Larry Brezner, manager who helped shape the careers of Robin Williams and Billy Crystal, dies at 73 - The Washington Post
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Larry Brezner, manager who helped shape the careers of Robin Williams and Billy Crystal, dies at 73

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From left, Janice Crystal, Larry Brezner, Billy Crystal and Dominique Cohen-Brezner. (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Dominique Cohen)

Larry Brezner, a Hollywood producer and manager who helped shape the career of top comic actors including Robin Williams and Billy Crystal, died Oct. 5 at a hospital in Duarte, Calif. He was 73.

He was diagnosed with leukemia this year, his business partner David Steinberg said.

Mr. Brezner played an important role in many big show-business careers. In the late 1970s, he spotted Juilliard dropout Williams at a Hollywood improv class and was immediately taken with the young actor’s manic energy and elastic imagination.

“No matter what situation was thrown at him, he never got lost,” Mr. Brezner told Rolling Stone in 1979. “In an improv, right before the blackout, you’ve either won or lost; you either hit the big line or it lays there. I watched two hours of this kid never losing, reacting off the top of his head, working off nerve impulses — not intellect at all. Incredible.”

But Williams’s nonstop wildness also kept audiences at a distance. Mr. Brezner and his colleagues persuaded him to reveal more of himself by ending his act with a moment of actual seriousness, framed as a few kind words from a character who had survived World War III.

“When he took the quiet moment and walked offstage without a laugh, the applause was deafening,” Mr. Brezner once recalled in the New York Times. “You knew, sitting in the audience, you’d just seen something special. He’d touched you.”

Mr. Brezner got to know Crystal when the comedian and actor was still substitute-teaching and trying to make it in comedy with a group called 3’s Company.

Mr. Brezner and fellow talent manager Buddy Morra gently urged Crystal to ditch the threesome and go it alone. When the prospect of a one-night gig at New York University crossed his path, Crystal impulsively agreed to fly solo.

“I called Larry and said I’d just booked myself at a frat house for $25, and I wasn’t paying commission,” Crystal recalled.

Mr. Brezner, Morra and their senior partner, Jack Rollins, showed up at the event in a driving rain and watched the comic do a hilarious hour-and-a-half. Crystal was, in the term he would later make famous, "mah-velous."

“I was supposed to do something like 20 minutes,” he said. “But the kids went crazy. There was no turning back. Afterward, Larry walked up to me and said, ‘Let’s go to work.’ That was the beginning of our relationship.”

Lawrence Ira Brezner was born in New York City on Aug. 23, 1942. He graduated from the University of Bridgeport in Connecticut and received a master’s degree in psychology at St. John’s University in Queens.

Mr. Brezner taught at an elementary school before opening a quirky little club on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. The place went bust, but Mr. Brezner married one of the acts he booked — singer Melissa Manchester. They later divorced.

Mr. Brezner managed Manchester’s career and, to gain experience in the field, started doing unpaid work for Rollins and his partner, Charles H. Joffe. Over the years, their firm managed talents such as Dick Cavett, Robert Klein, Martin Mull and Woody Allen, whose films were produced by Rollins and Joffe. The agency later opened offices in Los Angeles.

Mr. Brezner ultimately focused on producing movies. In 1987, “Good Morning, Vietnam” and “Throw Momma From the Train” started production in the same week. The next year, stars from both films were nominated for Academy Awards — Williams for the top role in “Good Morning, Vietnam” and Anne Ramsey for a supporting role in “Throw Momma.”

Over the years, Mr. Brezner produced a wide variety of films, including: “The ‘Burbs” (1989), “Coupe de Ville” (1990), “The Vanishing” (1993), “Angie” (1994), “Krippendorf’s Tribe” (1998) and “The Greatest Game Ever Played” (2005). His most recent film was “Ride Along” (2014), with Ice Cube and Kevin Hart.

Until his illness, Mr. Brezner boxed, played tennis, danced salsa and was active in his company, Brezner Steinberg Partners.

Most of all, he joked. “He was always funny,” Steinberg said, recalling an ancient joke about a parrot that Mr. Brezner told in a thick Yiddish accent at a surprise party last spring. “He was always willing to be inappropriate.”

His second marriage, to Bett Zimmerman, ended in divorce. His survivors include his third wife, Dominique Cohen-Brezner; two daughters from his second marriage; and a brother.

— Los Angeles Times