Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Agency: William Morris and the Hidden History of Show Business

Rate this book
The unauthorized account of the rise and fall of Hollywood’s greatest talent agency

The story of the William Morris Agency is the story of show business itself. For decades, hidden from the public eye, Morris agents made the deals that determined the fate of stars, studios, and television networks alike. Mae West, Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley, Barbra Streisand—the Morris Agency sold talent to anyone who would buy it, from the Hollywood moguls to the Madison Avenue admen who controlled television to the mobsters who ran Vegas. While the clients took the spotlight, the agency stayed behind the scenes, providing the grease that made show business what it’s become.

But in the 1970s, when a key executive at the agency bru­tally sac­rificed his own best friend—the man who’d brought Barry Diller and Michael Ovitz out of the mail­room—Mor­ris gave birth to its own nem­esis: Ovitz’s new shop, Cre­at­ive Art­ists Agency. Through­out the ’80s and ’90s, as Mor­ris made, and lost, such major stars as Kevin Cost­ner, Mel Gibson, Tom Hanks, and Julia Rob­erts, Ovitz’s power grew in­exorably as Mor­ris’s waned.

Lulled by the phenomenal success of Bill Cosby on television and the upward spiral of the Beverly Hills real estate market, Morris’s board failed to act as death and defection thinned the agency’s ranks. Not even the last-minute hiring of the legen­dary Sue Men­gers—“the superagent who ruled Hollywood with sex and booze,” as a New York Post headline once put it—was enough to re­vive the Mor­ris office. Finally, with its flag­ship motion-picture depart­ment at the brink of collapse, Mor­ris was faced with the stark reality of having to buy its way back into the busi­ness it once owned.

528 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1995

10 people are currently reading
263 people want to read

About the author

Frank Rose

7 books31 followers
FRANK ROSE is the author most recently of The Sea We Swim In: How Stories Work in a Data-Driven World, published in 2021 in the US and the UK and described as "critical thinking for an age of pervasive media" by The Wall Street Journal. His previous book, The Art of Im­mer­sion: How the Digital Gen­era­tion Is Remak­ing Holly­wood, Mad­ison Ave­nue, and the Way We Tell Stories, was a landmark work that showed how technology is chang­ing the age-old art of storytelling. Sparked by a decade of re­porting on media and technology for Wired, it has been called “a grand trip” by New Scientist and “a new media bible” by the Italian daily la Re­pubblica.
A senior fellow at Colum­bia University School of the Arts, Frank teach­es global busi­ness execu­tives as faculty director of the execu­tive edu­ca­tion seminar Strategic Story­telling. He is also awards director of Columbia's pioneer­ing Digital Story­telling Lab, where in 2016 he launched the annual Break­throughs in Story­telling awards to honor the most innovative approaches to narra­tive from the past year.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
24 (22%)
4 stars
48 (45%)
3 stars
19 (17%)
2 stars
13 (12%)
1 star
2 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for A Cesspool.
346 reviews5 followers
January 8, 2025
***½ (really)
now What am i suppose to do
with this all this WMA historical data??
...actually considered ☝️this several times -- contemplating putting down [as DNF], just walking away...; Credit the author for somehow making it all adequately intriguing - if only infinitely more than Bernie Brillstein's industry-wide rebuttal Where Did I Go Right? memoir; much less, filmmaker publicist "marketing executive" Barry Avrich's self-congratulatory, unremarkable revisionist-biographical Moguls, Monsters, and Madmen .

My biggest gripe is the lackin' B-T-S/making-of (feature films) anecdotals.
Really only a smattering of remarkable behind-the-scene trivia or recollections -- Not so much the sensational, exploitive stuff, rather, those revelatory specs to individual client's deals or even the ones that fell through (or never got made), e.g. Tom Hanks campaigning for When a Man Loves a Woman (1994); And/or, Burt Reynolds's firing his longtime WMA agent, Stan Kamen, after The Cannonball Run (1981) producers approached Reynolds directly — bypassing Team Burt’s representatives entirely— with their project-proposal + then-record-breaking offer: $5M payday. Kamen, being Kamen, of course, still insisted on taking his commission (primarily only because Burt was still under contract with WMA). Reynolds saw it otherwise, since William Morris knew nothing of the project, much less, ever spoke with the producers or their representatives.
...(more) stuff like that!

fyi: No updated postscript or Afterword with latest, 2013 edition? kinda tacky, imo; considering (WMA's unofficial, legacy-bookending that same year)
Profile Image for Kevin.
Author 3 books26 followers
July 16, 2015
I was reading this for research about Hollywood talent agencies. For that, it was a decent resource. There are general details about a few big plays and power struggles, but overall the book was a huge drag to get through. The characters (there are many) are not painted clearly enough to leave a lasting impression, so you're constantly being reintroduced to people in later episodes having forgotten who they are. There are sparse behind-the-scenes looks at negotiation strategies and contract details - not nearly as substantive as I'd hoped. The anecdotes that are meant to highlight a character or lead to a punchline are setup poorly, and their payoffs are so lacking that you feel that you've missed something. I did get some good notes out of it, but reading a year's worth of Variety probably would have yielded better results and been more fun. I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone unless they were doing similar research, and maybe not even then.
Profile Image for Amy Wolf.
Author 63 books88 followers
February 5, 2013
An incredibly comprehensive history of the Agency that dominated Hollywood for decades. Includes classic personalities like Abe Lastfogel & the various palace coupes that occurred through the years. A great book about the business of Hollywood.
329 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2015
This was interesting and a good history of the entertainment industry, but it wasn't particularly interesting to read. I was very glad to be done with it when I finished it.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
407 reviews1 follower
January 1, 2019
The reviews of this on GR are feast or famine. I found it interesting, and not at all a slog to read. :)
10 reviews
September 29, 2024
A bit dense but if the history and inner workings of the agency business interest you, it's a necessary book.
5 reviews
March 19, 2025
I just don’t really know 80% of the history so it was too hard to truly follow
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.