| Author Name: | Rose, Frank |
|---|---|
| Date: | {{{date}}} |
| Journal: | [[{{{journal}}}]] |
| Volume: | {{{volume}}} |
| Topic: | Vaudeville |
| Pages: | {{{pages}}} |
The growth of the William Morris Agency, founded in 1898, has mirrored the evolution of the entertainment industry. The agency began by booking vaudeville acts, then continued to supply talent to the ever changing show biz formats, silent movies, radio, "talkies" and TV. And as entertainment become more of a big business, the power of the Morris Agency grew along with it. The author of this book describes the formative years of the agency and show business. In the last third of the book the author shifts his focus from the stars to the Morris agents themselves. Here he vividly describes the Machiavellian tactics employed by the firm's agents against other agencies and against each other to steal clients to advance their own power. Infighting among the Morris agents became public in 1975 when Michael Ovitz and four others bolted to form Creative Artists Agency.