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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>
-
-