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- BUSINESS, Page 52If He Can Make It Here . . .
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- Will the film business be ruled only by foreign moguls and
- domestic megastudios? Not if Robert De Niro can help it. The
- reclusive, renegade actor is betting his money and his reputation
- that he can deliver a convincing performance as a real-life film
- producer. De Niro's previous experience as a boss has been confined
- to playing characters ranging from Don Corleone in The Godfather,
- Part II to a film mogul in The Last Tycoon. But this year the
- 46-year-old Manhattan native became president of his own movie
- company, New York City's TriBeCa Productions, which already has ten
- film projects in early stages of development. In September, De Niro
- will open the TriBeCa Film Center, an eight-story converted coffee
- factory near the Hudson River that will house his production
- company and offer space to other independent filmmakers.
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- De Niro decided to go into business so that he could try his
- hand at directing and producing. "I never had the full
- responsibility for a film before and never wanted it. But now I
- do," he told a reporter. "Ultimately, it's to have control."
-
- For his headquarters, De Niro chose an 83-year-old red brick
- building situated in TriBeCa, a trendy downtown neighborhood where
- he lives. De Niro, who will have 50% ownership in the building, is
- supervising a renovation that will leave in place industrial
- details like the giant coffee scales in his office. But the
- building's advanced features will include a 70-seat screening room
- designed by director George Lucas' production company.
-
- The atmosphere at TriBeCa will be a far cry from that of the
- big studios. "We're more relaxed," says Jane Rosenthal, a CBS and
- Walt Disney veteran hired by De Niro as his executive vice
- president. "My two dogs come to work with me." There will also be
- some indulgences at the film center. One will be the TriBeCa Bar
- and Grill, a restaurant that De Niro is opening with financial
- investments from such pals as Sean Penn, Bill Murray and Mikhail
- Baryshnikov. De Niro's new Hollywood-on-the-Hudson may be an
- upstart, but it will not suffer for lack of connections.