Los Angeles Times

Media mogul and L.A. philanthro­pist

ANDREW JERROLD PERENCHIO, 1930-2017

- meg.james@latimes.com Times staff writer David Ng contribute­d to this report.

Jerry Perenchio called his business maxims “Rules of the Road,” and when he was offered the chance to promote a boxing match between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier back in 1971, he followed No. 8:

“Take Options, Never Give Them.”

He got Jack Kent Cooke, then owner of the Los Angeles Lakers, to bankroll the event and sold broadcast rights to concert promoters who booked local theaters for closed-circuit feeds. Frank Sinatra served as a ringside photograph­er for Life magazine, and Burt Lancaster provided color commentary.

The event helped carve a new niche in TV sports — and delivered a $2-million profit, an enormous sum at the time.

Two years later, Perenchio drummed up another media event, the “Battle of the Sexes,” by pitting Bobby Riggs, an aging male tennis champion, with feminist Billie Jean King, who was at the top of her game.

Andrew Jerrold Perenchio had “extraordin­ary instincts,” said Alan Horn, his former underling who is now chairman of Walt Disney Studios. “He was always ahead of everyone else.”

In his long career, Perenchio, who died Tuesday at his Bel-Air home, deftly pulled the levers of power to create culturally defining media events, propel political candidates, collect masterpiec­e artworks and become one of the richest men in Los Angeles. He was 86 and was diagnosed with lung cancer five months ago.

The enigmatic billionair­e lived in a mansion that was familiar to millions of television viewers as the home of the fictional Clampett clan of the 1960s television sitcom “The Beverly Hillbillie­s.”

Perenchio in late 2014 an-

nounced that he would leave much of his collection — at least 47 works valued at more than $500 million — to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. His holdings include paintings by Claude Monet, Edouard Manet and Pablo Picasso.

“L.A. is my home, and I wanted to leave it to a museum here,” he told The Times in 2014. The bequest was scheduled to go into effect after his death — but with a major string attached: The museum must complete constructi­on of a new building and, in 2016, he promised $25 million to that effort.

In his more than 50 years in the entertainm­ent business, Perenchio developed a shrewd sophistica­tion that made him a giant in the industry. His vision and unerring gut instincts, once described as an ability to “see around corners,” were legendary in an industry that now relies on marketing, research and digital data. He inspired a generation of top executives in Hollywood by placing big bets that almost always paid off.

As a talent agent in the ’50s and ’60s, Perenchio’s firm represente­d such stars as Andy Williams, Glen Campbell and Henry Mancini.

A successful film producer in the ’80s, Perenchio helped bring to the big screen such iconic films as “Blade Runner” and “Driving Miss Daisy.” He brief ly owned the Loews theater chain and became Malibu’s largest landowner. During the ’90s, he transforme­d a cash-strapped TV company, Univision Communicat­ions, into the nation’s dominant Spanish-language media conglomera­te. When he sold Univision in 2007, Perenchio had parlayed his initial $33-million investment into a $1.3-billion payout.

Forbes recently estimated his net worth at $2.7 billion.

He did business on his terms — not anyone else’s.

That was in keeping with his “Rules of the Road,” a list of business maxims that he demanded his executives follow. Typed singlespac­ed, in all capital letters, his 20 no-nonsense rules were quintessen­tial Perenchio. They include:

No. 1: Stay Clear of the Press. No Interviews, No Panels, No Speeches, No Comments. Stay Out of the Spotlight — It Fades Your Suit. No. 3: Never Rehire Anyone. No. 12: When you Suit Up Each Day it’s to Play in Yankee Stadium or Dodger Stadium. Think Big.

No. 18: If You Make a Mistake, Admit It. Just Don’t Make Too Many.

Perenchio’s penchant for privacy was particular­ly unusual in the land of high-octane egos and personal publicists. Until 2014, he refused to allow his photograph to be taken and The Times would publish the same 1982 file photo that depicted a robust man in his early 50s — even decades later when he had become a whitehaire­d man in his 70s. The dated image, and the newspaper’s plight, amused Perenchio, according to his lieutenant­s.

He gave money to scores of candidates and political action committees. He served on the board of directors of the Ronald Reagan Presidenti­al Foundation & Institute. He contribute­d more than $3 million to assist Carly Fiorina’s 2016 bid for president and was one of the earliest and largest financial backers of U.S. Sen. John McCain’s 2008 presidenti­al campaign. He also supported former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, Sen. Dianne Feinstein and former L.A. mayors Richard Riordan and Antonio Villaraigo­sa. Over the years, he gave more than $30 million to candidates, political causes and the Republican National Committee.

Perenchio also donated tens of millions of dollars to charities, foundation­s and building projects, including Walt Disney Concert Hall and Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. His contributi­ons to charitable organizati­ons were nearly impossible to tabulate because most were given under the veil of “anonymous.”

“He was one of the most generous people whom I’ve ever met, and yet, in a town where everyone wants to take credit for everything, he refused to take credit for a lifetime of achievemen­ts,” Mark Gold, now an associate vice chancellor at UCLA, said in 2008. “He was really quite extraordin­ary.”

Perenchio was born into a Fresno family of vintners Dec. 20, 1930, the only child of Andrew and Dorothea Harvey Perenchio.

He adored his Italian-immigrant grandfathe­r, John Batiste Perenchio, who was a fresh-fruit broker who founded the Fresno Grape Exchange and a winery in nearby Reedley. There he was schooled in the fine art of business.

Years later, Perenchio would reminisce to his subordinat­es about how he would help his grandfathe­r fill orders by loading heavy baskets of freshly picked grapes into a truck bed.

“Sixty bushels, we stop now,” said young Perenchio.

“No,” said his grandfathe­r. “We give them 63. They’re our friends, the Mondavis.”

His parents enrolled the 15year-old Perenchio into the BlackFoxe Military Institute, an elite Los Angeles prep school. His two dozen classmates voted him “Biggest Showman and Promoter” and “Teller of Tall Tales.” In 1949, he graduated from the Hancock Park school, which has since been razed.

His father, in the 1950s, helped manage the Greek Theatre in Griffith Park, which gave Perenchio a front-row look at show business. When he attended UCLA, he started his own business, “Party Management,” which booked bands and catered celebratio­ns. He graduated from UCLA in 1954 with a degree in business. That same year, he married Robin Gardner Green. They had one son, John, and he adopted his wife’s two daughters.

In 1955, Perenchio entered the U.S. Air Force as a second lieutenant. He earned his wings as a single-engine jet fighter pilot and became a flight instructor .

A year after his discharge in 1957, he began his long career in Hollywood. He joined the Music Corp. of America, the behemoth run by the powerful Lew Wasserman. The company had its tentacles seemingly everywhere: booking bands, producing movies, distributi­ng TV shows and representi­ng talent.

“He learned a lot from Lew Wasserman,” singer Andy Williams, a longtime friend of Perenchio’s, told The Times in 2006. “Jerry was an MCA man. He was always very well dressed and very well mannered.”

Perenchio was decidedly oldschool. Wasserman instructed his agents to promote the talent, not themselves, a mandate that Perenchio would later incorporat­e into his own “Rules of the Road.” In 1962, under pressure from the antitrust division of the Justice Department, Wasserman was forced to divest MCA’s talent agency from its booming studio business.

That would be a turning point for 31-year-old Perenchio.

He left MCA and opened his own talent agency on Sunset Boulevard after aggressive­ly scooping up many of MCA’s marquee musicians, including Williams, Campbell, Henry Mancini, Johnny Mathis, Sergio Mendes and the Kingston Trio.

A few years later, he merged Perenchio Artists with the Hugh French Agency, which represente­d such stars as Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. Their boutique firm, Chartwell Artists, had plenty of pull. Perenchio arranged Elton John’s first trip to the U.S. after he heard an early recording.

In 1969, Perenchio entered the big leagues of match-making. He introduced Clifford and Stuart Perlman, the owners of Lum’s Inc., to the founder of Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas. The meeting led to the $60-million sale of the casino, and, for an afternoon’s work, Perenchio collected an $800,000 fee. That whetted his appetite for a highrollin­g life.

His most audacious deal was in 1971, the matchup between Ali and Frazier in New York’s Madison Square Garden. A Chicago boxing promoter had called Perenchio’s office in New York, offering the fight.

A young agent working for Perenchio, Howard Rose, remembered tracking down his boss at a London hotel to ask. The offer had come with a catch. Perenchio would have to guarantee the $5million purse if he wanted to be the promoter for the big fight. “He didn’t even hesitate. He said, ‘Tell them, I’m in’,” Rose later recalled.

Perenchio approached Jack Kent Cooke, then owner of the Los Angeles Lakers, who bankrolled the event. They sold rights to broadcast the “Fight of Champions” to regional concert promoters who booked local theaters that could capture the closed-circuit TV feed. Frank Sinatra served as a ringside photograph­er for Life magazine and Burt Lancaster provided color commentary. Thousands of people poured into such venues as the Forum in Los Angeles, then owned by Cooke, to see the historic match, helping to deliver a $2-million profit to the promoters — an enormous sum at the time.

The event helped carve a new niche in TV sports.

“He created this aura of entertainm­ent around the sport of boxing,” Rose said. “He turned it into show business and took it to the masses.”

Two years later, Perenchio orchestrat­ed the “Battle of the Sexes” with the two tennis stars.

“He said, ‘We’ve got to market this as a confrontat­ion between male chauvinism and women’s liberation,’ ” said Horn, who went to work for Perenchio in 1973. “He understood the trends in our society.”

That year Perenchio joined legendary television producer Norman Lear, who introduced to America such enduring shows as “All in the Family,” “Sanford and Son” and “Maude.”

“Jerry was tough, terribly smart and terribly straightfo­rward,” Lear told The Times in 2006. Lear had been working with his producing partner, Bud Yorkin, but Lear said, “Neither of us were business people. But when Jerry joined us, he made it a business.”

In 1974, with about $50,000, Lear and Perenchio formed a new production company, TAT, where they produced “The Jeffersons,” “One Day at a Time” and “Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.”

“The world has lost a glorious, most generous man and an absolute original,” Lear said Wednesday.

Perenchio experiment­ed with “on-demand” television — a concept of home theater that has since become a reality. Nearly four decades ago, Perenchio tried to create such a service, called National Subscripti­on Television. He began buying TV stations to form his network, but it sputtered because the technology wasn’t advanced enough to deliver shows without rampant piracy.

He and Lear in 1982 put together $25 million to acquire a second-tier studio, Avco Embassy Pictures. Full of bravado, Perenchio told The Times that year that Embassy would become “a major company. We’re going to model ourselves after ourselves.”

They merged it with their TV businesses and sharpened their film credential­s by distributi­ng such movies as “Blade Runner,” “This Is Spinal Tap” and “A Chorus Line.” In 1985, he sold Embassy, with its rich library of Lear television shows, to Coca-Cola for $485 million. He and Lear became enormously wealthy.

Next he put together an investment group that paid $165 million to acquire the storied Loews theater chain. The group nearly doubled their money the following year when Perenchio sold the theaters to Tri-Star Pictures for $300 million. Perenchio’s timing was perfect. The federal government had just relaxed rules that previously had prevented movie studios, including Tri-Star, from distributi­ng pictures and owning theaters. With the restrictio­n lifted, a new class of buyers was created.

Perenchio in 1986 bought the Kirkeby Estate in Bel Air, the mansion seen in the CBS sitcom “The Beverly Hillbillie­s,” for nearly $14 million. He spent millions of dollars more to buy adjacent lots and make renovation­s to create a Versailles-like palace that accommodat­ed his growing art collection and a cellar for one of California’s largest private wine collection­s. Last summer, he purchased for $15 million the Reagans’ longtime home in Bel Air after the first lady’s death.

Perenchio was also one of Malibu’s largest land holders through his ownership of the Malibu Bay Co. He bought 10 acres near the Malibu lagoon for a weekend retreat. Years later, he gained notoriety when environmen­talists discovered that, instead of building a passive park as Perenchio had promised coastal regulators, he had actually constructe­d a minigolf course without proper permits. Naturalist­s fretted that runoff from his property would pollute the bay.

To halt the controvers­y and end the legal wrangling, he said that he would donate his Malibu property to the state after both he and his wife were deceased.

Perenchio was always ahead of the curve.

His interest in Spanish-language media dated back 30 years, when it was a backwater business ignored by the major media companies. In 1986, President Reagan signed a landmark immigratio­n reform and amnesty bill. Perenchio knew the number of Mexicans moving to the U.S. would surge, and he wanted to capitalize on the trend. He offered to buy several Spanish-language television stations, including KMEX-TV Channel 34 in Los Angeles. But when the station owners tried to start a bidding war, Perenchio walked away.

In 1986, Hallmark Cards Inc. acquired the company, which it named Univision Communicat­ions. But within a few years, Hallmark’s operation was drowning in debt.

Perenchio saw his opportunit­y and wooed two Latin American media moguls, Emilio Azcarraga Milmo of Mexico and Venezuelan Gustavo Cisneros, to join him. In 1992, the trio bought Univision for $550 million — the same amount that Hallmark had paid six years before.

By using his U.S. citizenshi­p as leverage, Perenchio became the senior partner of the group and Univision’s chief executive. He persuaded Azcarraga to provide the hugely popular telenovela­s produced by his company, Grupo Televisa, to Univision. The deal provided the foundation for Univision’s profitabil­ity and eventual domination of U.S. Spanish-language television.

Because the Televisa telenovela­s played first in Mexico, Univision knew which ones clicked with audiences. And with Televisa supplying so many hours of programmin­g, Univision kept a lid on costs.

Univision also had demographi­cs on its side. Two-thirds of the U.S. Latino population are Mexicans or of Mexican descent, and thus, many grew up watching Televisa in their homeland. Univision’s programmin­g was comfortabl­e and familiar.

When Perenchio and his partners bought Univision in 1992, the company consisted of the Univision network. Over the years, Perenchio added music labels, radio stations and TV stations.

Buoyed by the rising tide of immigratio­n and its popular programmin­g, Univision is now a $2billion-a-year business.

In 2006, Perenchio decided to unload the operation. The markets were flush with cash. Once again, he knew the timing was right.

Perenchio is survived by his wife, Margaret; his three grown children from his first marriage, John, Catherine and Candace; five grandchild­ren; and three greatgrand­children. A private service will be held next week. Donations may be made to LACMA’s building campaign.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times By Meg James ?? ANDREW Jerrold Perenchio, above in 2014, created culturally defining media events, collected masterpiec­e artworks and became one of L.A.’s richest men.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times By Meg James ANDREW Jerrold Perenchio, above in 2014, created culturally defining media events, collected masterpiec­e artworks and became one of L.A.’s richest men.
 ?? Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times ?? ‘AN ABSOLUTE ORIGINAL’ Producer Norman Lear, left, and Perenchio at a gala honoring the 10th anniversar­y of the Walt Disney Concert Hall in 2013.
Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times ‘AN ABSOLUTE ORIGINAL’ Producer Norman Lear, left, and Perenchio at a gala honoring the 10th anniversar­y of the Walt Disney Concert Hall in 2013.
 ?? Christina House For The Times ?? ART COLLECTOR Andrew Jerrold Perenchio in 2014 gets a standing ovation at a LACMA news conference to announce his bequest of artwork.
Christina House For The Times ART COLLECTOR Andrew Jerrold Perenchio in 2014 gets a standing ovation at a LACMA news conference to announce his bequest of artwork.
 ?? Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times ?? ‘ONE OF THE MOST GENEROUS PEOPLE’ Perenchio with Nancy Reagan at the dedication of the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in ‘07. He donated money to it.
Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times ‘ONE OF THE MOST GENEROUS PEOPLE’ Perenchio with Nancy Reagan at the dedication of the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in ‘07. He donated money to it.
 ?? Iris Schneider Los Angeles Times ?? ENIGMATIC For years, The Times relied on this 1982 photo of the photo-averse Perenchio.
Iris Schneider Los Angeles Times ENIGMATIC For years, The Times relied on this 1982 photo of the photo-averse Perenchio.

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