CREATIVE ARTISTS AGENCY


'Creative Artists Agency' ('CAA') is a talent and literary agency which represents a vast array of actors, musicians, writers, directors, and athletes, as well as a variety of companies and their products.

Contents
History
Expansion
New Management
People represented by CAA
External links

History


CAA was founded in 1975 by five dissident talent agents employed by the William Morris Agency. Michael Ovitz, Ron Meyer, William Haber, Michael Rosenfeld, and Rowland Perkins met over dinner one night after they discovered that they all had in mind creating an agency of their own. As Ovitz reminisced in a 1989 New York Times article, 'We all sang the same tune, and we came out of that dinner with a clear understanding of how we were going to do it.' However, before they could obtain adequate financing for their new venture, they were fired.
By early 1975, Creative Artists Agency was in business, with a $100,000 line of credit and a $21,000 bank loan, in a small rented office outfitted with card tables and folding chairs. The five agents had only two cars among them, and their wives took turns as agency receptionist. Within about a week, according to one industry insider, they had sold their first three packages, a game show called 'Rhyme and Reason,' the 'Rich Little Show,' and the 'Jackson Five Show.'
At first, CAA's founders planned to form a medium-sized, full-service agency--one that was as unlike Morris as possible in approach and feel. Ovitz, who shortly assumed de facto leadership of the agency, described the company's corporate culture as a blend of Eastern philosophy and team sports. 'I liken myself to the guy running down the court with four other players and throwing the ball to the open guy,' he once said. Theirs was a relaxed partnership based on teamwork, with proceeds shared equally. Clients enjoyed the services of a number of agents because at CAA information was pooled. There were no nameplates on doors, no formal titles, no individual agent client lists. Work practices followed the company's two 'commandments': Be a team player and return phone calls promptly. There was an endless stream of meetings and talk. Because of this, others sometimes referred to CAA agents as the 'Moonies' of the business, famous for 'walking in lock-step,' according to the authors of ''Hit and Run'', the bestseller Hollywood insider account by Griffin and Masters.
Expansion

With its stable full of actors and about $90 million in annual bookings in the late 1980s, the agency, led by Ovitz, decided to get into movies. Its timing again was propitious, and its approach to the business inventive: CAA used its growing leverage to apply packaging to the movies. CAA's use of packaging changed the face of movie-making, making CAA increasingly powerful in the process.
Many studio heads, who did not like the way CAA made deals, insisting that along with desirable projects, studios also had to take 'the dogs.' Instead of the ten percent agents typically made on a contract, CAA insisted upon on a share in the product. Some, including former William Morris Agent David Geffen, blamed CAA in the press for throwing Hollywood's economy out of whack. Representing much of the major talent in the industry, CAA reputedly drove up salaries, and thus, the cost of making movies.
By the mid-1990s, CAA divided its agents into two camps: traditional agents, who oversaw the careers of CAA's 1,000 stars, and specialists, whose expertise in investment banking, consulting, and advertising made CAA into a one-stop shop for digital media. When Ron Meyer and Michael Ovitz left in 1995 for MCA and Disney respectively, the entertainment community watched to see if CAA would fall from the top.
New Management

The new management team headed by Richard Lovett, devised a four-point strategy for keeping competitors at bay during its transitional year: Make sure the 100-plus agents remain committed to the new CAA; re-sign longtime clients whose primary relationship was with Ovitz or Meyer; sign up new clients; and put together new movies.
Ovitz, Meyer, and Haber's departure led inevitably to an exodus of some of CAA's top-marquee names, but CAA recovered and continues to be a leader in the entertainment industry. Recently, CAA decided to expand into sports. Athletes such as Derek Jeter, Peyton Manning, and David Beckham and many agents from IMG have joined CAA to utilize their network in the advertising world. Pop singer Britney Spears has been rumored to be joining CAA.
After years in Beverly Hills, CA, in January 2007 CAA moved to a new building in the Century City neighborhood of Los Angeles.
CAA has offices in Los Angeles, CA; New York City, NY; Nashville, TN; London, England; Beijing, China; Kansas City, MO; St. Louis, MO; Calgary, Alberta; and Stockholm, Sweden.
CAA is a private company, with revenues estimated to be between $250 and $300 million per year.

People represented by CAA



Aaron Blitzstein

Alton Brown

Amy Grant

Amy Heckerling

Andrew Daly

Andrew W.K.

Anne Hathaway

Beyoncé Knowles

Brad Pitt

Brady Quinn

Brett Dennen

Bruce Willis

Cameron Diaz

Chad Pennington

Colin Farrell

Colin Hanks

Courteney Cox Arquette

Demetri Martin

Derek Jeter

Drew Barrymore

Drew Brees

Eddie Cibrian

Eli Manning

Ellen Pompeo

Emmy Rossum

Evangeline Lilly

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck

George Clooney

Hagen Bogdanski

Helen Mirren

Hilary Duff

Hugh Laurie

Jackie Chan

Jason Statham

Jennifer Aniston

Jesse McCartney

Jessica Biel

Joe Savery

John Mayer

John Singleton

Julia Roberts

Julianne Moore

Justin Smith

Kate Beckinsale

Kate Winslet

Katharine McPhee

Katie Holmes

Keanu Reeves

Kelly Clarkson

Kristin Chenoweth

Krystal Meyers

LaDainian Tomlinson

Leonardo DiCaprio

Lindsay Lohan

Marilyn Manson

Marvin Harrison

Matt Baker

Matt Dillon

Matt Leinart

Matthew Aros

Maura Tierney

Meryl Streep

Michael J. Fox

Michelle Pfeiffer

Naomie Harris

Natalie Portman

Nicolas Cage

Nicole Kidman

Orlando Bloom

Paul Kanarian

Peyton Manning

Pierce Brosnan

Reese Witherspoon

Reshad McCord O'Neal

Rinko Kikuchi

Robin Williams

Roland Emmerich

Roy Williams

Russell Peters

Ryan Howard

Ryan Leslie

Ryuhei Kitamura

Saoirse Ronan

Sarah Stafford

Shaun Alexander

Sidney Crosby

Stephen King

Terrence Malick

This World Fair

Tom Cruise

Tom Hanks

Tony Gonzalez

Travon Free

Viggo Mortensen

Vin Diesel

Zac Efron

External links



CAA Speakers Website

CAA Entertainment Website

CAA Sports Website

CAA College Entertainment Website

CAA's company history

IMDBPro information

Article in Variety about CAA

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