Jay Kanter, Agent for Marlon Brando and Marilyn Monroe, Dies at 97

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Movies|Jay Kanter, Agent for Marlon Brando and Marilyn Monroe, Dies at 97

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/14/movies/jay-kanter-dead.html

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Later a studio executive, he was among the last of the power brokers who dominated Hollywood in the latter half of the 20th century.

A black-and-white photo of Jay Kanter, a formally dressed young man, with Marilyn Monroe, who wears a low-cut dress and smiles broadly.
The agent Jay Kanter with Marilyn Monroe, one of his most famous clients, at a movie premiere in New York City in 1955.Credit...Everett Collection

Clay Risen

Aug. 14, 2024, 2:43 p.m. ET

Jay Kanter, whose long career as an agent to the stars — including Marlon Brando, Marilyn Monroe and Grace Kelly — and later as an influential studio executive made him one of the last of the generation of power brokers who dominated Hollywood in the late 20th century, died on Aug. 6 at his home in Beverly Hills, Calif. He was 97.

His son Adam Kanter confirmed his death.

An acolyte of the superagent Lew Wasserman, Mr. Kanter was renowned as much for the career he led as for the stories people told about him.

He was a junior agent at MCA, Mr. Wasserman’s agency, in 1948 when he was asked to retrieve Mr. Brando from the train station.

Mr. Kanter took Mr. Brando to his aunt’s house, and the next morning to a meeting with the director Fred Zinnemann, who wanted to cast Mr. Brando in his next movie, “The Men.” Apparently Mr. Kanter made a good impression, because when he suggested that they proceed to MCA to meet some of its agents, he recalled, Mr. Brando replied: “I don’t have to meet anybody. You’re my agent.”

Mr. Brando’s Hollywood career was on the verge of stardom. And now, so was Mr. Kanter’s.

“Suddenly I was getting all these calls from these heads of studios,” he recalled in a 2017 interview, and within a few years he represented a long line of A-list talent.

The Kanter-Brando story became a bit of Hollywood lore, so much so that it provided the inspiration for a 1989 sitcom, “The Famous Teddy Z,” about a Hollywood star who picks out a mailroom clerk (played by Jon Cryer) as his agent.


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