2020-03-26_The_Hollywood_Reporter

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THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 64 MARCH 26, 2020


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LITIGATION
Daniel Petrocelli
O’Melveny & Myers
SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL
Netflix can’t recruit employees anymore at Disney’s
Fox studios thanks to Petrocelli’s work in a lawsuit
filed after the streamer poached two execs.
Petrocelli will go to an appeals court to preserve
that injunction while handling an Irving Azoff outfit’s
antitrust case against terrestrial radio operators and
defending Kesha from Dr. Luke’s defamation claims.
If I could eat only one food forever, it’s “Dark
chocolate ice cream.”

LITIGATION
Marvin Putnam
Latham & Watkins
GEORGETOWN LAW
As Hollywood #MeToo disputes proliferate, studios
and networks increasingly are conducting internal
investigations. Putnam has become a go-to attorney
in such situations (ICM being one well-reported
example). He represents Miramax and former
Weinstein Co. board member Tim Sarnoff in a slew of
Harvey Weinstein-related lawsuits. Also high-profile
is his work on behalf of the Association of Talent
Agents in its packaging fees battle with the WGA.

LITIGATION
Jeremiah Reynolds
Eisner
USC GOULD SCHOOL OF LAW
A go-to litigator for A-list clients including Justin
Bieber and Ozzy Osbourne and in conflicts over
independent films, Reynolds currently represents a
U.K. company that claims the distributors of Tr a ff i c,
Gangs of New York and Ali downplayed the films’
revenue to circumvent millions in fees. He’s also
fighting STX for allegedly backing out of a deal to
co-finance an adaptation of Killers’ Game on behalf
of client Endurance Media.
Please reboot The Rockford Files

TA LE N T
Ken Richman
Hansen Jacobson
HARVARD LAW SCHOOL
Several of Richman’s showrunner clients landed
lucrative overall deals across town. The Good Place’s
Mike Schur and 30 Rock’s Robert Carlock inked
major deals at Universal, while Barry’s Alec Berg and
Veep’s David Mandel signed pacts with HBO. He also
reps Elisabeth Moss, who stars in The Invisible Man
on top of her Emmy-winning role in The Handmaid’s
Ta l e, as well as Full Frontal host Samantha Bee.
My biggest challenge now is “Helping my clients
and firm navigate the impact of the coronavirus.”

CORPORATE
Marissa Roman Griffith
Akin Gump
STANFORD LAW SCHOOL
As MRC’s lead dealmaker, Roman Griffith spear-
headed the co-production and co-financing pacts
for such films as Knives Out, Dora and the Lost City
of Gold and The Lovebirds. On the TV front, she put
together the financing agreements for shows like
The Great, The Outsider and Ozark. (MRC and THR
share a parent company, Valence Media.) And she
repped Portfolio Funding Company in its acquisition
of 191 titles from The Weinstein Co. library.
If I could eat only one food forever, it’s “Lobster.”

TA LE N T
Nancy Rose
Schreck Rose
GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
The New York-based attorney negotiated the biggest

When Jodi Peikoff joined hundreds
of other women working in law who
shared their abortion stories with the
U.S. Supreme Court in December, it
wasn’t the first time she fought for the
cause. But the amicus brief she signed,
which argues against the constitu-
tionality of Louisiana’s 2014 Unsafe
Abortion Protection Act, was far more
vast in scope than when she chal-
lenged a similarly restrictive Texas law
in 2016. Coordinated by the firm Paul
Weiss, the brief signed by 368 female
legal professionals excerpts (and
anonymizes) stories from women who
wouldn’t have been able to realize their
goals were it not for their “ability to
control their reproductive lives.”
In an interview with The Hollywood
Reporter, Peikoff, a New York-based
talent lawyer who represents Cynthia
Erivo, Felicity Jones, Lili Reinhart,
Carrie Coon, Tilda Swinton, Ezra
Miller and America Ferrera, among
others, went further, sharing her own
story without the cloak of anonym-
ity. Says Peikoff, “It’s really important
to speak openly about these issues
because it destigmatizes the decision
that so many women have to make.”

Why did you add your name?
I had the opportunity to control my
reproductive destiny, and without it,
I wouldn’t be the owner of a law firm.
So I felt I had to pay forward my privi-
lege to make sure the next generation
has the same right that I had.

Hollywood is a pretty liberal industry,
but did you pause before publicly shar-
ing your beliefs?
I didn’t give it a second thought.
As soon as it was published, I got
a call from a number of women
lawyers in the industry. One called
to thank me: Her father had been
a gynecologist who performed
abortions and her family had been
terrorized by the anti-abortion
right, and she was so happy that Paul
Weiss and the amicus brief people
had spoken up, and that she knew
someone who had. So, no. And the
response — to my face, anyway —
was uniformly good.

Have you talked to your clients about
signing the briefs?
I have mentioned it to a handful of
clients, in the context of saying that

Why I Revealed My


Abortion in Court


TALENT LAWYER JODI PEIKOFF SHARES HER PERSONAL STORY, WHY SHE
FIGHTS TO SAVE ROE V. WADE AND HOW HOLLYWOOD CAN HELP By Katie Kilkenny

Petrocelli

Putnam

Reynolds

Richman

Roman
Griffith

Rose

Rosenbloum

Rush

10fea_lawyers1-17_L [P]{Print}_53606986.indd 64 3/25/20 10:40 AM

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