Show people slough off their old agents all the time. If your
career is suddenly on the ascent, you need to sign with a big-time
handler who can fully exploit your new aura. And if your career
is foundering--needless to say, through absolutely no fault
of your own--you've got to find the suitably aggressive new
handler who can persuade executives that your aura is undimmed.
It's just the way the industry works.
</p>
<p> However, when the powerful director Mike Nichols (who, at 61,
epitomizes a certain Manhattan strain of cool, cerebral show-business
class) dumps his long-time agent, the legendary Sam Cohn (who,
at 64, epitomizes a certain Manhattan strain of cerebral, relentlessly
colorful show-business class) in favor of the powerful Creative
Artists Agency wunderkind Jay Maloney (who, at 28--28!--epitomizes a certain L.A. strain of clear-headed, buttoned-down,
reassuringly colorless show-business class), the switch seems
emblematic of larger, longer-running shifts in the way movies
and plays get produced.
</p>
<p> Ah, Sam Cohn. It is astonishing how recently (that is, during
Jay Maloney's teenage years) Cohn was singularly powerful. Indeed,
he was the first superagent of the modern age, a forerunner
of Maloney's boss Mike Ovitz as a finger-in-every-pie packager
who represented the writer and the director and the stars of
a given production. Deep into the 1980s, Cohn had an impressive
plurality of the stars and filmmakers with claims to blue-chip
seriousness: Meryl Streep, Glenn Close, Lily Tomlin, Whoopi
Goldberg, Robin Williams, Robert Altman, Bob Fosse, Sidney Lumet,
Woody Allen, Nichols and so many more. Cohn got Columbia Pictures
to pay an astonishing $9.5 million for the movie rights to the
Broadway musical Annie, a record that will probably never be
broken. In New York's big-time legitimate theater, Cohn's hegemony
was almost complete, his power inescapable. During a couple
of early-'80s seasons, Cohn was involved in the Broadway productions
of "Nine," Noises Off, The Real Thing, Sunday in the Park with
George and A Moon for the Misbegotten, among others.
</p>
<p> But nearly his entire decade-ago pantheon of movie clients have,
one by one, left him. Lumet and Allen remain, but neither director
is any longer someone whose films the smart set feels obliged
to see, and neither has had a hit since--well, since before
Sam Cohn's influence ebbed. In 1991 a New York-based movie star
signed with Cohn's agency--but with the understanding she
would not work with Cohn. And Broadway, the classier-than-thou
underpinning of his Hollywood power in his heyday, is no longer
much of a creative epicenter; only two straight plays are currently
running.
</p>
<p> Cohn's ostentatious snobbery (he slags Hollywood at every opportunity)
and quirks (he eats paper, he doesn't return phone calls) have
been finally more self-defeating than charming. And while talented
performers and directors can remain willfully removed from the
West L.A. schmoozathon, in this day and age an agent really
cannot.
</p>
<p> During preproduction on Wolf, Nichols' forthcoming movie starring
Jack Nicholson, a source close to the director says that when
Nichols encountered serious impediments--Nicholson wouldn't
commit, Columbia wouldn't approve the budget--Cohn did not
quietly throw his weight around and fix everything, Ovitzishly.
"Mike ((Nichols)) would try to reach Sam," recalls the source,
"and he'd have left the office for the night. And Mike couldn't
just call ((Columbia chairman)) Mark Canton and yell at him
himself." That's what superagents are for.
</p>
<p> But Sam Cohn's shrinkage is not just a matter of his age, his
distance from Wilshire Boulevard or his chronic breaches of
etiquette. Rather, says a friend, "Sam was the king of artistic
seriouness," and the appetite for serious films--dark and
downbeat, reeking of alienation--is not what it was. In 1993,
would studios green-light Lumet's Equus, Allen's Interiors,
Altman's Quintet or Nichols' Carnal Knowledge? Cohn was a power
broker during the decade or two when every movie director was
by definition an untouchable auteur. Nowadays even true auteurs
such as Scorsese are kept on rather short leashes, indulged
their expensive artistic visions not much beyond one or two
failures.
</p>
<p> The late, occasionally great age of high-priced show-biz seriousness
is over. Cohn will generate a zillion dollars in commissions
this year, but he will earn it off pleasant trifles like Nora
Ephron's Sleepless in Seattle and Manhattan Murder Mystery--in which the main characters are habitues of Elaine's, Woody's
Upper East Side hangout that was the hottest restaurant on earth
during exactly the period when Sam Cohn was the hottest agent.
The glorious moment for a certain cli quishly upper-middle-brow
Manhattan high life--back when Saturday Night Live and Vanity
Fair were brand new, back before AIDS and Soon-Yi--has passed.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>