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- BUSINESS, Page 79Business NotesPUBLIC OFFERINGSBlazing Shares
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- You might buy slapstick from this man, but would you buy
- stock? Funnyman Mel Brooks, 63, said last week that his
- production company, Brooksfilms, plans a public offering to
- raise cash for movie and TV projects. The company earned a mere
- $323,000 in fiscal 1989 and may lose money in 1990. Comedy is
- hot today, but Brooks may be running out of gas. He has had no
- major hit since Blazing Saddles and Young Frankenstein in 1974,
- which reaped a total of more than $86 million in North America
- alone.
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- Hollywood insiders say dealmakers have been wary of Brooks.
- "He's not hot enough that he can make any film he wants (with
- a top studio)," says the president of a major film studio. To
- date, most of the independent film companies that went public
- in the mid-'80s have been stock-market duds. Will Brooks beat
- the odds? Some Wall Streeters are cautiously optimistic: "Mel
- has the ability and contacts to make a success of this," says
- analyst Harold Vogel of Merrill Lynch. Even so, the title of
- Brooks' next film, Life Stinks, is not exactly bullish.
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