Michael Eisner
Michael Eisner | |
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Eisner in October 2010 | |
Born |
Michael Dammann Eisner March 7, 1942[1] Mount Kisco, New York, U.S. |
Residence | Los Angeles |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Denison University (B.A.) |
Occupation | Entertainment executive |
Years active | 1966–present |
Home town | Los Angeles, California |
Net worth | US$ 1 billion (2008)[2] |
Board member of |
The Walt Disney Company (Ex-Chief executive officer), Denison University[3] |
Spouse(s) | Jane Breckenridge (1967-present) |
Children |
Breck Eisner, Eric Eisner, Anders Eisner |
Family |
Sigmund Eisner (great-grandfather) |
Website | http://www.michaeleisner.com/ |
Signature | |
Michael Dammann Eisner[4] (born March 7, 1942) is an American businessman. He is best known as the chief executive officer of The Walt Disney Company from 1984 until 2005. Prior to Disney, he was president and CEO of rival movie studio Paramount Pictures from 1976 to 1984, and had brief stints at the major television networks NBC, CBS and ABC.
Early life
Eisner was born to an affluent, secular Jewish family[5] in Mount Kisco, New York. His mother, Margaret (née Dammann),[4] whose family founded the American Safety Razor Company, was the president of the Irvington Institute, a hospital that treated children with rheumatic fever.[5] His father, Lester Eisner, Jr.,[4] was a lawyer and regional administrator of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.[6] His great-grandfather,[7] Sigmund Eisner, established a very successful clothing company that was one of the first uniform suppliers to the Boy Scouts of America[5] and his great-grandmother, Bertha Weiss, belonged to an immigrant family that established the town of Red Bank, New Jersey.[5] His parents were both descendents of German Jewish immigrants and Eisner had 16 relatives who were killed in the Holocaust.[5]
He was raised on Park Avenue in Manhattan.[5] He attended the Allen-Stevenson School kindergarten through ninth grade followed by The Lawrenceville School in 10th through his senior year and graduated from Denison University in 1964[5] with a B.A. in English. [8] He is a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity[9][10] and credits much of his accomplishments to his time at Keewaydin Canoe Camp for boys in Vermont.[5] Eisner has one sister, Margot Freedman.[6]
ABC and Paramount
After two brief stints at NBC and CBS, Barry Diller at ABC hired Eisner as Assistant to the National Programming Director. Eisner moved up the ranks, eventually becoming a senior vice president in charge of programming and development. In 1976, Diller, who had by then moved on to become chairman of Paramount Pictures, recruited Eisner from ABC and made him president and CEO of the movie studio. During his tenure at Paramount, the studio produced films such as Saturday Night Fever, Grease, the Star Trek film franchise, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and Beverly Hills Cop, and TV shows such as Happy Days, Laverne & Shirley, Cheers and Family Ties.[8]
Diller left Paramount in 1984, and, as his protégé, Eisner expected to assume Diller's position as studio chief. When he was passed over for the job, though, he left to look for work elsewhere and lobbied for the position of CEO of The Walt Disney Company.
The Walt Disney Company
Since the death of founder Walt Disney in 1966, The Walt Disney Company had narrowly survived several takeover attempts. Its shareholders Sid Bass and Roy E. Disney brought in Eisner (as CEO and Chairman of the Board) and former Warner Brothers chief Frank Wells (as President) to replace Ron W. Miller in 1984 and strengthen the company.
During the second half of the 1980s and early 1990s, Disney was revitalized. Beginning with the films Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) and The Little Mermaid (1989), its flagship animation studio enjoyed a series of commercial and critical successes. Disney also broadened its adult offerings in film when then Disney Studio Chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg acquired Miramax Films in 1993. Disney acquired many other media sources, including ABC and ESPN.
In the early part of the 1990s, Eisner and his partners set out to plan "The Disney Decade" which was to feature new parks around the world, existing park expansions, new films, and new media investments. While some of the proposals were completed, most were not. Those completed included the Euro Disney Resort (now Disneyland Paris), Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney's Hollywood Studios), Disney's California Adventure Park (now Disney California Adventure), Disney-MGM Studios Paris (eventually opened in 2002 as Walt Disney Studios Park), and various film projects including a Who Framed Roger Rabbit franchise.
Wells died in a helicopter crash in 1994. When Eisner did not appoint Walt Disney Studios chief Jeffrey Katzenberg to Wells' now available post, Katzenberg resigned, and formed DreamWorks SKG, with partners Steven Spielberg and David Geffen. Eisner then recruited his friend Michael Ovitz, one of the founders of the Creative Artists Agency, to be President, with minimal involvement from Disney's board of directors (which at the time included Oscar-winning actor Sidney Poitier, the CEO of Hilton Hotels Corporation Stephen Bollenbach, former U.S. Senator George Mitchell, Yale dean Robert A. M. Stern, and Eisner's predecessors Raymond Watson and Card Walker).
Ovitz lasted only 14 months, and left Disney in December 1996, via a "no fault termination" with a severance package of $38 million in cash, and 3 million stock options worth roughly $100 million, at the time of Ovitz's departure. The Ovitz episode engendered a long running derivative suit, which finally concluded in June 2006, almost 10 years later. Chancellor William B. Chandler, III of the Delaware Court of Chancery, despite describing Eisner's behavior as falling "far short of what shareholders expect and demand from those entrusted with a fiduciary position..." found in favor of Eisner and the rest of the Disney board because they had not violated the letter of the law (namely, the duty of care owed by a corporation's officers and board to its shareholders).[11]
"Save Disney" campaign and the ousting of Eisner
In 2003, Roy E. Disney, the son of Disney co-founder Roy O. Disney and nephew of Walt Disney, resigned from his positions as Disney vice chairman and chairman of Walt Disney Feature Animation. His reason for resigning was his feeling that there was too much micromanagement within the studio, flops with the ABC television network, the company's growing timidity in the theme park business, the Walt Disney Company turning into a "rapacious, soul-less" company, Eisner's refusal to establish a clear succession plan, as well as the studio releasing a string of box-office movie flops starting in the year 2000.[12]
On March 3, 2004, at Disney's annual shareholders' meeting, a surprising and unprecedented 43% of Disney's shareholders, predominantly rallied by former board members Roy Disney and Stanley Gold, withheld their proxies to re-elect Eisner to the board. Disney's board then gave the chairmanship position to board member George Mitchell. However, the board did not immediately remove Eisner as chief executive.[13]
On March 13, 2005, Eisner announced that he would step down as CEO one year before his contract expired. On September 30, Eisner resigned both as an executive and as a member of the board of directors, and, severing all formal ties with the company, he waived his contractual rights to perks such as the use of a corporate jet and an office at the company's Burbank headquarters. Eisner's replacement was his longtime Chief Operating Officer, Bob Iger.[14]
Post-Disney
On October 7, 2005, Eisner was a guest host for the Charlie Rose talk show. His guests were John Travolta and his ex-boss, Barry Diller.[15] Impressed with Eisner's performance, CNBC President Mark Hoffman hired Eisner in early 2006 to host his own talk show, Conversations with Michael Eisner. The show (which was cancelled in 2009) mostly featured CEOs, political leaders, artists and actors.[16] Eisner is also an executive producer of the show.[17]
In March 2007, Eisner's investment firm, The Tornante Company, launched a studio, Vuguru, that produces and distributes videos for the Internet, portable media devices and cell phones.
In October 2007, Eisner, through his Tornante Company investment firm, partnered with Madison Dearborn Partners in the acquisition of Topps Company, the bubble-gum and collectibles firm. He produced a mockumentary style show about his takeover of the Topps Company, called "Back on Topps."
The College of Education at California State University Northridge is named in his honor.
In 2009, Eisner used his own money to produce a claymation show called Glenn Martin, DDS.
He was inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame in 2012.
Personal life
After college in 1964, he met his future wife, Jane Breckenridge,[4] a Unitarian of Swedish and Scottish descent.[5] They have three sons: Breck, Eric and Anders Eisner.[18]
Books
- Work In Progress (1998) (ISBN 0-375-50071-5)
- Camp (2005) (ISBN 978-0446533690)
- Working Together: Why Great Partnerships Succeed (2010) (ISBN 978-0-06-173236-2)
Awards and recognition
- 2001 Honor Award from the National Building Museum[19]
- 2004 UJA-Federation of New York's Steven J. Ross Humanitarian of the Year Award[20]
- Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2008.[21]
- Inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame on March 1, 2012.[22]
References
- ↑ "Monitor". Entertainment Weekly (1197). Mar 9, 2012. p. 26.
- ↑ "The World's Billionaires #1014 Michael Eisne". Forbes. Retrieved October 3, 2013.
- ↑ "Board of Trustees". denison.edu. Denison University. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 Film Reference: Michael D. Eisner Biography (1942-)
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Pinsky, Mark I., The Gospel According to Disney: Faith, Trust, and Pixie Dust p. 123-129
- 1 2 New York Times: "Lester Eisner Jr. Dies at 73; Former U.S. Housing Official" June 19, 1987
- ↑ Sigmund Eisner obituary, NY Times, January 6, 1925
- 1 2 "Michael Eisner". michaeleisner.com. Retrieved February 20, 2016.
- ↑ "Delta Upsilon Fraternity". San Jose State University. Retrieved December 11, 2014.
- ↑ "Delta Upsilon Fraternity". University of Rochester. Retrieved December 11, 2014.
- ↑ In re The Walt Disney Company Derivative Litigation, 907 A.2d 693 (Del. Ch. August 9, 2005).
- ↑ McCarthy, Michael (December 2, 2003). "War of words erupts at Walt Disney". USA Today. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
- ↑ McCarthy, Michael (March 5, 2004). "Disney strips chairmanship from Eisner". USA Today. Retrieved October 26, 2013.
- ↑ Holson, Laura M. (September 26, 2005). "A Quiet Departure for Eisner at Disney". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2013.
- ↑ "The Charlie Rose Show" Episode dated 7 October 2005 (2005)
- ↑ CNBC Website
- ↑ Petrecca, Laura (January 10, 2006). "Eisner to host CNBC show". USA Today. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
- ↑ Michael Eisner (I) – Biography
- ↑ National Building Museum. "Honor Award".
- ↑ "Entertainment, Media & Communications". UJA-Federation of New York. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
Steven J. Ross Humanitarian of the Year Award Honorees ... 2004 Michael Eisner
- ↑ Quick, Sonya (April 24, 2008). "Michael Eisner receiving star on Hollywood Walk of Fame Friday". Orange County Register.
Movie mogul and former Disney CEO Michael Eisner will be honored Friday with the 2,361st star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The 11:30 a.m. ceremony will be attended by Eisner, Hollywood Chamber of Commerce President/CEO Leron Gubler, Walt Disney Co. President and CEO Bob Iger and actor John Travolta. His star will join other Disney figures already in place on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (please comment if we’ve missed one): Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Walt Disney, Roy Disney and Snow White.
- ↑ Glazer, Mikey (March 2, 2012). "Chuck Lorre, Michael Eisner, Bunim/Murray Inducted Into TV Academy Hall of Fame". The Wrap News, Inc. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
“Tonight, we are here to celebrate people who are not French,” Jon Cryer joked as he opened the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ Hall of Fame Induction at the Beverly Hills Hotel Thursday night. The non-French 2012 inductees are CBS sitcom king Chuck Lorre , Michael Eisner, reality pioneers Bunim/Murray Productions (“The Real World,” “A Simple Life,” “Keeping up with the Kardashians”), Mario Kruetzenberg (Don Francisco, of “Sabado Gigante” fame), lighting designer Bill Klages (Emmys, Tonys, Grammys, Golden Globes and the 1984 Olympics), and late “I Love Lucy” cast members Vivian Vance and William Frawley.
Further reading
- The Disney Touch: How a Daring Management Team Revived an Entertainment Empire by Ron Grover (Richard D. Irwin, Inc., 1991), ISBN 1-55623-385-X
- DisneyWar by James B. Stewart, Simon & Schuster, 2005, ISBN 0-684-80993-1
- Work in Progress by Michael Eisner with Tony Schwartz (Random House, 1998), ISBN 978-0-375-50071-8
External links
- Official website
- Michael Eisner at the Internet Movie Database
- Eisner Foundation
- Michael Eisner interview video at the Archive of American Television
- Michael Eisner's Interview on Plum
Business positions | ||
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Preceded by Raymond Watson |
Disney Chairman 1984–2004 |
Succeeded by George J. Mitchell |
Preceded by Ron W. Miller |
Disney CEO 1984–2005 |
Succeeded by Robert Iger |
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