The Sentinel-Record

Media mogul Jerry Perenchio dies in LA at 86

-

LOS ANGELES — Jerry Perenchio was a media mogul, billionair­e former owner of Univision and the producer behind a slew of hit shows and sporting events but his house appeared more often on TV than he did.

Perenchio was famously publicity-shy. The first item on his list of 20 rules for subordinat­es was “stay clear of the press.” But his Bel Air mansion was seen every week as the home of the Clampett family on the 1960s series “The Beverly Hillbillie­s.”

Perenchio, 86, died Tuesday of lung cancer at his home in Los Angeles, his wife, Margaret, said Wednesday.

“Jerry Perenchio had a big vision and a bigger heart — he always gave back,” Arnold Schwarzene­gger posted on Twitter Wednesday. “He was an example to all of us and I was proud to call him my friend.”

Ron Howard used his Twitter account to call Perenchio “a gracious and brilliant mentor.”

Perenchio’s half-century in the entertainm­ent business included talent agent, sports promoter, television and motion picture tycoon but he preferred to work behind the scenes.

His wealth, recently estimated by Forbes at $2.8 billion, allowed him to be a generous political donor and philanthro­pist. He contribute­d some $50 million to candidates and causes and tens of millions more to schools, hospitals, museums and charities of all types.

He amassed a significan­t art collection that included work by Picasso, Cezanne and Monet and in 2014 announced he would bequeath 47 pieces — worth an estimated $500 million — to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. He also donated $25 million for a new building to house it.

“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, former head of the nonprofit environmen­tal group Heal the Bay and now an associate vice chancellor at UCLA, told the Los Angeles Times in 2008. “He was really quite extraordin­ary.”

Scion of a Fresno winemaking family, Andrew Jerry Perenchio wore many hats during a half-century in the entertainm­ent business.

He turned to show business after attending UCLA and serving in the Air Force as a jet pilot and flight instructor.

In the late 1950s he became a talent agent with Music Corp. of America, the legendary agency run by Lew Wasserman. He went on to start his own agency, later merging it with another and representi­ng movie and music stars such as Marlon Brando, Elizabeth Taylor, Andy Williams and Glen Campbell.

As a sports promoter he helped engineer the 1971 “Fight of the Century” between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier as well as the 1973 “Battle of the Sexes” between tennis players Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs.

The 1970s also saw him join Norman Lear to produce and distribute hits such as “The Jeffersons,” ”Diff’rent Strokes” and “One Day at a Time.”

Lear once described his partner, who handled the business end of things, as a man of great creativity and vision.

“The world has lost a glorious, most generous man and an absolute original. There will never ever be another him,” Lear said in a statement Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States