Low-profile Bob Weinstein must now save family business

Anywhere else in Hollywood, Bob Weinstein would have been the star, with a string of executive producer credits on Oscar winners such as The English Patient and Good Will Hunting and a track record for making low-budget, profitable films.

But Weinstein, 62, was always the second banana to his larger-than-life older brother Harvey. Now with Harvey booted from the film studio the brothers co-founded, their roles are reversed. It will fall on Bob Weinstein's shoulders to save the family business and steer it into a new era, one less reliant on the art-house films his brother was known for cultivating.

The board of The Weinstein Co., reduced to just four members following a string of resignations, said on Sunday that it had terminated the employment of Harvey, 65. The move was in response to a New York Times story that said he'd paid settlements to eight women who had accused him of sexual harassment. Several of the women were Weinstein employees, according to the paper. Since last week, the company, with more than 100 workers, has been under the leadership of Bob, the co-chairman, and David Glasser, the chief operating officer.

Already partners of The Weinstein Co. are cutting ties with Harvey. Lifetime, the cable network that airs the brothers' biggest TV hit, Project Runway, is taking his executive producer credit off of that show and another, Six, that Weinstein Co. co-produces for the channel. Similarly, Viacom's Paramount Network is removing Harvey's name from three shows under production with the company: Waco, Yellowstone and Rest in Power: The Trayvon Martin Story.

After decades of working with his brother in the business, Bob's major task will be deciding how to distance the company from Harvey. One decision, still under consideration, could be especially painful: changing the company's name.

"It's right out of Machiavelli's The Prince, " said Ted Clark, who heads the Center for Family Business at Northeastern University in Boston. "One of the princes was getting out of control and he had to be dealt with."

The Weinstein Co. and Bob Weinstein didn't respond to requests for comment.

The brothers were always a pair, since their days promoting rock concerts in Buffalo, N.Y., in the 1970s. Harvey steered them into the film business, with early hits such as Sex, Lies and Videotape and Pulp Fiction. Over the years, Bob focused on more mainstream fare that didn't win Oscars but made money, such as the horror film series Scream and children's movie Spy Kids.

"Harvey was more of the schmoozer, while Bob was more of the financial side," said Jeff Bock, senior box office analyst at Exhibitor Relations.

The Weinsteins sold their first company, Miramax, to Walt Disney before heading off on their own in 2005. Even after releasing critical favorites such as The Reader and Inglourious Basterds, the brothers never found their financial footing.

Recently, the company delayed the releases of a number of films, a sign that money has been tight. 47 Meters Down, a shark thriller, was headed directly to the DVD bin before comedian Byron Allen's production company bought and released it, bringing in $44 million. Weinstein Co.'s next picture, the long-delayed Amityville: The Awakening, will stream for free on Google before getting a limited theatrical release on Oct. 28.

Replacing Harvey, even with his diminished stature, won't be easy. He helped build the careers of stars from director Quentin Tarantino to actress Gwyneth Paltrow, and his relationships were integral to the company's success.

"Part of the company's panache was the talent he could attract," said Allen Adamson, founder of BrandSimple, a consulting firm. "That's hard to replicate."

MovieStyle on 10/13/2017

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