Chicago Sun-Times

PRODUCER OF ‘CHINATOWN,’ ‘THE GODFATHER’ DIES AT 89

- BY JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK — Robert Evans, the protean, fast-living Hollywood producer and former Paramount Pictures production chief who backed such seminal 1970s films as “Chinatown,” ‘’The Godfather” and “Harold and Maude,” has died. He was 89.

Mr. Evans’ publicist, Monique Moss, confirmed that Mr. Evans died on Saturday. No other details were immediatel­y available.

His career was a story of comebacks and reinventio­ns. Mr. Evans had launched a successful women’s clothing line with his brother, Charles, and was visiting Los Angeles on business when actress Norma Shearer saw him sunbathing by the pool at the Beverly Hills Hotel. She persuaded producers to hire the handsome, dark-haired 26-year-old to play her late husband, movie mogul Irving Thalberg, in “Man of a Thousand Faces,” a film about horror movie star Lon Chaney.

After acting roles faded, Mr. Evans reemerged as head of production at Paramount and quickly converted the studio from a maker of mediocre films to the biggest hit machine in Hollywood, home to “The Godfather” and “Love Story” among others.

For decades, and with many flops in between, Mr. Evans was one of Hollywood’s most outsized and flamboyant personalit­ies, encapsulat­ing the romance of a now bygone movie era where films were greenlit more on instinct than market research. He was widely believed to be the model for Dustin Hoffman’s petty-minded Hollywood producer in the 1997 satire “Wag the Dog.”

The title of Mr. Evans’ 1994 memoir, “The Kid Stays in the Picture” (later turned into a 2002 documentar­y) came from an early story of his improbable success.

After he appeared in “Man of a Thousand Faces” Darryl Zanuck signed Mr. Evans to a contract at Twentieth Century Fox and cast him as a bullfighte­r in “The Sun Also Rises.” The filmmakers insisted the young actor wasn’t right for the role, so Zanuck went to Mexico City, where the film was being made, to see for himself. His verdict: “The kid stays in the picture.”

It was Mr. Evans who optioned “The Godfather” while Mario Puzo was writing it. As Paramount chief, Mr. Evans presided over Francis Ford Coppola’s production but his role in the movie, itself, has sometimes been exaggerate­d — most of all by Mr. Evans. But Coppola, recalled Mr. Evans fondly on Monday, recollecti­ng the producer’s “charm, good looks, enthusiasm, style and sense of humor.”

“When I worked with Bob, some of his helpful ideas included suggesting John Marley as Woltz and Sterling Hayden as the police captain, and his ultimate realizatio­n that ‘The Godfather’ could be 2 hours and 45 minutes in length,” said Coppola.

Mr. Evans was born Robert J. Shapera in New York, the second son of Archie Shapera, a dentist, and his wife, Florence, a homemaker. He began acting in radio while in junior high school, going on to appear in more than 300 shows.

After “The Sun Also Rises,” Mr. Evans left Hollywood to join his brother in the clothing business, but was lured back in 1966 when Zanuck offered him a three-picture contract as a producer. That same year Paramount Pictures hired him to head production.

From 1966 to 1974 Mr. Evans presided over such hits as “The Odd Couple,” “Rosemary’s Baby” and “Goodbye, Columbus.”

Albert Ruddy, who won an Oscar as producer of “The Godfather,” credited Mr. Evans with filling an essential role in the picture’s success. When Paramount’s head of distributi­on objected to the nearly 3-hour running time, Mr. Evans backed up the filmmakers and insisted that the movie not be cut.

Mr. Evans didn’t share in Paramount’s prosperity, however. He wasn’t granted any bonuses, and his string of marriages and divorces drained away much of the money he did make. After brief marriages to actresses Sharon Hugueny and Camilla Sparv, he married Ali MacGraw, who became a star with her performanc­e in “Goodbye, Columbus.” She gave birth to Mr. Evans’ only child, Joshua.

MacGraw became a superstar after “Love Story,” then went off to Texas to spend four months making “The Getaway” with Steve McQueen, with whom she had one of Hollywood’s more notable affairs. She and Mr. Evans divorced in 1972 and he married former Miss America Phyllis George in 1977. They split a year later.

Meanwhile, Mr. Evans had formed his own production company, and he quickly turned out one of the biggest hits of 1974, Roman Polanski’s “Chinatown.” The next decades brought a period of failures, however, including Coppola’s “The Cotton Club,” and the “Chinatown” sequel “The Two Jakes” and the thrillers “Sliver” and “Jade.”

In 1980 he pleaded guilty to cocaine possession and was placed on a year’s probation.

He had a near-fatal setback in 1998 when he suffered a stroke in a Hollywood screening room. Mr. Evans underwent a grueling rehab, but still found time for his fifth wedding, this time to actresss Catherine Oxenberg. The marriage barely lasted longer than the couple’s five-day courtship.

Wedding No. 6 occurred in 2002. The bride was Leslie Ann Woodward, a model and actress. Divorce No. 6 followed a little more than a year later.

In 2005, Mr. Evans married Lady Victoria White, a socialite 33 years his junior. He and White divorced in 2006.

 ?? RICHARD SHOTWELL/ INVISION/AP ?? Robert Evans is photograph­ed in Los Angeles in 2013.
RICHARD SHOTWELL/ INVISION/AP Robert Evans is photograph­ed in Los Angeles in 2013.
 ?? AP ?? Producer Robert Evans (center) celebrates with exwife Ali MacGraw and their son Josh after the unveiling of Evans’ star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame in front of Grauman’s Chinese Theater in 2002.
AP Producer Robert Evans (center) celebrates with exwife Ali MacGraw and their son Josh after the unveiling of Evans’ star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame in front of Grauman’s Chinese Theater in 2002.

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