The Guardian (USA)

Robert Evans, celebrated Hollywood producer of Chinatown, dies aged 89

- Andrew Pulver

Robert Evans, the flamboyant and controvers­ial Hollywood studio executive and producer who counted Love Story, Chinatown and Marathon Man among his most influentia­l films, has died aged 89. The news was confirmed by a PR representa­tive.

Evans was best known as one of the key figures in 1970s Hollywood, and to a later generation through his noholds-barred 1994 autobiogra­phy The Kid Stays in the Picture. He was as celebrated for his rowdy sex-and-drug-fuelled lifestyle as for the films he worked on. Described as the “least bashful producer in Hollywood”, he was married seven times, convicted for cocaine traffickin­g and fell spectacula­rly from grace before managing to climb the greasy pole of the film industry once again.

Evans, the son of a New York dentist, was born Robert Shapera in 1930. He first worked for his brother Charles’s clothing company, Evan-Picone. At 26, he was spotted poolside at the Beverly Hilton by the actor Norma Shearer, who successful­ly lobbied for him to be cast in the Lon Chaney biopic Man of a Thousand Faces (1957) as Irving Thalberg, her late studio-mogul husband.

His performanc­e as Thalberg proved premonitor­y as, aware of his shortcomin­gs as an actor, Evans who then switched horses to become a producer. By 1966 he was head of production at Paramount, cementing Evans’s place at the heart of Hollywood. While at Paramount, he put a string of hits into production, including Rosemary’s Baby, Love Story (whose star, Ali MacGraw, became his third wife), The Godfather and Serpico. Evans also bought the rights to The Great Gatsby in 1971, intending for MacGraw to play Daisy Buchanan. (After she left him in 1972 for Steve McQueen, the role went instead to Mia Farrow, who starred opposite Robert Redford in the adaptation released in 1974.)

Evans moved into more hands-on producing with Chinatown, the Roman Polanski film he had commission­ed from writer Robert Towne; the film was a success and prompted Evans to leave Paramount and set up as an independen­t. Marathon Man continued his good run, but the hits began to be elusive. The 1980 Robert Altman-directed film Popeye was a commercial flop, and in the same year Evans was convicted of cocaine traffickin­g, after entering a guilty plea as part of a plea bargain. He agreed to make anti-drug commercial­s, but was not sentenced to jail time.

Evans’s career went spectacula­rly off the rails in the ensuing decade – “My life in the 80s went from royalty to infamy,” he said in 2002 at a Guardian live interview at the National Film theatre. Having become a Hollywood pariah after the conviction, Evans sailed even closer to the wind during the disastrous 1984 production of Francis Ford Coppola’s The Cotton Club, which resulted in the murder of Roy Radin, Evans’ business partner on the film. (Evans pleaded the fifth amendment to avoid giving evidence against the four people convicted of the killing.)

Evans returned to producing in 1990 with The Two Jakes, a sequel to Chinatown that was directed by Jack Nicholson (with whom Evans maintained a long friendship), but it proved a flop. He also began an associatio­n with maverick screenwrit­er Joe Eszterhas, with whom he made the erotic thrillers Sliver and Jade; neither were especially successful, as was the fate of adaptation­s of The Saint and The Phantom.

Evans became a cult figure to a new generation in 1994 with the publicatio­n of his autobiogra­phy, The Kid Stays in the Picture. Its title echoes producer Darryl F Zanuck’s pronouncem­ent after the rest of the cast demanded that Evans be fired from one of his first acting roles, in the 1957 adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s novel The Sun Also Rises. (Hemingway was reportedly one of the most vociferous objectors, and Evans would gleefully refer to his later relationsh­ip with Hemingway’s granddaugh­ter Margaux as “revenge”.) In 2002, a film adaptation, directed by

Nanette Burstein and Brett Morgen, was released with Evans’s participat­ion (although he refused to be filmed). A stage version, devised by Simon McBurney and starring Danny Huston, premiered at the Royal Court in 2017. A second autobiogra­phy, The Fat Lady Sang, was published in 2013.

After a series of strokes in 1998, Evans had an unexpected hit in 2003 with the Kate Hudson/Matthew McConaughe­y romcom How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, which grossed more than $100m in the US alone.

Francis Ford Coppola, who worked with Evans on The Godfather and The Cotton Club, has paid tribute, praising his “charm, good looks, enthusiasm, style, and sense of humor”.

None of Evans’s marriages lasted longer than four years, and one – to actor Catherine Oxenberg in 1998 – only made it nine days. Evans is survived by his son Josh, with MacGraw, who is a film producer.

 ??  ?? The ‘least bashful producer in Hollywood’ … Robert Evans. Photograph: Vincent Kessler/ Reuters
The ‘least bashful producer in Hollywood’ … Robert Evans. Photograph: Vincent Kessler/ Reuters
 ??  ?? Jack Nicholson in the Robert Evans-produced film Chinatown. Photograph: Ronald Grant Archive
Jack Nicholson in the Robert Evans-produced film Chinatown. Photograph: Ronald Grant Archive

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