It was 1964 and a degree was one of the conditions of employment so Mr Geffen told his bosses he had studied at the University of California, Los Angeles. When a letter from UCLA arrived casting doubt on his claim, he intercepted it in the mailroom, steaming it open and substituting its contents with a forgery. It was a daring act and had he been caught he would have been fired. Yet the extent of his later achievements suggest that not even rejection from William Morris would have derailed his path to success。
當(dāng)時(shí)是1964年,有學(xué)位是其被雇傭的條件之一,于是,格芬就跟他的老板說(shuō),他曾在加州大學(xué)洛杉磯分校(University of California, Los Angeles,簡(jiǎn)稱UCLA)就讀。當(dāng)一封來(lái)自該學(xué)校的信對(duì)他的說(shuō)法提出質(zhì)疑時(shí),他在郵件室內(nèi)截住了這封信,用蒸汽將其拆開(kāi),然后用一封假信掉了包。此舉十分大膽,如果他被抓住,他將會(huì)被解雇。不過(guò),他后來(lái)的成就表明,即使威廉•莫里斯拒絕了他,也不會(huì)阻止他走向成功。
A billionaire many times over, the 66-year-old was this week linked with a bid for The New York Times. This adds an interest in newspapers to a career in which he has dominated the music industry, produced a string of Broadway shows, launched DreamWorks SKG – the first truly independent film studio in decades – and accumulated one of the world's most impressive collections of modern art。
最近,這位66歲的億萬(wàn)富翁被傳有意收購(gòu)《紐約時(shí)報(bào)》(The New York Times)。這將使他的事業(yè)范圍擴(kuò)展至報(bào)業(yè)。在其事業(yè)生涯里,他已經(jīng)主宰了音樂(lè)界,制作了一系列百老匯歌舞劇,創(chuàng)建了夢(mèng)工廠(Dreamworks SKG)——數(shù)十年來(lái)第一家真正獨(dú)立的電影制片廠——還收集了世界上最令人驚嘆的一部分現(xiàn)代藝術(shù)品。
His upbringing was a far cry from his billionaire lifestyle. He was born in Brooklyn, the son of a Polish father and Russian mother. His mother, Batya, owned a corset store; his father, Abraham, was a pattern maker in the garment trade. The family was not well off but his mother gave him a work ethic and was prone to sayings such as: “If something looks too good to be true, it probably is。” Mr Geffen is also fond of the maxim, says Jeffrey Katzenberg, a friend for 35 years and his partner, along with Steven Spielberg, in the creation of DreamWorks SKG. “He was influenced tremendously by his mother and will often quote her,” says Mr Katzenberg。
他的童年與現(xiàn)在億萬(wàn)富翁的生活方式大相徑庭。格芬出生于紐約的布魯克林,父母分別來(lái)自波蘭和俄羅斯。母親巴蒂亞(Batya)擁有一家胸衣商店,而父親亞伯拉罕(Abraham)是服裝業(yè)的一名制版師。他的家庭并不富裕,但母親向他灌輸了工作觀念,并總喜歡引用諺語(yǔ),例如:“如果什么事看上去好的令人難以置信,那么你最好別信。”格芬也喜歡說(shuō)格言,他35年的老友兼合伙人杰弗里•卡岑貝格(Jeffrey Katzenberg)如是說(shuō)。他們二人連同斯蒂芬•斯皮爾伯格(Steven Spielberg)一起創(chuàng)建了夢(mèng)工廠。“他受媽媽的影響極深,常常引用她的話,”卡岑貝格說(shuō)道。
Mr Geffen scraped through high school and tried a term at the University of Texas before Hollywood beckoned. At 19, he got a job as an usher at CBS Television City where, on his first day, he was assigned to The Judy Garland Show. From there, he went back to New York and William Morris, where his contemporaries included Larry Gagosian, the renowned art dealer, and Barry Diller, who would become a friend and go on to run Rupert Murdoch's Fox。
格芬勉強(qiáng)讀完了高中,在德克薩斯大學(xué)(University of Texas)嘗試念了一個(gè)學(xué)期,就投奔了好萊塢。19歲時(shí),他成為哥倫比亞電視城的一名引座員,第一天上班,他就被派到《茱蒂•嘉蘭秀》(The Judy Garland Show)。他從電影城回到紐約,進(jìn)入威廉•莫里斯,他的同齡人包括知名藝術(shù)經(jīng)紀(jì)商拉里•加高西安(Larry Gagosian),以及后來(lái)成為朋友的巴里•迪勒(Barry Diller),迪勒后來(lái)執(zhí)掌魯珀特•默多克(Rupert Murdoch)的??怂?Fox)。
Work in the mailroom
was tough and Mr Geffen later recalled having to fill the soapdispensers and change the toilet paper. But the agency taught him somevital lessons, such as how to form relationships and win trust. InDavid Rensin's 2003 book about the agency, The Mailroom, Mr Geffenrecalls learning how to “read the room ... I took mental notes oneverything”。
郵件室的工作非常艱苦,格芬后來(lái)回憶道,他還要添加液體肥皂,更換廁所手紙。但這家公司教給了他一些至關(guān)重要的經(jīng)驗(yàn),例如如何建立人際關(guān)系并贏得信任。在大衛(wèi)•蘭森(David Rensin) 2003年出版的有關(guān)這家公司的書《郵件室》(TheMailroom)中,格芬回憶自己學(xué)著如何去“讀懂辦公室……我在心中對(duì)每件事都做了筆記”。
Mr Katzenberg, who was Mr Diller's assistant when he first met Mr Geffen, says his friend has an uncanny ability to absorb large amounts of information, quickly retaining what isimportant. But success has come on his own terms. “One of the things that is so fascinating about him is that he isn't a type-A personality who has to get up very early every day and have a very full agenda,”says Mr Katzen berg. “It's not the way to get the greatest value out ofhim – and he knows that。”
卡岑貝格與格芬初次相遇時(shí)是迪勒的助手,他稱他的朋友擁有一種不可思議的能力,能吸收大量信息,并迅速保留那些重要信息。但他取得成功并非靠墨守成規(guī)。“他的一個(gè)奇妙特點(diǎn)是,他并非那種A型性格——每天早早起床,日程排得滿滿的,”卡岑貝格說(shuō)道。“這不是從他身上挖掘最大價(jià)值的方式,他也知道這一點(diǎn)。
By his mid-20s Mr Geffen was a millionaire thanks to the sale of a music publishing company he half-owned. He made a bigger impact in 1970 with the launch of Asylum Records, which nurtured actsincluding The Eagles and Joni Mitchell. The end of the 1970s washarder: he was misdiagnosed with cancer and did not work for severalyears. But he came back in 1980 with the launch of Geffen Records,which launched the careers of Guns N'Roses and Nirvana。
到25歲左右時(shí),通過(guò)出售擁有一半所有權(quán)的音樂(lè)出版公司,格芬已成為了一名百萬(wàn)富翁。1970年,他創(chuàng)建了孕育出老鷹樂(lè)隊(duì)(The Eagles)和約尼•米切爾(JoniMitchell)等藝人的AsylumRecords唱片公司,進(jìn)一步增強(qiáng)了影響力。70年代末對(duì)他要艱難一些:他被誤診為癌癥,停止工作數(shù)年之久。但1980年他又東山再起,創(chuàng)建了Geffen Records唱片公司,開(kāi)創(chuàng)了“槍與玫瑰”(Guns N'Roses)和“涅磐”(Nirvana)樂(lè)隊(duì)的事業(yè)。
Geffen Records propelled him into the realms of the super rich. A decade after its launch,he sold the label to Lew Wasserman's MCA Hollywood studio, receiving shares that would eventually net him $700m when MCA was acquired by Matsushita of Japan。
GeffenRecords唱片公司將格芬推入了超級(jí)富豪行列。該公司創(chuàng)建10年后,他將商標(biāo)權(quán)出售給了盧•沃瑟曼(LewWasserman)旗下的MCA好萊塢唱片公司,當(dāng)日本松下集團(tuán)(Matsushita)收購(gòu)MCA時(shí),格芬所持股份為其最終賺得了7億美元的利潤(rùn)。