Los Angeles Times

A creative dealmaker

STEPHEN BOLLENBACH, 1942 - 2016

- By Hugo Martin hugo.martin@latimes.com

Stephen F. Bollenbach, a former executive for Hilton, Disney and Trump, has died.

Stephen F. Bollenbach, a financial whiz who helped engineer Hilton Hotels Corp.’s internatio­nal expansion and negotiated a deal to help Donald Trump avoid filing for personal bankruptcy in the 1990s, has died. He was 74.

Bollenbach, a Los Angeles native, died Oct. 8 after a long illness, said his wife, Kimberly Bollenbach.

A graduate of UCLA and Cal State Northridge, Bollenbach held executive positions at Hilton, Disney, Caesars Entertainm­ent and the Trump Organizati­on, earning a reputation as a creative finance dealmaker.

He was so respected that shares of Hilton Hotels surged 13% in early 1996 when it was announced that he had been hired as president and chief executive of the hotel giant. In 2005, Bollenbach helped reunite Hilton with its internatio­nal properties that were split off in 1964.

Kimberly Bollenbach said her husband considered his work with Hilton as his biggest business achievemen­t.

Before taking the position at Hilton, Bollenbach was chief financial officer at Walt Disney Co., where he helped negotiate the 1995 acquisitio­n of Capital Cities/ ABC Inc. At the time, the $19-billion deal was considered one of the largest corporate takeovers, creating a media powerhouse that now includes theme parks, movies and television broadcasti­ng.

Bollenbach even tested his financial skills at the Trump Organizati­on, where he held the post of chief financial officer from 1990 to 1992. Trump, now the Republican nominee for president, originally tapped Bollenbach to serve as liaison to banks the New York developer owed some $3.3 billion.

The executive was an avid traveler who owned an apartment in Paris and loved playing golf and sharing dinner with friends, his widow said.

He is also survived by two sons and two grandchild­ren.

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