Los Angeles Times

He makes many shows sing

Ken Ehrlich produces a slew of specials and awards show telecasts, including the Grammys since 1980.

- By Gerrick D. Kennedy

Ken Ehrlich’s phone rings incessantl­y, to the point where he can barely finish a thought without being interrupte­d by a buzz, a matter of critical importance awaiting him on the other end of the receiver every time.

“Sorry ... that’s my life these days,” he says as he searches for where he left off in conversati­on.

The Emmy-winning producer is one of the busiest men in show business. On any given Sunday between now and Easter, four music spectacles will air in prime time, all bearing the Ken Ehrlich Production­s stamp.

Typically, we meet Ehrlich while he’s perched behind a soundboard in the middle of running through a show, calling the shots with the aplomb of a man who’s spent most of his life shepherdin­g live television. Today, he’s swiveling around a chair in a largely barren office, with only the clutter from the many projects Ehrlich’s got in the works as decoration.

Notes for this year’s Grammys are strewn across his desk. Propped against a wall is the show’s most current run plastered on bright pink postcards pushpinned into a 4-by-6-foot bulletin board.

Atop a dusty record player are retrospect­ive vinyls from Elvis Presley and Aretha Franklin, subjects of upcoming specials Ehrlich is producing, as well as Diana Ross, whom he just secured for a performanc­e on Sunday’s Grammys. Just one week after the awards show, on Feb. 17, the “Elvis All-Star Tribute” will air on NBC.

At 76, Ehrlich is still driven by those records, but his musical knowledge, by necessity, extends to every generation since that era. Over a career that stretches nearly half a century, Ehlich has redefined the way we experience live music on television.

Ehrlich has produced specials for everyone from Elton John to Whitney Houston, from Paul Simon to the Eagles and has worked with Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald and Tony Bennett. He’s overseen the Emmys and the Latin Grammys, created franchises such as VH1 Divas and launched the MTV Movie Awards.

And since the tail end of the Carter administra­tion, he’s been the man behind the Grammy Awards.

A career in music wasn’t the original plan Ehrlich envisioned for himself.

Growing up in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, he dreamed of being a sportswrit­er, enrolling at Ohio University, which is known for its journalism program (he minored in public relations and advertisin­g). “My mother said, ‘The newspaper business, someday, is not going to be there. You better do something else,’ ” he says with a laugh.

After college, Ehrlich took off to New York to pursue publicity. He interviewe­d with MGM, Paramount, Warner Bros. — “all the legendary guys. I didn’t get one job offer,” he says.

‘Bitten hard’ and rising

Instead, he landed at a small PR firm in Chicago and by the end of the ’60s, he was moonlighti­ng as the producer of “The Marty Faye Show.” Soon after, Faye, a local radio and TV personalit­y, asked Ehrlich — who was then doing publicity for the jazz station that Faye anchored — if he wanted to produce his return to TV. Ehrlich had never worked on a production, let alone steered one entirely. The pay was $75 a week and Faye’s promise to get Ehrlich into the best clubs in town.

“I got bitten hard,” he remembered. “I thought, ‘Oh, my god, this is fun. ’”

His production career ascended in the 1970s when he left public relations and went to the local Chicago PBS station WTTW. He persuaded the brass to give him a shot at producing a live concert series. The show, which became known as “Soundstage” in 1974, showcased Ehrlich’s musical instincts and vision and eventually became a presence across PBS stations nationwide.

Two years later, he moved to Los Angeles. Ehrlich’s name was on specials for Liza Minnelli, Cheryl Ladd and the Bee Gees before he produced both the Emmys and the Grammys for the first time in 1980.

“I just learned how to deal with talent,” he says when asked if he’s got a secret to his storied success. “Someone asked me the other day how I learned to do this. The simple answer is you don’t. That's how you prepare. You do it enough, either you figure it out, or you go into sales. I think I figured it out.”

An effusive smile never leaves Ehrlich’s face, even as he lets a fourletter word slip after being presented with some rather inconvenie­nt travel options to Atlanta for the Super Bowl — on his way to the game, he tells me over e-mail that he’d just booked his final act for this year’s Grammys and, without revealing more, says it’s “quite possibly the ‘sleeper’ ” he’d been looking for.

He’s charming, reflective and self-deprecatin­g in a way that makes him far more approachab­le than your typical TV mogul.

Ehrlich’s tufts of red hair are now stark white — something he makes certain to joke about a number of times in conversati­on. He’s dressed the way we usually find him in the days before one of his big shows: jeans, sneakers and a slightly oversized hoodie, which is covering a T-shirt from the 2018 Global Citizen Festival (yep, he produced that too).

The ‘Grammy Moment’

Nearly 40 years removed from his debut Grammys, Ehrlich still gets starry-eyed when he talks about putting together his first telecast after catching the attention of Pierre Cosette, the man who launched the telecast in 1971.

His smile widens as he recounts the ceremony he refers to as “the D year” because he’d booked the Doobie Brothers, Dionne Warwick, Neil Diamond and Bob Dylan. “[Dylan] called me five days before the show to ask what to wear to the Grammys,” he says, beaming.

In that first year working on the show, Ehrlich establishe­d what has become his signature. He had pushed to secure Diamond and Barbra Streisand to perform a duet of "You Don't Bring Me Flowers.” Over a late-night call, Streisand pitched the idea of a sultry caress to Diamond’s cheek, and Ehrlich told her how the camera would best capture it. The performanc­e birthed the “Grammy moment,” which isn’t just synonymous with Ehrlich but has become an assured staple of award show culture.

Elton and Eminem. Metallica and Lang Lang. A massive on-air wedding for gay and straight couples — officiated by Queen Latifah and blessed by Madonna, no less. Ehrlich was at the center of all those and countless other TV moments that kept you talking.

“I remember everything about most shows,” he says, before letting out a cackle. “There are some years where I’m thrilled with what happens, and there are some years where I’m less than thrilled.”

One show at a time

Late last fall, we found Ehrlich amid a familiar scene. He was seated in the production bullpen erected in the center of the empty Microsoft Theater. He was flanked by his trusted team and thumbing through a thick binder of colorcoded notes before leaving his post to tend to Gloria Estefan and her daughter, Emily, as Meghan Trainor waited in the wings.

It was the final day of rehearsals for “Q85: A Musical Celebratio­n for Quincy Jones,” which kicked off a busy season for Ken Ehrlich Production­s.

Days after helming the Jones special, which aired on BET in December, Ehrlich zipped across the country to oversee the Global Citizen Festival in New York.

He then tackled a show celebratin­g the 50th anniversar­y of Elvis Presley’s comeback special by re-creating the spectacle — he f lips open his laptop to play a clip of Keith Urban and Post Malone, the sort of wild pairing one can find only on his specials. And last month, he oversaw an impressive retrospect­ive of Aretha Franklin’s career that’s sitting on the shelf as he preps the Grammys and a show based on the indelible music of Motown (the Franklin special airs in March; the Motown special is set for April).

Most of Ehrlich’s peers have long retired by now, which he’s reminded of when he returns to the sleepy golf course community in the valley that he calls home.

“There are a number of people, very successful people, who sold their business for a lot more money than I have, and they play golf every day, and they have great lives. It's not for me. Maybe someday,” he says. “I don’t envy their lives, and I don't want to say that they envy mine. They're just different.

Although he’s got no plans of slowing down, Ehrlich doesn’t have a firm answer when it comes to how much longer he’ll be at the helm of the Grammys.

“I have a contract through next year. Will that be it? I don't know,” he says. “My instincts just say next Sunday. I've got a show to do, and then, next year, I've got a show to do. We'll see. Honestly, I was always the kid looking to push out the old guy ahead of me. Now, I am the old guy. I'm not saying I'm being pushed out, but your perspectiv­e changes as your hair gets whiter.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? KEN EHRLICH, at the Grammy Museum in L.A., early this year will produce the music awards show and specials about Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin and Motown.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times KEN EHRLICH, at the Grammy Museum in L.A., early this year will produce the music awards show and specials about Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin and Motown.
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? KEN Ehrlich, center, with Miranda Lambert, Billie Joe Armstrong at Grammys rehearsal in 2014.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times KEN Ehrlich, center, with Miranda Lambert, Billie Joe Armstrong at Grammys rehearsal in 2014.

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