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- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 64The Miracle Mogul Walks Out
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- At Fox, Barry Diller started the first successful TV network in
- 40 years. What will he do for an encore?
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- At 50, George Orwell said, everyone has the face he deserves.
- Barry Diller had that face by the time he was 30 and a
- fast-tracker at ABC. His premature baldness and stark visage
- gave him the look of an Edsel with the top down. And he already
- possessed that icy stare that made him, according to one
- Hollywood wit, "the last person you'd want to spill a drink on
- at a cocktail party." These, and a great gut for pop culture,
- served him well as chairman of Paramount Pictures from 1974 to
- '84, when it produced golden-calf movies (Grease, Flashdance)
- and cash-cow TV series (Taxi, Cheers). Then he took over 20th
- Century Fox, where he stanched its financial hemorrhaging,
- stabilized its film program and, oh, started the first
- successful TV network in 40 years.
-
- On Feb. 2, though, Diller turned 50. And the miracle mogul
- had to wonder, Did he have the power he deserved? Spawning Home
- Alone and The Simpsons loses its savor if the profits you
- generate go out of Fox's entertainment pocket and into the
- frayed purse of the newspapers owned by your boss, Rupert
- Murdoch. Or any company owned by anyone else. At Disney,
- Diller's friend and former underling Michael Eisner answers only
- to God and the Bass brothers. Ted Turner, Larry Tisch -- these
- guys own stuff. Diller just ran things. "For 30 years I've been
- an employee," he says. "It's long enough."
-
- That was Diller's explanation for his abrupt announcement
- last week that he was leaving Fox. The funny thing is that it
- may be true. "I decided to leave in June of last year," he
- says. "Finally, I ran out of excuses." With Fox TV in its third
- profitable year, Diller could leave with a keen sense of
- accomplishment. "I was there when Fox was a minute-and-a-half
- from going under," says producer James Brooks, who brought the
- network respect with The Tracey Ullman Show and then killer
- clout with The Simpsons. "But Barry brought it off. It wasn't
- an act, it wasn't manipulation. It was sheer force of will."
-
- Some observers say Diller is getting out while the getting
- is good. The film division has floundered with costly snoozers
- like Dying Young and For the Boys. The TV network could sail
- back into red ink when it expands from five to seven nights. And
- Murdoch, now based in Los Angeles, promises or threatens to be
- a hands-on boss.
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- Diller may want to get his hands on another network -- NBC
- seems tantalizingly vulnerable -- and remake it in his own
- image, with spikier programming, homemade stars and a skeletal
- news staff; he could even sell the network's local stations.
- "Whatever happens," says David Geffen, the movie-and-music
- magnate who has been mentioned as a potential Diller investor,
- "he won't rest for long. He loves a challenge. He's not afraid.
- He's got elephant balls."
-
- For now, Babar hints at his future by invoking his past.
- "The only things that have interested me are the things I've
- started: the movie of the week, the novel for TV [he bought
- Roots for ABC], building that fourth network from a blank piece
- of paper. Things that haven't been done before don't scare me.
- So today I feel euphoric and lucky. I can put all my energy into
- this new project. Whatever it will be."
-
- Barry, you tease!
-
- By Richard Corliss. Reported by Sally B. Donnelly and Martha
- Smilgis/Los Angeles.
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