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Ruth Vitale, Hollywood Powerbroker

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

profession: President of Fine Line Features, a division of New Line Cinema.

basic story: One of the handful of high-ranking women in Hollywood. Since 1995 she’s been responsible for acquisitions, development and production of all films for Fine Line.

education: BA in literature from Tufts University; MS in journalism, Boston University.

claim to fame: Nabbed “Shine” at Robert Redford’s Sundance Film Festival. This year the movie received seven Oscar nominations, and lead actor Geoffrey Rush walked away with an Academy Award for best actor.

the way up: Before she landed her first film job — buying flicks for the Movie Channel — she worked in advertising and media. Made her mark at Vestron Pictures as a senior VP on the hit sleeper “Dirty Dancing.”
then what: After a stint at United Artists, where she was involved in the making of “Child’s Play” and “I’m Gonna Git You Sucka,” she hopped over to New Line as an EVP of Worldwide Acquisitions, where she oversaw all New Line/Fine Line theatrical, video and international distribution outlets. Some of the films she brought to the studio before “Shine” were “Corrina, Corrina,” “Widows’ Peak” and “Don Juan DeMarco.”

industry salute: Named one of the Top 50 Women in Entertainment by Hollywood Reporter magazine in 1996.

on picking movies, projects, scripts: “You try to decide what you think is going to touch people’s hearts or be controversial, interesting or evoke a response. But ultimately all you have are your instincts to go by, and that makes it a horse race.”

biggest moment so far: “I would have to say ‘Shine’: How many times do you get to go to the Academy Awards with seven nominations? That happens to people only once at best and sometimes never. It was really a celebratory day when we heard the news.”

“Shine”’s underlying appeal: “It’s the little engine that could. In the end the pianist [played by Geoffrey Rush] finally makes it, and that’s what’s so great about the movie.”
women and the biz: “There are certainly more women now than when I started. But I’ve never been one of those people who say it’s tough for women to be in this business. I’m not so sure this business divides itself by sexism. It divides itself by talent, aggression and intelligence. And you can succeed if you have a sane head on your shoulders, you’re smart and hard-working.

advice for breaking into Hollywood: “First you have to decide what part of the business you want to be in. You can start as an assistant out of college and work for someone in production if you think you like production. Or there is the mailroom/assistant talent agency route at an ICM, William Morris or CAA. I’ve always believed that working in an agency gives you a really good overview of the business, and you can decide from there.”

on balance: “You have to realize that no matter how many hours in the day you work, there will always be more work the next day. To keep a sanity level, you have to say, I’m going to have a professional and a personal life, and I’m going to keep them in balance. Sometimes you can and sometimes you can’t.”

current & upcoming projects: “A wide range of films.” David Cronenberg’s “Crash”; “The Quiet Room” by an Australian director, Rolf Deheer — “a wonderful, simple, elegant movie about a little girl whose parents don’t get along, and as a result she stops speaking”; “Love! Valour! Compassion!” with Jason Alexander based on the Terrence McNally Broadway play; “For Roseanna” with Mercedes Ruhl, directed by Paul Weiland, and “Gummo” by Harmony Korine — “a very startling — almost documentary — view of what kids without love do in the suburbs.”

tech savviness: “I don’t personally use the Internet but Fine Line has a site.”

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Jessica Yu, Independent Filmmaker

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

profession: Producer, director, writer. “Breathing Lessons: The Life and Work of Mark O’Brien” received an Oscar for best documentary short.

born: Feb. 14, 1966, in Los Altos Hills, Calif.

education: BA, English, Yale University. “I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life. I just knew I liked studying English. And they had a really good fencing program.”

the basic story: Fell into film production because she needed a job with flexible hours in order to compete in fencing — a sport she has since given up. Worked on commercials in San Francisco before moving to Los Angeles, where she learned the ropes of documentary work. Entered the national spotlight with her film portrait of Berkeley, Calif., writer and poet Mark O’Brien and his life in an iron lung, as well as her humorous and poignant Academy Awards acceptance speech. She currently lives in Glendale, Ariz., with writer/husband Mark Salzman.

inauspicious beginnings: “My very first job was on a pasta commercial, arranging frozen noodles on a plastic fork for six hours. It was incredibly humbling.”
true confession: Threatened to fold up her director’s chair. “I credit the experience of making ‘Breathing Lessons’ with re-igniting my faith in the idea of making films. I remember telling all my friends, stupidly, that this was the last film I was going to make. The process of fundraising was just so enervating. Then, of course, making the film was so rewarding — and I was so happy with it and happy that Mark liked it — that the drama went out the window.”

current project: “The Living Museum,” a documentary of New York’s Creedmoor Psychiatric Center. “There’s such a strong feeling of community and goodness coming out of this place. I think the film will explore that area between art and healing; not art as therapy, but as a way to find some meaning and beauty in what seems like the most traumatic and terrible experiences.”

past projects: At 31, she’s made six films, including “Breathing Lessons”; “Men of Reenaction,” a feature documentary about Civil War buffs; “Better Late,” a short about an elderly man preparing to propose marriage; and the humorous short, “Sour Death Balls.”

on diversity in the film world: “I haven’t encountered any situation where I felt I was denied something solely because I was an Asian and a woman. In independent films, there’s not a lot of money, and it’s really your own motivation, your own hard work that determines how far you go.” Still, she says, it was “startling” to be one of only three minorities at the Academy Awards nominee luncheon.
how the Oscar changed her life: Helped launch other projects. Oliver Stone is talking with her about a feature film on Mark O’Brien. “There are so many opportunities, and it’s slightly jarring for someone who came out of the independent world. I find that as much as we like to bitch about not having help along the way, there’s something very strengthening about working in your own little circle and making your own decisions.”

film tastes: Eclectic. She admires Ang Lee for his “realistic” Asian-American characters. “Sick,” a documentary on the life and death of a super masochist, also impressed her. “It’s so memorable because it exceeds your expectations, it really surprises you. That’s what I look for in films.”

tech savviness: “I don’t really cruise the web a lot. If I have a specific research need, I’ll run some sort of search.” And she can finally afford digital film editing equipment.

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Radio host, Dr. Laura Schlessinger

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

born: In Brooklyn, to a Jewish father and an Italian mother, in 1947.

education: Ph.D., physiology, from Columbia. Post-doc work in marriage and family therapy at USC.

her formula: She gained ratings and market share by sidestepping the typical “nice” shtick of other hosts and taking a tough look at personal issues. Says hers is not one of those “pure shrink shows, which tend to be exceptionally liberal and exceptionally men-bashing — I bash everyone.” Combines non-discriminating advice, with traditional morals and ethics. “My views are extremely healthy,” she says.

what else: Has written two books — the first, “Ten Stupid Things Women Do,” crept slowly up the best-seller list as her show expanded into new markets. Her new book, “How Could You Do That?!” (left), debuted at No. 3.
the next step: More of the same. She’s been approached by TV producers, but has decided against the tube. “I love radio. I like the immediacy, the intimacy and the power of the three hours, just people and me, without any foo-fah or necessity for visuals, garbage. To me, that all detracts.”

web site: None, but many stations brag about her.

the competition: “Mostly I hear yelling and screaming, very little content, the host usually has very little knowledge. They’re just there to get ratings by ranting and raving and stirring the pot and getting people’s emotions revved. And they call that radio. I call that an abuse of airwaves.”

making it as a broadcaster: She may be a role model for some, but Dr. Laura doesn’t advise trying to follow in her footsteps. “You can’t use my career as a blueprint, because this is bizarre. My life is bizarre. A woman talkin’ tough? And a shrink? Shrink shows have failed nationally. So, you gonna put on another shrink show? That fails! You gonna put on a woman, and she’s not sounding so maternal and sweetsy? Never. It’s been the story of my life. There’s always a set of rules, and then there’s me. I like that.”
household: Husband and manager Lew Bishop, and son, Deryk, 10.

balancing career and family: While most broadcasters move around, from station to station, from morning to night shows, Dr. Laura held out for breaks in LA. Broadcasts from home. “I was not willing to move. I was not willing to take a different time slot. I never put my career ahead of everything else. I still don’t. My career is not ahead of my family.”

raising kids: “I yell at both moms and dads. I don’t care, flip a coin, but somebody ought to be home (with the kids).”

if she weren’t on the air: In her pre-radio days, she taught at the university level, but she wouldn’t go back: “The way universities are being run now, there’s no place for somebody like me…No, I’d be in rabbinical school.”

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Lynda Obst, Hollywood Producer

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

profession:Producer of such hit films as “Sleepless in Seattle” and the upcoming “One Fine Day,” Obst is one of a handful of successful female producers in Hollywood. She heads up Lynda Obst Productions, and she’s just written a book, “Hello, He Lied,” about how to get things done in Hollywood — and in life.

born: April 14, 1950

education: BA, Philosophy, Pomona College, CA. Dropped out of Columbia University grad school in philosophy. “I had no expectation to leave Columbia. Then I got a C- on a metaphysics test because I wrote about love, and they told me it was an inappropriate topic.” (Oddly enough, spiritual guru Marianne Williamson was her college roommate.)

the basic story: “I wouldn’t have ended up in Hollywood left to my own trajectory. My first husband, David Obst, went to Hollywood for his career, and I had a baby, so I had to go.” (David Obst was a big-time literary agent, representing journalist Bob Woodward among others, before he became a TV producer.)
why she stayed: “What hooked me, and I discovered this during the success of ‘Flashdance’ [her first movie], was having an influence on pop culture. A year after ‘Flashdance’ came out, all over the country there were girls in torn sweatshirts following their dreams.”

first realization that she had power in the industry: “Very recently [around age 40] agents started calling me with their breaking movie stars. That meant I had influence in casting with the studio.”

on making her presence felt (she’s five feet): “When you can’t be seen in elevators, you compensate, so I make a lot of noise. But the first step is to take yourself seriously.”
movies she wishes she had made: “‘All About Eve’ — the definitive portrait of women, and I think it’s the most terrific screenplay. I’m in love with ‘Inherit the Wind’ and ‘To Kill a Mockingbird.’ They have huge cultural implications.”

on cigarette smoking (she puffs away audibly during the phone interview): “Sadly, I’m a yogi who smokes,” she says. “I quit on ‘Sleepless,’ then Drew Barrymore, my ‘daughter’ on ‘Bad Girls,’ re-eroticized smoking for me. I don’t smoke on the weekends. It’s totally associated with work for me.”

what inspired her to write a book: “Ultimately, the voice of the producer is deferred. Once you get a script into production, you have to defer to the director, which is appropriate, because it’s a director’s medium. There’s a part of me that wanted to escape from that deferred voice.”
phone with stars, but Nora Ephron [the director of 'Sleepless in Seattle' and an old friend] and I email. It’s challenging to email Nora, because she’s so bloody clever; her emails are publishable.”

projects: “‘Contact’ – I was executive producer — and shot with [director Robert 'Forrest Gump'] Zemeckis. I worked on ‘Hope Floats,’ with Sandra Bullock, a wonderful little character piece kind of in the tradition of ‘Terms of Endearment.’ There’s ‘One Fine Day,’ which I produced solo, a Tracy/Hepburn for the cellular age, with Michelle Pfeiffer and George Clooney. “

what she really wants to do: “I hope (by the end of 1997) to be directing, a picture called ‘Tornado Jam,’ my West Texas ‘Flashdance.’ I’m actually getting a lot of submissions as a director since I came out of the closet as one.”

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Windham Hill’s Anne Robinson

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

profession:President and CEO of Windham Hill Records.

company’s annual revenue:Around $30 million.

the basic story: In 1976, William Ackerman, Anne Robinson and 60 friends each pitched in $5 and Windham Hill Records was born. Today, Robinson is one of the few women heading a major independent record company and is considered the grand dame of New Age music. (She prefers to call it “acoustic instrumental.”) In 1992, Ackerman sold his part of the business to German-owned Bertelsmann Music Group (owners of Arista, RCA Records, Zoo Entertainment, etc.) The Windham Hill label is as well known as some of its artists: George Winston, Alex de Grassi, Liz Story.
born: January 31, 1948.

educated: BA in history and fine arts from Stanford.

household members: Her husband, “a rabid reader who challenges my mind daily;” Makai, a golden retriever/Australian sheep dog mix; and Swimmer, her “15-year-old sweetheart” cat.

favorite music: “I’m crazy about the French ambient group Deep Forest, and the jazz pianist Bill Evans.” (There’s a baby grand in the office lobby, for artists and employees.) ” Lenny Kravitz is overrated and I couldn’t sell rap or grunge to save my soul.”

favorite places to hear live music: “Wetlands in New York, way, way, way downtown and a real dive. Fez, a trendoid place for contemporary rock and roll, also in NY.”

her hot artists in 1996: “subdudes: a rock and roll group from New Orleans and their new album Primitive Streak; master American Indian flautist Douglas Spotted Eagle; and Hawaiian slack key guitar music (artists include Ray Kane and Keola Beamer).”
favorite pastime: “Looking at art. Using my etching press to make monotypes. Collecting antique quilts.”

mentor: “Figurative artist Nate Olivera. I studied with him at Stanford.”

life goal: “Spend more time in my garden, getting hands in the dirt. When the days are short, I garden at night with a miner’s headlamp.”

life philosophy: “There is no such thing as a stupid question.”

on managing stress: “Remember that no one knows everything. Don’t be like men; often they take themselves too seriously in business.

how life might be different if she were a man:”I wouldn’t laugh as much. I wouldn’t get away with as much stuff. Women don’t realize how much power they have; they should take more advantage of it, and I don’t mean in the obvious traditional way.”
tech-savviness: “I rate myself an eight out of ten. We’ve been on the cutting-edge for years — Apple used our music for the advertising launch of the Mac.”

future plans: “Double the company’s size in five years and have more time in my own life. I have a burning need to make more art for myself.”

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Lisa Brown Leopold, Music Supervisor

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

profession: Music supervisor for Ocean Cities Entertainment in West Hollywood, Calif.

education: Several years at UCLA as a political science major.

musical background: Childhood piano lessons.

the way up: While in school, landed a summer internship at Capitol Records. Her interviewer turned out to be the head of A&R, and the internship — unbeknownst to Brown — was a much sought-after stepping stone into the music world. “It was a fluke that pretty much spun my head around,” she recalls. Her next internship came from Interscope Records. Her first job in the industry was at Hit and Run Music, a publishing company co-owned by Phil Collins.
the scoop: “I deal with all aspects of music in the film — music coming out of a car radio, background music and on-camera performances.”

choosing music: “It’s most important to carry out a director’s visions. You’re always asking, ‘What does the director want the audience to feel?’ When I hear music, I can visualize story lines and themes. I’m really conscious of how it makes me feel. Music is really subtle, the way it can change your mood.”

average number of CDs screened per week: 50 to 100

getting the music: “I’m on the phone with music publishers, record label reps, managers, record producers, artists and songwriters, trying to find that perfect song for each scene.”
the bottom line: Commissions for music supervisors — independent contractors on films, much like set designers, actors and actresses — range from $30,000 to $200,000 per film.

projects Brown supervised or coordinated: “My Best Friend’s Wedding” (Summer, 1997), “Chasing Amy” (Spring, 1997), “The Long Kiss Goodnight” (Fall, 1996), “Kazaam” (Summer, 1996), “Bed of Roses” (Spring, 1996), “Flirting with Disaster” (Spring, 1996), “The Truth About Cats and Dogs” (Spring, 1996), “Dead Presidents” (Fall, 1995) and “Captive” (Spring, 1995)

perks: Free CDs, concert tickets and movie premieres.

breaking into the biz: “It’s a small, competitive field. Paying dues is part of the process.” But it’s 80% to 95% women-dominated, and it’s expanding: “Movies are always being made. The studios are beginning to recognize the importance of music supervision, and are even beginning to hire in-house supervisors.”
on her name: Married in April 1997, Brown is undecided on whether to use “Leopold” professionally. “I feel that I have a handful of credits and people are just starting to recognize my maiden name. I want to keep that momentum going. But in the big picture, I don’t know if adding on another name will make that much of a difference.”

favorite movie moments: Janet Lee humming “Que Sera Sera” in the shower scene of “Psycho”; Robert DeNiro cruising into a Little Italy bar to the sounds of “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” in “Mean Streets”; Michael Madsen — as Mr. Blonde — carving himself a piece of ear to “Stealers Wheel” in “Reservoir Dogs.”

tech savviness: Brown regularly consults the Billboard Phonolog Music Reference Library on CD-ROM. She also visits the web sites of ASCAP and BMI, performing rights organizations that help her find the owners of particular songs.

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Judith Regan, Polymedia Mogul

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

who she is: Maverick publisher whose clients include Howard Stern and Rush Limbaugh.

recent claim to fame: Posed on the inside cover of her ReganBooks catalogue wearing a pink Vera Wang dress.

profession: President and publisher of the Regan Company, a “polymedia” division of News Corporation Ltd., a Fox enterprise run by media entrepreneur Rupert Murdoch.

education: Vassar

Regan on polymedia: “Poly means many, and one of my authors, Doug Coupland, described me as a polymedia person because I am doing it all: books, TV and movies.”

revenue: From 1994 through 1997, company revenues totaled approximately $100 million. For the fiscal year ending in June 1998, the Regan Company is projected to make $20-$30 million.

basic story: As VP and senior editor at Simon & Schuster, Regan was dissatisfied with the publishing world’s grueling hours and less than great pay. But meeting Rupert Murdoch turned her career around. During a power lunch with the media guru, she asked for it all — and she walked away with a book deal, a production company and her own weekly TV show.
recognition: In 1996, ReganBooks was named one of the most successful imprints in the publishing industry. In 1997, Entertainment Weekly listed Regan as one of entertainment’s most powerful people. Also in 1997, The Hollywood Reporter included her in its “Women in Entertainment” issue as one of the eight “females who wield clout in publishing.”

book projects: Howard Stern’s “Private Parts,” Judge Robert Bork’s “Slouching Towards Gomorrah,” Christopher Darden’s “In Contempt” and Wally Lamb’s “She’s Come Undone,” a New York Times best-seller and Oprah Winfrey’s pick for book of the month, plus her follow-up novel “I Know This Much Is True.”

on the way: A reporter and editor for the National Enquirer and TV producer for “Geraldo” and “Entertainment Tonight”

TV projects: Hosts her own one-hour talk show, called “This Evening with Judith Regan” on the Fox News Channel.

movie projects: “I’m producing a movie for Universal from Doug Coupland’s book ‘Microserfs,’ about a bunch of genius kids who work at Microsoft and have no life. I’m also doing a film for DreamWorks about a custody case; and for Lifetime, ‘How a Gentleman Should Treat a Lady,’ which aired in the winter of 1998. It’s based on my own idea. When my son started dating, he asked me what he should do and how to behave. I told him the bottom line is to treat a woman with respect, put her on a pedestal and worship the ground she walks on.”
picking best-sellers: “You try to make an informed decision, but this is not a business that does research. I think it’s a combination of intuition and good fortune. I also think I have a guardian angel, my grandmother, who is watching over me to make sure.”

doing what you love: “Basically, I have fun all day long. Everything I enjoy I’ve incorporated into my work, except for cooking. And I am trying to figure out how to incorporate that into my job by doing a cookbook. With what little time I have left, I like to play with my daughter. We go for walks and play games.”

advice for women entering the field: “If you want to be in television, film and publishing you have to know what’s going on. I read a zillion newspapers, a zillion magazines and watch a lot of television. You have to pay attention and keep your eyes and ears open. Then you’ve got to listen to your friends and family — what people are saying and not just what is being reported. Basically, you have to work your tail off.”

handling frustration and rejection: “I just say, ‘NEXT!’ I don’t waste a second. I don’t focus on what isn’t happening.”

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Christy Haubegger, Magazine Entrepreneur

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

profession: founder, president and publisher of Latina, the first glossy national mag for Hispanic women in the U.S.

the numbers: Started in 1996, the magazine made it to the newsstands. In 1996, it’s circulation was 300,000, and not yet profitable. (Few magazines are in their first year.) Latina went monthly in July 1997.

born: Aug. 15, 1968 in Houston, Texas.

education: BA, Philosophy & Spanish literature, University of Texas. JD, Stanford Law School.
the magazine: Headquartered in Manhattan, Latina covers a range of women’s issues — with a Hispanic flavor. Recent features include a cover piece on “La Bombshell” actress Salma Hayek, and the first all Latina sex survey. The main articles are in English (features are summarized in a Spanish sidebar), and many of the ads are in Spanish.

Aimed at a range of Latinas, aged 18-49, the magazine find its readers in areas of the U.S. with large Hispanic populations, such as LA, NYC and parts of Texas.

beginnings: Born to a Mexican-American mother, Haubegger was adopted as an infant by an Anglo couple who strove to raise her with a strong awareness of her ancestry. She started learning Spanish in pre-school.

the inspiration: Haubegger says the blonde, blue-eyed models she saw in women’s magazines as she was growing up did not reflect her body type or her beauty concerns. And when she went on to college and law school, she found that she and her fellow Latinas had trouble finding professional role models.

“I wanted to change the way Latinas see themselves, as well as how others see them,” she explains.
CHRISTY HAUBEGGER
“I felt it [a Hispanic women's pub] was the one women’s magazine that I’d want to read, and I kept thinking, ‘Somebody should do it.’ And finally I realized that that somebody was going to have to be me.”

the way up: At Stanford she took several entrepreneurial classes while getting her law degree. Spent her first year out of law school doing her financial homework and looking for the financier most likely to support her niche.

the backer: Edward Lewis, CEO of Essence Communications, Inc., and founder of Essence Magazine (which 25 years ago was the first publication targeted specifically at African-American women) vowed years ago never to start another magazine from scratch. And he didn’t — until he saw Haubegger’s proposal. “It was one of the best business plans I had seen in almost 20 years in this business,” he said. “It was extraordinary for a person her age [27].”

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Shelley Day, Kids’ Software Wizard

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

profession: President and CEO of Humongous Entertainment, makers of the popular “Freddi Fish,” “Putt-Putt” and “Pajama Sam” CD-ROM titles for kids.

the basic story: Day’s brainchild, a purple cartoon car named Putt-Putt, was born of the bedtime stories she told her toddler back in 1992. That was the year that she founded the Woodinville, Wash.-based Humongous, which makes clever, animated CD-ROM titles.

Humongous — which Newsweek has called “the Disney of children’s software” — now surpasses Broderbund, Living Books, Microsoft and Edmark in its share of the fiercely competitive children’s software market. Acquired by GT Interactive Software in July of 1996, Humongous inked a deal in spring 1997 with Lancit Media Entertainment to create TV programs, movies and videos based on Putt-Putt and friends.

her reach: Three million of her CDs have been sold around the world.
SHELLEY DAY
on the acquisition by GT Interactive: Day insists that her small, independent multimedia company hasn’t been swallowed by a big, greedy fish; rather, as a wholly owned subsidiary, Humongous has gained valuable distribution channels and deeper pockets without having to sacrifice integrity. “GT Interactive is actually younger than we are,” she explains. “Running their own business keeps them busy, so they don’t want to fiddle around running the companies they acquire.”

her biz philosophy: When Day co-founded Humongous with creative director Ron Gilbert, they focused intently on the quality of their products, “rather than on the money we would make.” Boatloads of awards are testament to the wisdom of that judgment.

her hiring philosophy: Day’s a stickler for working with the right people. “You’ve got to find the best people you can for every position in the company, even if you have to wait to hire them,” she says. “I’d rather hire someone I have to rein in than having to push them forward. And if something’s not right, you have to walk away from it, even if it’s at the last minute.”

coming attractions: Look for an online multi-player game for kids in fall 1997, courtesy of the Humongous web site.

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Barb Weidmann Music Maker

Posted by hawot on June 11, 2008

Who She Is: Owner of Baby Music Boom, Inc.Babymusic, a Minneapolis-based children’s record label that has put out eight albums and a video since 1993. The company has won numerous Parent’s Choice Awards and the Family Channel Seal of Quality.

Born: 1953

First Break: More than 20 years ago, Weidmann “got a job as a receptionist in a recording studio. I had absolutely no background in music.”

Learning the Biz: Weidmann spent 20 years working in the field. In 1983, she became an executive at dmp, a high-quality audiophile jazz label in New York City and, ultimately, a talent agent for musicians.

The Big Idea: The Baby Boom concept came to Weidmann after her first child was born in 1992. “I started getting gifts of children’s music and I noticed there was a big gap in the quality [between that and adult music]. I decided to dive in.”

Secret to Her Success: “We work with artists who are well established in the adult music world.”

Biggest Hit: Baby Boom’s top seller is Peter Himmelman’s “My Best Friend is a Salamander,” which one reviewer described as “rib-tickling, at times soulful flights of fancy.” In the title song, a child learns you shouldn’t judge a pal by how he looks (kinda slimy) and what he eats (grasshopper feet and roasted flies).

On Music: “Kids are used to getting things so fast on TV and the computer — completely visual. But music comes at them a different way and really stimulates their imaginations.”

Favorite Bands: The Grateful Dead, the Beatles and Blind Faith

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