UPDATE: I finally put together what happened, and it’s a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of Team De Niro. My sources say when Robert De Niro first came to WME in 2008, he was coming off 2 low budget and low salary and low prestige Avi Lerner pics which CAA claimed at the time was all it could secure for him. But estimates are that the 66-year-old actor made $35M with WME’s Ari Emanuel in less than 2 years. That included the big payday for the 3rd Fockers installment which WME put together, the movies Stone with Edward Norton and Machete with Robert Rodriguez, as well as Another Night In Suck City for Focus Features with Paul Weitz directing, a showy role playing Gov George Wallace in Precious director Lee Daniels’ next pic about desegregation, plus mid-development on another Midnight Run, and other film projects. Plus 2 to 3 TV series for Bob’s Tribeca production company. Plus an advertising deal with American Express. All this ka-ching also included WME securing him one of the lead roles in Edge Of Darkness. But then, my sources claim, “he was fired because he didn’t memorize his lines”. (Bob’s people wouldn’t confirm or deny this.) Even so, WME secured his full pay for him. “That bad situation had a good effect on him. He’s a great actor, but he lost his way about what’s important. And there was his constant need for money, planes, everything,” my source noted. “He re-focused himself. And Ari re-established him.”
From what I’m hearing, De Niro started to be handled more by Chris Donnelly than Ari personally. That’s when De Niro’s longtime Tribeca producing partner Jane Rosenthal, despite the big money Bob was making with WME, initiated calls to CAA. She started negotiating the actor’s return to that agency. On the phone with me today, Rosenthal took full responsibility for guiding De Niro back to CAA. “It’s not about money. I have been friends and still colleagues with CAA and that’s what it’s about. It becomes about personalities who you end up working best with.” But my sources said this was also more about Rosenthal’s fears for her own future than De Niro’s career.
9:45 AM: Well, this is surprising. I’ve just been told that Robert De Niro has returned to CAA where he will be represented by a team headed by Richard Lovett, Josh Lieberman and Dan Aloni. De Niro was last represented by CAA in 2008, when the actor jumped to what was then Endeavor. (Robert De Niro Has Fired CAA) It had been a major signing coup for the boutique agency, especially given the word that De Niro was dissatisfied with how CAA had serviced his production companies in film, television, etc. But the very idea of him leaving CAA, where he’d been a client for such a long long time, was astonishing. I remember when Bryan Lourd, Kevin Huvane and Richard Lovett made it a top priority as soon as they took over CAA in 1995 to do everything they could to keep De Niro since he had been tied so closely to departing Michael Ovitz. Then Endeavor’s merger with William Morris took place. Now De Niro is gone from WME back to CAA. It’s not about money. It’s about prestige. This really is a 2-agency war going on.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.







At the rate he’s going, I imagine the next thing we’ll hear is “I’ll take Robert DeNiro as the secret square to block”.
Oh, and as for New York Producer’s comment “He owes her everything”: why thanks for popping in here Jane. Is it any coincidence that apart from A Bronx Tale, EVERYTHING he’s done since their (your?) hookup has pretty much been beneath him?
In all seriousness, Nine might be kind of a stinker, but can anyone imagine Daniel Day Lewis doing “Meet the Fockers”?
Jane is lucky she got him back there. WME hated her with a passion and wanted to get her fired. She loses good movies for Bob all the time. CAA will protect her so Bob’s career will suck
Jane can’t be fired. You all and Nikki are uninformed to suggest it. Or it’s just more WME spin. Jane and Bob are fully, irrevocably partnered financially in Tribeca Films, Tribeca Film Institute, Tribeca Enterprises. Even more she’s on the board of directors at all those entities. Not just Jane but her husband too, who is a wealthy developer and who helps finance the money-losing nonprofit ventures and festival.
I recently signed with WME, and they’ve been nothing but great. Not just to me but to other people I know who are just starting the climb.
CAA wouldn’t give me the time of day, even after my first break—but when they heard I got my first big payday (through WME), that’s when they started calling.
All the defectors from WME to CAA have already peaked—CAA is getting people whose careers are done.
But WME is looking for rising talent—at least that’s what it seems like from where I’m sitting.
Actually, WME claims they only want to handle the top 2% of talent… Really… The WME leaders actually went into a staff mtg. and told all the agents that.
The honeymoon for you will end soon.
So as tough as De Niro is on screen, he is really Rosenthal’s bitch!
The most interesting part of this article is the throwaway line that another Midnight Run – AKA one of the best films of the 1980s and a criminally underrated gem – is in development. Can this be true? I can’t find anything on this on the internets.
Deniro doesn’t exactly do good work anymore though, what happened to him? He isn’t in the same league as Jack Nicholson, maybe he really never was that great of an actor…
For shame! The Godfather II, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Awakenings, Heat, This Boy’s Life, Midnight Run, The Untouchables, The King of Comedy…yes, he’s been phoning it in for a paycheck in the last decade, but to say that he was never great is dead wrong.
I have watched de Niro for years now walk thru roles and collect checks and its tiresome and predictable. I was under the impression that he was more a producer and businessman than actor in this incarnation and after so many years in the business, who can blame him?
When was the last time he played anything that didn’t look at sound like it was born and raised within a 2 mile radius of the Bronx? This is American’s finest? Sorry, thats not really acting, its idolatry.
when Gary Oldhaman can do a 5 second imitation of you on Late Night and nail your range its time to retire.
and Oldman, there’s a real actor who has stayed hungry…onlike Deniro who retired from real acting 15 years ago…Deniro in his present state should be doing detective shows or daytime soaps…sad
“when Gary Oldhaman can do a 5 second imitation of you on Late Night and nail your range its time to retire.”
Ummm. Isn’t Gary Oldman a great actor? Glad he’s getting paid off of two franchises. Doesn’t seem like an insult. But I understand. I haven’t seen a good De Niro movie since Heat.
Would love to see Gary doing Bob.
Where can I see that?
it goes deeper than that. its that moron mark dowley who f-ed up the amex relationship with wme talent. wme needs to decide who is more important to them, their corporate clients or their clients.
WME already made this decision. The reason why it didn’t take much to get all of Besser, Levine and Weinstein’s clients to go with them to Verve.
bob has become such as embarrassment . . .
to go from work in raging bull, the deerhunter . . .
to fokkers, righteous kill, etc.
it’s really so horrible to watch . . .
why?
he needs the money . . .
as others suggested, it’s not about the agency . . .
bob has done this to himself . . .
gruesome.
The comment from “NewYorkProducer” is without doubt the most (unintentionally) entertaining thing I’ve ever read on this site…
I know, right?! It almost reads like brilliant parody it’s so ridiculous. My vote it’s some bubble headed intern at Tribeca Films trying to be a loyal foot soldier.
Bob fired the wrong people. New York Producer is wildly delusional.
there is such a great reservoir of love for dinero out here we will forgive just about anything.
a remake of the great george burns/ art carney bank robbery movie.
jane producing, bring in hal linden and dustin.
add recession and downsizing and voila!
A client call a day keeps CAA away.
Correct, and that is at the heart of this.
Seriously? Is that all it takes?
No, but it would be a start.
There is a type of agent who believes, however absurd it might seem, that to ignore clients or give them attitude is the way to be valued by the client. It goes back to high school when they yearned to be the rejecter not the rejected. There should be a book written for the film industry titled, “Everything I Needed to Know about Life I Learned in High School”.
Chris Donnelly?! Ha, ha, ha. That twerp was brought in to deal with Bob? He could not work at the DMV without an army of people telling him how to do his job.
CD is really the last remaining Strickler protoge at WME so I like him for that. I feel for him as he was badly beaten up by Lesher who tried to get him fired. CD has his issues but none of them are terminal and his taste is very good. I don’t know how he survives at WME. I suspect he stands or falls by Scorses right now.
why did Lesher try to get him fired?
i will say this. bash me if you like, break me down. but i tried my best with bob. i love him, and hope he finishes his career as dynamic as he started it. i wish him nothing but the best.
- christopher d.
I never write on these things. But I randomly stumbled across this post tonight and I’m shocked by all of the negative posts towards Chris. I’ve spoken with Chris a few times and he’s been nothing but generous and caring towards me. I think theirs some hating going on. In a business that is filled with thieves, liars and total pieces of shit…Donnelly is one of the goods one. I wish they were all like CD. Not sure if anyone will read this considering that it’s old… Just thought I’d share.
CAA’s diversified far beyond film into music, sports, and so on. My bet’s with the Death Star. No matter who reps Bobby D., his time has past. In short–he blows.
If de Niro is such a great actor as his publicists would have the world beleive, how come he has never attempted Shakespeare, by far and away the greatest dramatist in history? He has avoided all British characters in fact because he lacks the range and technique necessary to play them. That represents no small vacuum in an actor’s repetoire.
And so what if many of his great characters are brooding,angry and violent? Beginning level actors learn quickly that those qualities in most male actors are very close to the surface and easily accessible. The sad truth always has been that around the film business supporting actors,wannabes,competing actors and real talent never do anything but gloat in public over those at the top of the heap. Its a system based in extreme fear and insulation.
Broad range is not required to be considered a great actor. That’s a very naive drama-school belief not proven in the professional world. It’s the mark of humility and pragmatism for an actor not to attempt what is not his or her forte. I don’t WANT to see De Niro doing Shakespeare. How can you even picture that?
Sorry but great range is one of the true marks of being a great actor. Real transformation is the alchemy of acting. People more often than not confuse star acting with acting. Its not. Its a different animal all together and it can be very compelling, but its never great acting. There is a huge difference between Meryl Streep and de Niro. Marlon Brando had terrific range and power but lacked the desire to act. Laurence Olivier,Anthony Hopkins,Albert Finney, – just more examples of superb range and terrific acting.
Quite honestly I sense that at some point in the 70s the media hype machine was kidnapped by the cult of de Niro and it has not freely expressed itself since.
I miss Heath Ledger and I hope that Gary Oldham has a big resurgence.
De Niro is rather prolific in the art of producing flops. Not to worry, he can always team up with Joe Pesci and shoot yet another mob movie to pay the bills.
De Niro really was the best actor of the 70′s and the 1st part of the 80′s but he lost interest in making good movies and wanted to be a movie star making movie star dollars. Sounds like he wants it both ways now but I wonder if he really has it in him to give a great, new, memorable performance again. I think he’s too spoiled and rich to put in the effort that he used to.
Another Midnight Run? Sad.
Gee, why can’t Bobby do the same roles he did at 30? That’s a real tough one, my friend. Maybe because in 3 short years he’ll be 70.
Wow, I can hardly wait to see stuff like Fockers 3 – “Fock You And Fock Everybody”. Or Analyze 3 – “Analyze The Other Thing.”
Or those great remakes of old movies that will always be 100 times better than their crappy copies. Ya, sequels and remakes, real smart way to go, Bobby – NOT.
Well now, I agree in part, to almost all of the posts above, however, Robert Deniro is one of the best actors off all time. You can call him “spoiled”, “difficult”, etc., but to say anything negative about his acting and influence is totally off base and very cruel and wrong. He has done some terrible films, so has Al Pacino, and Marlon Brando. Bad movie choices does not make any of these actors “bad” actors. I dont believe Deniro knowingly signs onto a crappy film. Im sure that he “hopes” that the film is received positively when it is released, while also getting a pay cheque. Deniro can do terrible films from now on, but I dont think anyone will come and take away his Oscar anytime soon. None of his bad movies have diminished some of the amazing roles that he brought to life in the past. Im sure the right role will present itself in the future, hopefully all of the agent CAA/WME crap will lead to better scripts actually getting to Deniro. Until then, it is not a crime for Deniro to make money off of some not so good films. Bad films yes, his acting is still amazing. Have you all forgotton his role in the movie “The Fan”?. In closing, how he conducts himself with his agent or agency, is his business. Dont you wish you could be in his position to have had these agencies fighting over you?? Either way, no matter what he chooses to do, he is still one of the greatest actors of all time. Give the guy the credit he deserves.
Thank you George. Well stated.
Hey “Grateful”, Im just being honest. Im an aspiring actor and even Iam sometimes “misunderstood”. I am so “unknown” that even my own agent has a hard time remembering who I am and at the same time, even I have to put up with the trials of being in this industry. I find it is so easy for people to forget the past accomplishments of actors like Deniro who not only influenced the way acting is done, but Deniro has also contributed to “pop” culture sipmly by “how” he portrayed his long list of legendary charactors. I just cant believe how hard people are on Deniro, regardless of some poor movie choices and his “on set” atitude, which I might add, has nothing to do with anyone. People should just enjoy his work. Bad script??- blame the writer. Bad Film? -blame the director, the D.O.P, etc. Simply enjoy Deniros work, appreciate it for what it is and leave the rest of the crap to the agents and tabloids.
He’s gonna be awesome in STONE. Simple and riveting.