3RD UPDATE: Ed Limato’s clients weigh in on his passing:
Richard Gere: “Ed was my dear friend and agent for 40 years. He was the best of the best. There will never be anyone like him. The mold has been broken. He was probably the most respected agent of our time who loved his clients dearly and would do anything for them. “
Mel Gibson: “It’s said of agents ‘they have no hearts’. Ed was all heart!
He was there for me 30 years. I will miss him.”
Steve Martin: “Ed Limato not only represented important actors in Hollywood, but also represented class and kindness.”
Denzel Washington: “Ed was more than an agent. He was like a father to me and a dear friend to me and my entire family.”
2ND UPDATE (now completed): Ed Limato had been ill from lung disease and awaiting a lung transplant that never came. He arrived home from Cedars Sinai this week and fell into a coma. In recent days the icon who’d spent four decades in showbiz guiding the careers of some of its biggest stars was surrounded by everyone he loved: his clients and his friends and his colleagues. The untimely passing of this legendary talent agent at age 73 will cast a pall over Hollywood this holiday weekend. But his reputation as one of the greats will live on.
Most recently, Limato was a senior agent at WME Entertainment but he’d spent a lifetime moving between ICM and William Morris agencies. He began his career in the mailroom of the Ashley-Famous Agency in New York in 1966. That tenpercentery eventually became International Famous Agency where Ed was promoted to junior agent. Later, Ashley-Famous merged with Creative Management Associates to become International Creative Management (ICM). He transferred to ICM’s West Coast office but was lured away to the William Morris Agency in 1978 by his idol Stan Kamen’s motion picture talent department for a 10-year stay and some of Limato’s most productive years. There he helped discover Mel Gibson, Richard Gere, Michelle Pfeiffer, Kevin Costner, and Michael Biehn among so many other clients. By 1984, Limato seemed destined to be the town’s next superstar agent. But Limato found the Morris elders’ end-of-year bonus offer insulting and didn’t come into the office for a week. He met with ICM and agreed to return. When Kamen learned what happened, he demanded a new contract for Limato: $250,000 for 1984, $300,000 for 1985, $350,000 for 1986, and a new Jaguar. Limato stayed.
By 1988, Stan Kamen had died, an internal battle was raging to run his department, and it embroiled Limato in another contract dispute that even involved a lawsuit. This time, Ed did go back to ICM where he cemented his reputation as a superstar agent and took all his movie stars, now joined by Denzel Washington and Steve Martin and Billy Crystal and Liam Neeson, to the next level of superstardom. There he rose to become a major administrator of the agency. But after ICM merged with the TV agency Broder Webb Chervin Silbermann in 2006, Limato found himself in the summer of 2007 embroiled in a very bitter and very public contract renewal battle with newly installed ICM president Chris Silbermann.
At issue was whether Ed would remain part of ICM management and if so what he would get paid. One proposal on the table was for Limato to stay as an eminence gris and rep his clients as usual but relinquish his management role so ICM could effect generational change. On the money front, Limato was making $5 million in salary and bonuses with perks like another mil at least for his Oscar party, two script readers, three assistants, and own business affairs person. Plus, Ed insisted that all of his aides eventually be promoted to agent status. ICM wanted him to downsize, especially his annual Friday night pre-Oscar party which for years had been the ne-plus-ultra of Hollywood (where Limato became known as “The Barefoot Contessa’ because of his penchant for hosting shoeless despite his sartorial splendor) until Bryan Lourd’s and Ari Emanuel’s competing parties began to eclipse it. Limato claimed both his authority and stature were being undermined by the new regime, which, he alleged, planned on forcing him into early retirement. Limato wanted out of his contract. ICM refused.
The dispute was taken to arbitration, where Limato challenged a 3-year non-compete clause, which would have forbid him to work for another agency and forced him to remain at ICM as a consultant. During arbitration, Limato’s lawyers argued that his contract dated back to the mid-1990s and violated the California law stemming from the old studio contract system known as the “seven year rule,” stating that anyone who renders extraordinary or unique services cannot be bound to a contract for more than seven years. On August 13, 2007, the arbitrator found in favor of Limato and against ICM. Just a few days later, Limato and his movie clients including some making salaries of more than $20M plus first dollar gross went back to the William Morris Agency and joined his former colleagues Jim Wiatt and Dave Wirtschafter. As Wiatt said at the time, “Over the years I’ve respected and admired Ed as both a colleague and competitor, and I can assure you I prefer him as a colleague.” Limato bid his ICM colleagues a fond farewell.
After William Morris merged with Endeavor in June 2009, and despite Wiatt’s ouster from the new company, Limato seamlessly transitioned into WME Entertainment where he was treated with the respect he deserved. At one staff meeting last December, Patrick Whitesell gave accolades to Limato as WME’s “Iron Man” in the vein of MVP QB Brett Favre and presented Ed with a Minnesota Vikings jersey emblazoned with the name “Limato” on the back as staffers stood and applauded. Now, everyone there knew that Ed would rather go to the symphony than attend a football game. But he gamely accepted the jersey and exclaimed, “I can’t wait to wear it on Saturday night.”
Today, WME Entertainment issued this statement to me: “We are deeply saddened by the loss of our colleague Ed Limato. He was the consummate agent, launching the careers of some of the most celebrated artists of our time, always with his signature style and class. His passion for this business was contagious, inspiring so many who had the privilege of knowing him. A true legend, Ed has left an indelible mark on our industry. We will miss him dearly.”
After Limato’s departure, ICM’s already troubled motion picture talent edepartment never recovered. ICM Chairman and CEO Jeff Berg gave me this statement on Limato’s passing: “Ed was valued colleague for many years, and he had a remarkable impact on the entertainment business. He dedicated his life to his clients and guided the careers of many important artists in our industry.”
Jim Wiatt emailed me today: “I am saddened by the passing of my friend Ed Limato. I had the privilege to work with Ed for over 30 years, at ICM and the William Morris Agency. He loved his clients, and represented them with style, class and the ultimate commitment to their art. He will be missed, but always remembered.”
Today, Limato’s friends issued this obituary to me, and I can attest that this part is accurate:
“Ed Limato was in a class by himself – an iconoclast, as Vanity Fair once called him – a talent agent who glided through Hollywood with poise and panache. He hearkened back to the Golden Age, a time when men were more refined and elegant, as if he were preparing for an evening at the Mocambo. Yet despite his reverence for Hollywood of yore, his client list kept him active and relevant into the 21st century. He was as colorful as he was powerful. Always handsomely coiffed and impeccably dressed, Limato would promenade into the office wearing Italian suits of mustard yellow or salmon pink, rallying to his assistants, ‘Let’s talk to the stars.’
“Limato’s love for old Hollywood was not just apparent in his demeanor. His Coldwater Canyon Estate, known as “Heather House”, was built in 1936 by Hollywood stars Dick Powell and Joan Blondell and later owned by George Raft. The game room was adorned with Hirschfeld caricatures acquired from the old MGM commissary, and his screening room was named after Marlene Dietrich. He even gave his assistants a list of classic Hollywood films that they were to watch and report back to him with analysis.
“Limato is the last of the great talent agents – a breed that dwindled with the loss of Stan Kamen and Irving ‘Swifty’ Lazar. Over the years, his client list read like a who’s who of Hollywood legends and Oscar winners, including Ava Gardner, Marlon Brando, Michelle Pfeiffer, Meryl Streep, Wynona Ryder, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Kevin Costner, Goldie Hawn, Dennis Quaid, Madonna, Nicholas Cage, Robert Downey, Jr., and Liam Neeson. To Limato, his clients were less business and more family. Instead of family photographs in his living room, he kept exquisitely framed headshots of every actor he ever represented. Limato could be as obstreperous as any Hollywood bad boy, throwing tantrums and hanging up the phone on the most powerful players. However, he would often follow up with an apology or bouquet of flowers.”
I was fortunate to have known Limato personally and professionally and interviewed him extensively over the years. Here’s my take on why Ed was such an extraordinary Hollywood agent: he was a throwback to the pre-Ovitz days of the Hollywood talent agent where even small actors came before big deals, where clients’ problems came before his own, where brutal honesty came before feigned sincerity. Average height (which made him tall in Hollywood), moody and a heavy smoker, he was born to be an agent. He loved the adrenaline rush of the phone calls and the negotiations and the power lunches with the stars. His official bio noted:
“Although it’s common for clients to jump from agency to agency, Limato inspired loyalty from the likes of Gere, Gibson and Washington, who have been with him for most of their careers. He was often criticized for maintaining his own agency within the agency, because his office consisted of three trainees, a personal assistant, a lawyer and a story editor. But while most agents are all about the deal, Limato serviced the client. Because of his unique style, Gere, Gibson, Washington and Martin did not have managers. Limato was a full-service agent.”
That Limato was out of the closet was accepted by his peers and clients as readily as his availability 24 hours a day. In turn, his showbiz clients and friends became his surrogate family. He cared so deeply about his actors that pals wondered if Limato would go the way of Sue Mengers and burn out. But Limato had staying power.
A self-made man, Edward Frank Limato was born in Mount Vernon NY, the son of Italian-American blue collar laborers. Limato early on gravitated to gangs. “I was in a lot of trouble in junior high school,” he once told me, and was thrown out of high school three months before graduation. Limato loved going to the movies on Saturdays and wanted to make a living somehow in the film business. So, as a teenager, he headed off to New York City. “But I didn’t have the guts to become an actor,” he recalled. He bummed around Europe where, in Rome in 1966, he met director Franco Zeffirelli who offered him an assistant’s job on the set of The Taming Of The Shrewi. On the set, Michael York said to him, “You should be an agent.” From that moment on, he was.
He built up a client base of TV actors but wanted to rep movie stars. Soon, Richard Gere walked into Limato’s office. The agent signed him on the spot. But Gere wanted to be a musician: he played nine different instruments, including the clarinet (his skill was later showcased in The Cotton Club). But Limato argued that Gere should concentrate on a dramatic career. The rushes of Gere’s performance in 1977’s Looking for Mr. Goodbar were enough for Paramount’s Don Simpson to immediately call Limato and say he had to have Gere for his next movie, American Gigolo, then a dark picture about a male prostitute caught up in a gruesome murder. While Gere hemmed and hawed about whether to do the film, Simpson offered the movie to John Travolta, who following Saturday Night Fever was the hottest star in Hollywood at that moment. Limato was puttering around his new cottage in Laurel Canyon when director Paul Schrader phoned to inform him that Travolta had passed on American Gigolo.
“If Travolta doesn’t want to do it, then I don’t want it,” Gere told his agent.
“Just put the crap aside,” Limato patiently counseled.
The role initially was a homosexual prostitute, then a bisexual male hooker. One scene called for the character to hang out in a gay bar. Gere decided to research the role, so he dragged along his agent Limato, his friend and studio exec Craig Baumgarten, his director Paul Schrader, and his co-star Lauren Hutton from gay bar to gay bar. “It was hysterical. Ed maintained he knew nothing about where anybody went, but we kept teasing him all night,” recalled Craig Baumgarten (who like Limato maintained Gere is “100% heterosexual” and was convinced that the rumors about the actor’s alleged homosexuality all stem from that night of research). Subsequently, Limato talked Gere into starring in An Officer and a Gentleman. Suddenly, Limato was handling one of the biggest stars in the world.
If the true measure of an agent is not just what other superstars he can steal, but what careers he can create, then Limato was a better agent than CAA’s Mike Ovitz or Ron Meyer. At the time, the Australian film industry was just beginning to make an impact on Hollywood. An Australian agent sent over a photo and a resume of a client he thought Limato might want. As Limato slipped the photograph from the envelope, it took his breath away. But could Mel Gibson act? Limato would soon find out. Gibson had just made Mad Max, a low-budget Australian movie directed by George Miller which had fared well in Europe. The agent expected to be disappointed. Instead, he was awestruck. From the very first frame of film, Gibson showed range.
As it turned out, Gibson had already visited several agencies, including CAA. “CAA asked him to ‘read,’ Limato recalled to me. “I really want you to be my client,” Limato said to him. As Gibson’s star rose, so, too, did Limato’s.
When Kamen’s longtime protege Gary Lucchesi left Morris, Limato inherited his clients, including the Orange Country beauty queen turned model, Michelle Pfeiffer, who ended up in Grease 2. She’d been discovered by casting director Wally Nicita. According to Ed’s bio, “Limato was a voracious reader and believed that good material was the key to stardom. He suggested Michelle Pfeiffer for the role in Scarface”, which launched her serious film career.
But Kevin Costner was the one who got away. Limato first learned about him from celebrity photographer Herb Ritts who asked Ed to meet with a young male model. But weeks went by and the model never phoned for an appointment. Costner’s acting career was being handled by a commercial agency at the time. When Wally Nicita was casting a role in Mike’s Murder, and Costner came into her office and did a cold reading that she told William Morris agent Gary Lucchesi was “incredible”, he signed Costner. (Costner also became best known around Hollywood as the corpse who was edited out of Lawrence Kasdan’s baby-boomer hit The Big Chill.) When Limato was introduced to Costner in the Morris hallway, he thought the name sounded familiar. “Wait a minute, don’t you know Herb Ritts? Weren’t you supposed to call?”
Replied a sheepish Costner: “I didn’t call you because I knew you were too busy. But I would have loved to have met you.”
When Lucchesi left Morris, those clients he didn’t give to Limato were up for grabs. Kevin Costner decided to sign with Lucchesi’s Morris secretary turned junior agent, J.J. Harris. It was her idea to get Costner involved with Limato, then head of Morris’ motion picture talent department. From that point on, Harris and Limato had an intense rivalry over Costner’s career. Limato was instrumental in landing Costner his breakthrough in 1987’s The Untouchables. Initially, Paramount’s then head of production, Dawn Steel, wanted Limato’s other client, Mel Gibson, for the role of Eliot Ness. When Gibson passed, Limato started pushing Costner. “Please, please, go back to Mel,” Steel pleaded. In a wily act of agenting, he kept Paramount waiting for Gibson’s answer for three weeks, all the while calling the studio executives every day, pushing Costner. Finally, Limato could stall no longer. After all, Steel was a good friend who had even dated his key client, Richard Gere, years before. “Dawn, I have some bad news for you and some good news for you,” Limato started. “The bad news is: Mel definitely is not going to do The Untouchables .” Immediately, Steel cut to the chase. “What’s the good news?” Limato preened. “The good news is that Kevin Costner wants to do it.”
“I know that, and I have good news for you,” Steel countered. “We want Kevin.”
Later, Costner did No Way Out, which also had gone first to Gibson, who wasn’t interested. Meanwhile, Limato’s relationship with Harris was worse than ever. It fell to Morris business affairs head Roger Davis to mediate what he called “a nightmare”. Not that Limato was always right. It was Harris who first read the script for Bull Durham and knew she was holding gold. Limato worried that the film would fall apart, saying producer Thom Mount had about as much chance of getting it made as seeing snow fall in Malibu. Well, as it turned out, snow fell in Malibu that year, and Bull Durham got made. Limato had another tug-of-war with Harris over Ray Stark’s Revenge. Limato knew that Gere and Gibson had turned it down. And then Limato received a phone call from Costner asking for help. Costner informed Limato he also wanted to do Field of Dreams for Universal. Both movies had the same start dates. Limato persuaded Stark to flip his start date with Field of Dreams, which, because of the growing season for corn, had a schedule that couldn’t be changed.
Then, the unthinkable happened: Limato was about to lose Richard Gere. Since An Officer and a Gentleman, the actor had done one bomb after another, and Limato would pound the conference table with his fist at the Morris’ Wednesday motion picture meetings and snarl, “Goddammit, why aren’t you people finding a job for Richard!” Gere was going to sign with ICM’s Sam Cohn. Immediately, Limato followed Richard out the door to join the rival agency. Morris tried to sue, then settled, and took solace that Costner, now a huge star, had stayed. Limato chose Gere over Costner. Few agents would have done that back then. Ed then orchestrated Gere’s comeback by talking him into doing Pretty Woman.
In lieu of flowers, the family is suggesting donations be made to the Motion Picture and Television Fund.
- Inside WME’s Motion Picture Staff Meeting
- William Morris Makes All Its Post-Merger Firings Today
- For Your WMA-Endeavor Scorecard…
- Frank Langella Jumps To WMA
- William Morris Signs 2 CAA Actor Clients
- One Last Limato Follow-Up, Promise…
- Will the Last Limato Asst Please Turn Off The Lights?
- Toldja! Limato To Morris Is Finally Official
- EXCLUSIVE: Ed Limato Headed To Morris
- Limato Bids ‘A Fond Farewell’ To ICMers
- Limato Bids ‘A Fond Farewell’ To ICMersArb
- Limato Bids ‘A Fond Farewell’ To ICMers
- Arbitrator Rules For Ed Limato, Not ICM
- ICM/Limato Update: The Seven Year Itch
- ICM Makes Motion Picture Talent Changes
- Finke/LA Weekly: ICM vs Limato Wrap-Up
- UPDATED: Latest ICM/Limato News
- Limato/ICM Update: D-Day Is August 1st
- EXCLUSIVE: ICM & Ed Limato Call It Quits
- Limato’s Negotiations With ICM In Limbo
- Rumor of ICM’s Ed Limato To CAA ‘Ridiculous’
- The Iceberg Cometh: Inside ICM’s Project Beta
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.






What a terrific write-up Nikke. RIP Ed
I second that Nikke! And condolences to those fortunate enough to work with this gentleman. We obviously lost an icon. And if we have truly reached “the end of an era”, what a shame for the industry and society in general who is strongly influenced by Hollywood in many ways. Perhaps his legacy will be to inspire us to turn the clock back and conduct business in Hollywood the way it was meant to be.
+1.
RIP, Mr. Limato, you will be greatly missed.
class, elegance and a true gentleman.
they don’t make them like that anymore and it’s a shame.
Ed never thought about “destroying” anyone (compeitors, ex-clients, betrayers.)
He only wanted to make sure his clients were well taken care of and if that meant
fighting, yelling or strongly persuading, it was all for the good of his movie stars, never
for his own ego.
Ed, you will be missed.
RIP, Mr. Limato.
I always stood up straighter in your presence.
Great loyal agent , unfortunate that he never represented me. I had even been a stand in for one of his Oscar winning clients, and even after winning a local EMMY he never gave me a shot. Oh well that’s Hollywood. There will be none like him.
Ed represented a Hollywood that is no more and the business is that much shabbier with his loss. The outpouring of sentiment for him in these comments is truly moving – and just shows how much people respond to integrity and class…
Legendary talent agents are largely a thing of the past. I never knew Ed by anything but reputation, though the idea of being an “Ed Limato” (even if you have no idea who Ed is/was) is what I’d imagine inspires many a young person to become a talent agent.
‘And just as it is appointed for man to die once, and after that comes judgment.’ Hebrews 9:27.
While Nikke wrote a wonderful article on Ed Limato, no where does it state what he did for God while on this earth.
The sad reality for many in Hollywood is that fame and fortune is fleeting and temporary. This life passes like a rocket and every man and woman will stand before God Almighty someday and give an account.
I have no idea where Ed Limato is tonight, but I can assure you that he is in fact alive in either heaven or hell.
If you don’t believe in God, they say, you better be sure as hell.
Thanks for filling me in on stuff like that. I like bedtime stories.
HG… our loss of someone who actually took advantage of the random gift of life by making others lives better is not at all soothed by your saying “I have no idea where Ed Limato is tonight, but I can assure you that he is in fact alive in either heaven or hell.” In fact, it’s upsetting and makes your religion seem even creepier than it already is. Do yourself a favor… if you really wanna recruit people to your cult, don’t let them inside your head… it’s really disturbing.
Thanks Mr. Limato. Without you, the gap between old and new hollywood would’ve been even wider.
Be nice, D T. Remember, when W. C. Fields, an avowed atheist/agnostic, was very near his time to go he was caught reading the Bible by his good friend Gene Fowler. “What are you doing, Bill?” asked Fowler.
Replied Fields, “Hedging my bets.”
Something you might think about doing, D T, just in case you’re wrong.
Hey, when you die, maybe someone will post some crap asking what you ever did for Mohammed, or Ganesh, or some other deity. Most of the world doesn’t share your “beliefs”, so go fuck yourself.
The sentiments of HG were beautiful in spirit. The replies, not so much. One can truly understand Hollywood reading right through all these postings.
FANTASTIC tribute by Nikki — and via the link by Christopher Lockhart as well.
Mr. Limato sounds like an inimitable, consummate pro. It is both refreshing and nice to see that in a business where people can often be so trenchantly cutting and ruthlessly tough on one another that many folks agree he was this: an uber mensch.
R.I.P. Mr. Limato
Very nice bio. Sounds like Hollywood could use more of his sort.
I sold a script once that the studio wanted to shoot immediately. Sadly, there was only one actor right to play the lead and that was Richard Gere. Ed Limato read the script and correctly told Richard that if he played the role just it was written he would win an Oscar. After almost two years of hemming and hawing, Richard said yes, demanded that the script be rewritten, and the movie did not win him an Oscar. Far from it.
Those Saturday night boy parties with shows at Ed’s will be missed along with him.
I worked at william morris when ed was in his hawaiian shirt phase. He was even nice to assistants and the day I turned away from the little copier in the alcove and did a full body bump into richard gere is one I will not forget. Ed was an incredible life force who kept everyone else scrambling to catch up.
Beautiful write up.
It is truly the end of an era. The business has changed so much and not for the better. Too many agents and managers have no idea how to build careers, they only poach clients.
RIP Mr. Limato.
Wonderfully thorough tribute to an impeccable and vanishing breed of Hollywood statesman. Mr. Limato embraced the Golden Era with a singular and always re-inventive style and eloquence. His legend will only grow…
Ed Limato was the last great treasure in Hollywood, and the most amazing person I encountered in my 20 years in the business. Ed was grand, world-class, larger than life, while at the same time accessible and helpful to anyone who needed it, regardless of their title or stature in the town. He returned everyone’s phone call, be it a movie star or a junior exec, and treated everyone with the same fairness, always with dignity and grace. He told me “you catch more bees with honey.” He was fiercely loyal to his clients, and they were fiercely loyal right back. To those who really knew him well, and we know who we are, that Ed Limato is gone is very difficult for us to grasp, fathom, and accept. Our hearts are very heavy today. His love, friendship, wisdom, guidance, generosity, and sense of humor was unmatched and will truly never be replaced.
Great tribute Nikki to a classy guy who defined a generation of real agents. The only thing missing is the part of what an SOB Silberman is and how he treated Ed. Well done Chris, it’s too bad you blew the chance to learn something from a guy who knew how to be a real agent. RIP Ed.
i was so enjoying all the beautiful sentiments and then you had to go and mention
Chris Silly-man…ICM should have been the agency proud of Mr. Limato’s great legacy…but because of CS, it’s WME’s privilage.
You will always be missed, Mr. Limato, may you Rest in Peace.
Yes, thst is so true. I was working in business affairs at ICM at the time of the merger. Chris Silbermann made it his daily business to make Ed miserable, insult him, break him down, injure his reputation, and destroy his legacy. Chris could not accept that there were other leaders with opinions that differed from his own, so he humiliated and offended Ed, and eventually forced him out of the agency. Chris was simply dreadful to this good man, undeservedly so. I’m sure Chris is one of the few that was happy at the news of Ed’s passing. Chris you are an asshole and a bad person, and what comes around goes around and you will get yours. Karma’s a bitch.
Troy was there:
don’t you think now is the time to ask for Chris Silbermann’s head?
Whomever owns ICM should wake up, get rid of Chris and bring in
a movie person. What he did to Mr. Limato is/was dispicable…and the
town hates him.
If these posts don’t wake someone up… then ICM is destined to fail.
God Bless Ed Limato
RIP
Great article, Nikki!
How many more great men are we going to lose to Cancer Sticks. Stop!!!! We need you!
When I was a baby agent years ago, I was “covering” a movie that one of his young actors was very right for but the casting director wouldn’t bring him in to audition. Ed called me into his office to ask why his client wasn’t meeting the director. When I explained the problem he picked up the phone to the casting director and very nicely started selling his client. As the conversation went on with no movement, Ed started getting agitated and then angry and before I knew it he was screaming at her and pounding down the phone receiver calling her the most outrageous names. His next call was to the director of the film. Of course, his client ended up going in and actually getting the job. He and the casting director even remained friends…Amazing. He taught me to never take no for an answer. I learned from the best.
RIP Mr. Limato
An anecdote about Ed:
When ICM was still located on Wilshire Blvd, across the street from the Academy, Ed Limato and Jeff Berg had the two executive office suites, on the third floor of the building. They were located directly across from each other, separated by the courtyard entrance to the building.
Ed’s office suite was located in a little cove, with an outer office, and then his inner office and private bathroom. In the outer office was a large fish tank, which contained some exotic species. Ed loved those fish, and gave them all names. The third assistant had the distinct and ritualistic honor of having to feed the fish every day. Whenever an important client or executive would come by to see Ed for a meeting or visit, he would stop them in front of the fish tank, pointing out all the different fish and their names.
Ed’s house, “Heather House”, is legendary and if you were his assistant, you had the duty and pleasure of housesitting when Ed was out of town. If you were a friend of one of them, then you were probably lucky enough to be given a tour and possibly even treated to drinks and a game of pool in the billiards room or a screening in the Marlene Dietrich theater.
Yep, my friend was a young, male client of Mr. Limato’s, who invited us up when he house-sat one weekend. I remember a beautiful piano, sweeping views of the Hollywood hills..and Polaroids of Mel Gibson, Michelle Pfeiffer and Richard Gere on the fridge. It was all I could not to pilfer Gere’s! RIP, sir.
sure would be nice if hollywood still had the great oldtimers rather than the pathetic junior-agent wannabe’s that are around now. hat’s off to you, Ed.
He gave the agency business class.
He is my true idol. If I ever make agent I want to be just like Ed.
No, you really don’t.
C’mon, Anita, your comment certainly requires explanation and expansion since you, like Nikki Finke, know where all the bodies are buried and who buried them.
The death of Ed tolls the death of the feature film business as a whole. It was fun.
We’re still in shock, dearest cousin Edward, you won’t have to worry about retirement now, you can get some well-earned rest now…so rest dear cousin, you’ve earned it…
I recall you were always the pride of the family, my Dad used to brag about you to others and was always so proud that you made your own mark on the world…I recall the days when Katherine Helmond and Richard Gere were basically your main clients, and it just ballooned from there…why, I’ll speculate because you truly cared for the welfare of your clients and that was apparent and as such a resounding tribute to a life and career well served…yes, we will miss you and I’m only sorry you’ve preceded your Mom, but you’ll finally get to be with all the family and friends who’ve gone before you…say Hi to Chubby and Dad…may God rest your spirit and immortal soul…cousin Frank and family