Morris Mike Medavoy (born January 21, 1941) is an American film producer and business executive. He is the co-founder of Orion Pictures, the former chairman of TriStar Pictures, the former head of production for United Artists, and the current chairman and CEO of Phoenix Pictures.
Early life
Morris Mike Medavoy was born in Shanghai on January 21, 1941, the son of dress shop owner Dora and garage mechanic Michael Medavoy. His mother's shop mostly catered to Chinese actresses.[1][2][3] His parents were both Russian-speakingUkrainian Jews, with his mother being born in Harbin to immigrants from Odesa and his father being born and raised in Ukraine.[1][4] He has a younger sister named Ronnie.[5] The family moved to Chile in 1947 and stayed until 1957, with Medavoy studying at the Liceo Valentín Letelier de Santiago.[5] The family later moved to Los Angeles and lived with Medavoy's aunt.[6] He became an American citizen in 1963,[7] and graduated from UCLA the same year. Joining the U.S. Army Reserve in 1963, he served at Fort Ord in California until 1969.
In 2011, Medavoy announced a project depicting the 2010 Chilean mining accident that left 33 men trapped underground for 69 days. He collaborated with Chilean officials and Academy Award-nominated screenwriter José Rivera; they created an authentic retelling of the story. Medavoy explains, "at its heart, [it is] about the triumph of the human spirit and a testament to the courage and perseverance of the Chilean people".[9]
Also in 2011, Medavoy announced his collaboration with The Shanghai Film Group to create both a feature film and six-hour miniseries. The feature was an adaptation of the novel The Cursed Piano, a love story set in Japanese-occupied China about persecuted Jews seeking refuge from occupied Europe. The mini-series, Tears of a Sparrow focuses in detail on the experiences of the Jews in Shanghai. Medavoy also worked on Dandelion Wine which was adapted from a novel with the same name written by Ray Bradbury.[9]
Medavoy was previously married to Marcia Rogers, the daughter of publicist Henry C. Rogers and the ex-wife of actor Mark Goddard; their wedding and divorce dates are unknown.[14] Their son, Brian (born 1965), is also a film producer.[9]
Medavoy married political activist Patricia Duff in 1986, and they divorced in 1993; within two years, she had married and divorced banker Ronald Perelman.[14]
Medavoy married Russian-American philanthropist and former model Irena Gerasimenko in 1995. They have a son named Nick.[15][16]
Medavoy was a close friend of actor Marlon Brando and is a co-executor of Brando's estate.[17] In addition to his native Russian, he became fluent in Spanish while living in Chile and later became fluent in English after moving to the U.S.[5]
Awards
In 2011, UNICEF and Oscar winner Sean Penn presented the Medavoy family a humanitarian award,[18]
1980 - Honored by the Society of Fellows of the Anti-Defamation League
1992 - Motion Picture Pioneer of the Year Award
1997 - UCLA Career Achievement Award
1998 - The Cannes Film Festival Lifetime Achievement Award
1999 - UCLA Neil H. Jacoby Award for Exceptional Contributions to Humanity
2002 - Israeli Film Festival's Lifetime Achievement Award
2004 - Florida Atlantic University's Louis B. Mayer Motion Picture Business Leader of the Year Award
2004 - UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television Honorary Member Award
2005 - Producers Guild of America Vision Award
2005 - Inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame and received a star on Hollywood Blvd.
2007 - Stella Adler Actors Studio Marlon Brando Award
2008 - Jerusalem Film Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award
2008 - International Student Film Festival Hollywood Lifetime Achievement Award
2009 - Declared the honorary Doctorate at the Academy of Art in San Francisco
2009 - Declared Chevalier of the French Government's Legion of Honor.
2009 - Independent Spirit Award
2010 - Bernardo O'Higgins award from the Chilean government
2011 - The Locarno Film Festival Raimondo Rezzonico Prize (Locarno, Switzerland)
2011 - Hebrew University Award
2011 - Danny Kaye Humanitarian Award
2012 - Shanghai International Film Festival – Outstanding Achievement Award
2014 - Satellite Awards Mary Pickford Award - Outstanding Artistic Contribution to the Entertainment Industry
Member of the Board of the Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Sciences from 1977 to 1981
One of the original founding members of the board of governors of the Sundance Institute (1978)
Chairman Emeritus of the American Cinematheque
Chairman Emeritus of the Stella Adler Actors Studio in New york
Books
In 2002, Simon & Schuster published Medavoy's book, You're Only As Good As Your Next One: 100 Great Films, 100 Good Films and 100 For Which I Should Be Shot, co-written by Josh Young, which became a best-seller and was subsequently released in paperback in 2003. In 2009, Mike published American Idol After Iraq; Competing for Hearts and Minds in the Global Media Age, with co-author Nathan Gardels,[21] editor of the National Political Quarterly.[9]
Filmography
Medavoy was a producer on the following films unless otherwise noted.
^Medavoy, Mike and Young, Josh (2002). You're Only as Good as Your Next One: 100 Great Films, 100 Good Films, and 100 for Which I Should Be Shot (p. 215). New York City: Atria Books
^Medavoy, Mike (2013). You're Only As Good As Your Next One: 100 Great Films, 100 Good Films, and 100 for Which I Should Be Shot. Atria. pp. xxix.
^Gardels, Nathan; Medavoy, Mike (2009). American Idol After Iraq: Competing for Hearts and Minds in the Global Media Age. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN978-1-4051-8741-1.