The 77-year-old Hollywood manager and movie/TV producer died tonight from complications when his kidneys failed after a long illness stemming from heart disease. Bernie Brillstein’s longtime partner Brad Grey and his longtime client Lorne Michaels made arrangements for a memorial service Monday at 6 PM at UCLA. I’m told his funeral will be private. Like most everyone in Hollywood, I loved Bernie. Because he was that rarity in showbiz, an astute student of Hollywood history who also learned from it. And he understood the proper use of power in this town, as opposed to the abuse of power, in a way most did not.
Though his father was in the millinery business in New York, Brillstein majored in advertising and marketing in college. He scored two interviews at Madison Avenue agencies thanks to the influence of his uncle, Jack Pearl, an ex-Ziegfield Follies comedian who had become a radio star doing the voice of Baron Munchausen. But in the 1950s advertising was notoriously non-Jewish and the agencies gently hinted that to Brillstein. “They said, ‘Bernie, you’re terrific. But this is no place for you to be,’” Brillstein once said to me. “I loved them for being honest.” Instead, Brillstein landed a job in the mailroom at the William Morris office on Broadway.
After just three months, Brillstein was placed in the Morris publicity department, where his job consisted of writing bios for the agency’s biggest stars and canvassing the nightclub owners and TV bookers with flyers. When the department head retired, Brillstein, not yet out of his twenties, was put in charge. “Working in publicity in an agency is like being in charge of valet at a parapalegic camp,” Brillstein quipped to me. He was moved into commercials. So Brillstein began cold-calling the commercial bookers and pushing Morris clients for ad spots on radio and TV. With an easy laugh and honed sense of humor, Brillstein was a born “people person,” the kind strangers and colleagues alike felt they could trust the first time they met him. He easily established relationships within his new world, befriending one of his new clients, Edward R. Murrow. Brillstein personally pushed the journalist’s pioneering TV show, Person to Person. Thanks to smart decisions like that, Brillstein built his department, generally considered a loser, into a $2.5 million a year business. His success caught the eye of Morris’ powerful head of TV packaging, Wally Jordan, who brought Brillstein into the TV department to build on the connections with managers he’d forged in the commercials department. Bernie even managed to sign two clients away from then No. 1 agency MCA. The signings caught the attention of Marty Kummer, a former top agent with Wasserman at MCA who had opened a management firm with his biggest client, Jack Paar and offered Bernie a job. Brillstein liked the idea of advising and guiding a star’s career, so in 1963 Brillstein left Morris for Martin Kummer Associates. (When the two brought aboard manager Jerry Weintraub some years later, the firm’s name was changed to Management 3).
At Morris, a colleague asked Brillstein to meet with a little-known puppeteer, Jim Henson, whose acts included Kermit the Frog and Rowlf the Dog. Brillstein signed him immediately and then booked him on the Jimmy Dean Show. Two months after Brillstein left Morris, Jim Henson called and said, “I need you.” Over the next decade, Brillstein made a fortune representing not only Henson but also the producing team of John Aylesworth and Frank Peppiatt. The producers came up with an idea for a corn-pone version of Laugh-In for the country-western set called Hee Haw and, in 1969, Brillstein helped package the show to CBS. Though the network cancelled the show in 1971, Hee Haw was sold into syndication, where it ran for another 23 years, becoming one of the longest-running shows in TV history, pulling in millions of dollars in licensing fees and making Brillstein a rich man.
In 1970, Brillstein left Management 3 and moved to Los Angeles, where he decided to go it alone. He built up a list of top comedy writers, including The Bob Newhart Show’s Tom Patchett and Jay Tarses and comedy writers Lorne Michaels and Alan Zweibel, and he packaged them all into new TV shows for the networks. By 1975, Brillstein was one of the hottest personal managers and TV packagers in the entertainment business. In that year alone, he sold both The Muppet Show, brainchild of puppeteer Jim Henson, and Saturday Night Live, created by Lorne Michaels. The story behind SNL is now legendary, but it bears repeating: when Michaels and Brillstein came to pitch the idea of SNL to NBC, the network executives simply stared at the men. “They said, ‘Who are these Jews from California?’ They absolutely hated us,” Brillstein remarked. When SNL’s first show generated 200 complaints, NBC wanted to pull the plug. It was Brillstein who fought to keep it on the air. “You idiots,” Brillstein told them. “Don’t you realize you have a hit here?”
As SNL grew in the ratings, so did the popularity of its cast, and almost overnight the show produced break-out stars in Second City alumni John Belushi, Dan Aykroyd, Gilda Radner, who all relied solely on Brillstein’s managerial advice and support. The first time Brillstein met John Belushi was 15 minutes before the first taping of Saturday Night Live. Two days earlier, NBC’s legal department had sent Belushi an interim employment agreement. The actor was worried about a small clause that said NBC had the right to cancel his contract if the comedian were “disfigured.” Now, with the cameras ready to roll, the actor still hadn’t signed. An NBC executive was desperately pleading with him to sign the agreement when Belushi leaned over to Brillstein and asked, “Would you sign this contract?”
“I designed the fucking contract,” Brillstein replied. “And you can always break it.”
It was the beginning of a long and close friendship, almost like father and son. Brillstein was fiercely protective of the troubled comedian, defensive when people complained about his work habits, his unreliability and, more critically, his growing drug use. Brillstein understood obsessive behavior. During the 1970s, Brillstein had beat a gambling problem. He also liked to eat, and his weight problems had forced him into perennial attire of baggy sweaters. (Client Richard Dreyfuss called him “Shelley Winters with a beard.”)
By 1980, Belushi and Aykroyd had left SNL to become the hottest comedic actors in Hollywood. Brillstein loved making deals for them over breakfast at the Polo Lounge of the Beverly Hills Hotel. But Brillstein had made most of his money in TV. He had only dabbled in feature films and, frankly, been skewered almost every time out. He had secured a $35,000 contract for Belushi to appear in 1978’s National Lampoon’s Animal House, an enormous sum given the fact that Belushi had no film experience. Aykroyd, too, could have had a part but declined in order to keep on writing for Saturday Night Live. But like most performers, Belushi was impatient for success. He felt the fast track lay in Hollywood films. He had been in three minutes of the 1977 Jack Nicholson vehicle Goin’ South. Now Belushi and Aykroyd felt there was a future in their April 1978 SNL characters of Joliet Jake and his silent brother, Elwood. They asked Brillstein to convince Atlantic Records to produce an album for $125,000, Briefcase Full of Blues, which was released in December 1978. Then Brillstein booked the Blues Brothers to appear as the opening act in a 9-night engagement that comedian Steve Martin had scheduled at the Universal Amphitheater in Los Angeles the next fall.
Over the next months Aykroyd expanded the act into a full-length Blues Brothers movie. By then, Animal House was the No. 1 movie in the country. That summer, Belushi phoned then Universal exec Sean Daniels about Blues Brothers, and Daniels bit. Brillstein was thrilled how it was all turning out. But he resisted Steven Spielberg’s coaxing Belushi to take a part in 1941 for $350,000. Brillstein liked the money but argued against the project on the grounds that Spielberg had never done comedy and the script was not really that funny. But Belushi told Brillstein, “I can’t turn down Spielberg.”
Meanwhile, Brillstein was fighting with Universal for a bigger piece of the Animal House pie — $60 million so far on Uni’s negative cost of $2.7 million — for Belushi and himself. Thom Mount, then head of Universal, was trying to make a 3-picture deal for Belushi. Ok, Brillstein said, but a discussion of the future might begin with the past. Why not agree to give Belushi some retroactive percentage of the Animal House profits? But Universal wouldn’t budge. In the end, Mount would only offer a $250,000 bonus for Belushi if he signed the deal — take it or leave it. Brillstein left the office and called Belushi, who had only one demand: Get the check today. Brillstein and Belushi signed the 3-picture deal: $350,000 for 1941, $500,000 for The Blues Brothers and $750,000 for a third movie Continental Divide. But Brillstein’s take of the Blues Brothers was only $150,000 — peanuts, as far as he was concerned. So, in 1980, Brillstein signed with CAA’s Michael Ovitz. Except for Jim Henson, Brillstein’s clients signed with CAA as well. The relationship paid off immediately: Ovitz did a deal for Neighbors guaranteeing Belushi $1.25 million, and Brillstein $400,000. “I nearly shit,” Brillstein recalled.
Managers traditionally charged 15% of a client’s salary. But Brillstein had long ago found a much more profitable way of generating income as a TV packager. Using his stable of A-list writer-producers to create projects, Brillstein would load as many of his own writers onto a show as he could, generating even more fees, and then attach himself as executive producer and sell it to a network. As executive producer, Brillstein not only collected a producer’s fee but also profit sharing and backend participation. With syndication and licensing fees, a hit show could bring in millions upon millions. Now Bernie was packaging himself into Belushi’s and Aykroyd’s movies as well. But unlike TV, an executive producer on a movie was for the most part an empty title. Usually it was given to someone who was in control of a project at one point and then lost it, but was still bound to the project contractually. Other times it was a quid pro quo, for example, a payback for delivering the rights to some material. In Brillstein’s case, to put it bluntly, it was a “bribe,” the price the studio had to pay him to deliver his stars. A manager putting himself in business with his own clients was, to say the least, a gray area. It could be argued that the arrangement was better for the client because it saved him paying the manager’s commission. But it was also a conflict of interest. No matter how straight a manager played it, the fact that such questions could even be raised was troubling for many. But seemingly such matters did not concern Brillstein or Brillstein’s clients.
By now Bernie was having a tough time keeping Belushi’s drug problems from careening the comedian’s career. Belushi by 1982 was living in a bungalow at the Chateau Marmont and hounding Brillstein for cash. The day before he died of an overdose in Bungalow 3, Belushi told Brillstein he loved him. Bernie was called when Belushi’s body was found on March 5th. The ambulance rushed the actor to Cedars-Sinai. While Brillstein waited, he received the one call he had always dreaded. He dropped the receiver. He would never see his friend and client again. The remorse was overwhelming. Followed by anger over first investigative journalist Bob Woodward’s book Wired blaming Brillstein and the rest of Belushi’s entourage for not doing enough to help the comedian’s drug addiction, and then the movie.
Aykroyd and Brillstein sold Ghostbusters with both of them attached. Brillstein had bought the rights to the screeplay from his client for $1. But surprisingly, the studios were reluctant to bite once the script went out. The screenplay relied heavily on silly slapstick and oneliners and not everybody got it. And Aykroyd, who would star, had yet to prove he could carry a movie without his Blues Brothers sidekick. “Universal had it first and passed; John Landis passed; a lot of people passed on it,” Brillstein told me. “But we owned it and I was instrumental in keeping it alive.” So was Ovitz who helped structure a difficult deal with Columbia. Released in 1984, Ghostbusters quickly became the highest grossing comedy of all time.
By 1986, Brillstein had never been hotter in TV, packaging Buffalo Bill, Open All Night, The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd and The Gary Shandling Show. Brillstein had a commitment to NBC for another show and thought puppeteer Paul Fusco’s and writer-client Tom Patchett’s Alf might be the perfect project. Fusco, Brillstein and Patchett all met in Brandon Tartikoff’s office to present their pitch. But the presentation, as Brillstein put it, was going in the “crapper.” Then suddenly Fusco reached into a bag and pulled out Alf, who promptly exploded in a huge sneeze, then wiped his nose on Tartikoff’s arm. Stunned, the NBC executive laughed hysterically. Tartikoff grasped the marketing and licensing potential immediately and bought the series on the spot. Alf immediately shot to the top of the ratings and soon there were Alf plush toys everywhere. Brillstein had added another cash cow.
But then Brillstein’s luck changed. He became embroiled in a long-running feud with Michael Ovitz and CAA. He took an ill-fated job as head of Lorimar Entertainment’s new movie studio thinking it would give him the stature in Hollywood he had long deserved. But Bernie also knew the moment he gave up his management company he would lose all his clients and his power base. At the time, The Brillstein Company guided the careers of such in-front-of-the-camera talents as Dabney Coleman, Richard Dreyfuss, Peter Falk, Garry Shandling, Bronson Pinchot, Gilda Radner, Jim Belushi, Geena Davis, Andy Williams, Norm Crosby, Thelma Hopkins, Marsha Mason and George Wendt. His writer clients included Jim Henson, Pat Lee, John Moffitt, Alan Rafkind, Jay Tarses, Dave Thomas, Alan Zweibel, Sheldon Keller, Buzz Kohan, Marty Pasetta, Perry Rosemont, Kenny Solms and Barry Sand. In addition, Brillstein was the executive director of five network TV series – Alf, It’s Garry Shandling’s Show, The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd, The Slap Maxwell Story, and The Nell Carter Show.
But Brillstein, as always, had a solution: why didn’t Adelson purchase Brillstein’s company? Brillstein not only sold his management company to Lorimar for $26 million but retained control of the firm as well. To avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest even though one certainly existed, Brillstein agreed to take a salary of only $1 a year for his new position as CEO of Lorimar Film Entertainment. As Variety noted, the deal created “one heaping big show business macher.”
But soon Brillstein’s representation of Aykroyd ended. Then Merv Adelson, without warning, agreed to sell Lorimar-Telepictures and all its holdings, including the movie company and Brillstein’s management company, to Warner Bros. The studio quickly folded Lorimar into Warners, and Bernie found himself out of a job. He was forced to start all over again. Brillstein took his golden parachute and decided to go back into the management business. He also took a very young Brad Grey under his wing. Together, the two were able to sign back many of Bernie’s former clients and start the careers of many new hot young ones. Slowly Grey took over the running of the company, named Brillstein-Grey Entertainment by 1991, until 2005 when Brad left to become chairman/CEO of the Paramount Motion Picture Group.
It was an incredible testament to Brillstein’s legacy that, when Brillstein-Grey decided in June 2007 to rebrand itself, the talent management and movie/TV production entity paid homage to its founder and mentor by renaming itself Brillstein Entertainment Partners. Said Brillstein in the press release, “It’s been a pleasure seeing this company evolve over the past 38 years.”
And it was a pleasure to know you, Bernie.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.


Bernie was a warm heart in an often cold business. Even in a “crisis,” when everyone else in the room was freaking out, you could look over at Bernie and he would shoot you a smile which said, “Don’t worry, kid, you’ll fuck ‘em another day.”
He was the first guy to call just to say he saw something you did and liked it. No agendas, he just wanted you to know.
His passion, his human touch, his understanding of the fragile creative mind, his spot-on advice, his big comforting laugh… It will all be missed.
Bravo, indeed, Nikki. What a wonderful piece about a guy that we have so few of in this town. I worked for a flak in the late 80s who had befriended Bernie, and we got a lot of clients through that relationship. We did PR for “Molly Dodd” and worked with several of the actor talent. Brillstein-Grey was a hotbed of real talent and they took their cue from the top guy. (I never met him or even spoke to him, but it was common knowledge that he was one of the good guys.) Thanks for such a terrific piece. and RIP, Bernie.
I am greatful for the sharing of the personal expereinces with Bernie, i did not know him but have for so maney years worked with arrogent low level people in this business that think they are beeter then you, it is so refreashing to to get a sence of what a truely successful person is like, it gives me hope to keep working in this field. Thanks you all for your sharing.
Danny
you left out that he was the best gossip in hollywood. he will be missed.
I only met Bernie one time some 35-years ago at an
industry party. I was a young writer just starting
out, and he spent some time talking to me, making me
feel like I was the most important person in the room.
He couldn’t do anything with the projects I was trying
to develop, but he did give me a referral which led to
getting my first pilot made. When I tried to thank
him with much gushing, he just told me to pass it on
someday to somebody else who needed a leg up.
What an attitude. What a true gentleman.
They don’t get any better than Bernie. He was a class act and brought incredible warmth and light to BEP. He will be sorely missed.
Nikki,
Thank you for your beautiful obit of a man who has inspired many of us (but, unfortunately, not enough of us). Bernie was a true mensch, a big thinker, and a terrific ambassador for Hollywood. He is among the last of a breed that, sadly, we will not see again in this town.
For those of you who haven’t, do yourself a favor and pick up Bernie’s autobiography, “Where Did I Go Right.” Forget “The Art of War,” one should be allowed to manage a client until they’ve read it.
RIP Bernie. You will be missed. May your spirit live on.
I am a client of Brillstein and though he stopped being my day-to-day when he fell ill (love ya, Tim Sarkes), I have to say that Bernie was the real deal.
I’ll never forget going with him to the Polo Lounge one night recently. He sat down and looked across the room like an overly eager kid, fresh in from the Midwest.
“Larry Flynt? Sarah Silverman? Pat Sajak? Man, this place is hot tonight!”
He was just so excited. And after dinner, he walked around the room like a statesman, and everyone knew who he was.
My biggest regret this morning is that I have no picture with the man. Sometimes you get lost talking about jobs and the business and you don’t take a picture. And now I can’t.
I will truly, truly miss you Bern. Thanks for believing in me. Love ya, kid.
Terrific, terrific obit. Never knew the man, but of course, knew of him. Makes me sad to think that generation of writers and actors will never know what it’s like to have someone like him on your side.
As an assistant, I spoke with him many times on the phone. He was always ready to help or offer a kind word – which was and remains a rarity in “The Business.”
One of the greats.
He will be missed.
RC
In this cutthroat, backstabbing business, there ARE
some decent, honorable gentlemen who have graced the
Hollywood landscape…
Frank McCarthy, Walter Mirisch, Alan Ladd, Jr., and…
Bernie Brillstein.
Rest in peace, my friend, you will be missed.
A real Mensch … yes! Hollywood did die a bit with Bernie’s passing.
A true force of nature … he was at the top of his game, and, he did make you feel like you were the most important one in the room.
A True Hollywood God indeed.
Great job Niki! Stellar! And, so deserved!
I met Bernie in the early 90′s through Sheryl and Rob Lowe. He loved them. Always supported them, and helped Rob re-establish himself at a time where it could have gone either way. He didn’t give a crap as to why Rob was down and out….everyone gets there at some point…all he knew was that Rob was good people, and that’s what mattered.
I wonder what he thinks now. He sees the truth that none of us can see until we are gone. He now knows what the real answer is.
My first agent set my old partner and I up with a meeting with Bernie in 1993. We were just starting out and he was extremely warm and encouraging and free with advice and insight and entertained us with Belushi stories and said to call anytime for help whether we worked with him or not. If only the rest of the people I’d dealt with in the business over the ensuing fifteen years were half as generous and decent.
RIP BB
great writing the ny times & wires should use this as their obit. being able to drop mr. brillstein’s name as your manager in the parking lot at the comedy store has always been one of the tier’s most comedians in hollywood aspired to reach. he was the real deal old school hollywood and he will be missed.
I’d only been at BGE 1 week when bernie yelled at me “kid, how can you have worked here a whole week and not come into my office to say hi”…and a thousand stories that followed, all of them similar to the ones we all hear, and yet each unique and specific to the only man they could belong to. I will always remember stealing capri cigarettes from his desk on late nights and the time he let me take a crap in brad’s bathroom. Not a person i know whom he knew and didnt touch in an amazing and beautiful way.
Thank you Nikki…
I’m just a humble ol’ member of the audience, a real outsider living in the Midwest, and only saw Mr. Brillstein’s name in the credits. What a wonderful man and Ms. Finke’s homage was a great read and provided deep insight to the man behind the credits. Thank you.
Kudos, as always to you Nikki. Reading your piece on Bernies passing had me melancholy, strolling down memory lane. I was fortunate enough to have had numerous business dealings with Bernie and any “business lunch” with him always turned into a lesson for me. Whether it was a lesson on life, or The Business,(which were two and the same for Bernie), you were smart to absorb all that you could from this icon. He dispensed his wisdom graciously and was the most un-selfish person I knew in a town loaded with sharks and me firsts. His rapier wit and downright dirty sense of humor made him that much more human. I’ll have a cocktail and cigar in your honor tonight my friend.
When John Lennon died I taped myself doing an impression of Father Guido Sarducci, Don Novello (one of Bernie’s clients not mentioned), doing a tribute to John Lennon with the entire tribute made up of titles to Beatle songs. I was a restaurant owner that did a little stand-up at my own place. I included my phone number. Bernie had no idea who I was but called my number and said, kid what do you do? I said I’m a restauranteur. He said good stick to it. Your impression, while amusing, was too god-damned sad. Can’t use it. Still can’t believe he called!
RIP Mr. B – I’m still cooking.
I worked at BGE in the late 90′s and every time I sat in a meeting with Bernie, I couldn’t believe my luck — and that I was getting paid for it. He was the best; everything said here is true and then some. His like will not come again and we are all the worse for it.
Bernie was a true class act, we should all pay respect to the man by leading with some of his principles – it’d be hard to do it his way, but we can do it in our own unique way. He was a pillar and symbol of everything fun and good about doing business in Hollywood.
Rest in peace, friend.
Rest in peace Bernie.
You will be missed and are impossible to replace.
A genuinely well written article. Really gives you a sense of the man. If I were a family member I would treasure it. Great job.
What wonderful tributes. I have nothing to do with the business, although I think Brad Grey’s mother-in-law might live in my parents’ condo community (how is that for connections!), but I took a kind of interest in things, and have been aware of Mr. Brillstein for a long time. His name would just show up all the time a in the credits of so many of my favorite shows. To love your work, to be kind and geenrous to your people and others, to make a pile of money doing it! Greatness!!!!!!!! This was clearly a life very well lived. Wish I had a mentor like you when I was a yuoung man. Not sure I believe in heaven, but if it exists, you are there.