Tom Sturges | |
---|---|
Born | Paris, France | June 22, 1956
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | University of California, Los Angeles and University of California, Davis |
Occupation(s) | Music executive, author, professor |
Parent(s) | Preston Sturges (father) Anne Margaret "Sandy" Nagle (mother) |
Relatives | Shannon Sturges (niece) |
Tom Sturges (born June 22, 1956) is an American music executive, author, educator, and public speaker. [1] [2]
He has served as president of Chrysalis Music, [3] EVP/Head of Creative for Universal Music Publishing Group, and VP/GM of Shaquille O'Neals T.W.Is.M Records. [4] A passionate advocate of creative thinking, Sturges authored 5 books and is a regular guest speaker/panelist. He has also been Grammy member for last thirty years, and previously served as a trustee and the president for the LA chapter. [5] [6]
Born in France, Sturges is one of only seven Americans baptized at Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris. [7] Sturges is the third son of Preston Sturges, the Hollywood screenwriter and director who passed away when Tom was three years old, [1] and Anne Margaret "Sandy" Nagle (1927-2006). [8] At age 14, Tom sued his mother for the right to his own custody and won the case, a first time in favor of a minor. [9] Sturges graduated from University of California, Davis in 1979 with a BA in music, and attended graduate school at the University of California, Los Angeles. [10]
His career started as an intern at Arista Music Publishing in 1980. A month into his internship, [11] he was placed in the copyright department where he typed copyright forms and sent telexes. [12]
In 1983, Sturges was onboarded as a General Professional Manager for Lester Sill's Screen Gems/EMI after Chuck Kaye recommended him. During his time there, Tom played a central role in placing hits like "Another Night" by Aretha Franklin and "We Belong" by Pat Benatar. [3] He also worked closely with Gerry Goffin, Katrina & The Waves, and suggest Carole King to write a new bridge to Anne Murray's #1 country single, "Time Don't Run Out on Me". [13] He also worked with writers at screen gems included David Gates and Jeff Barry. [14]
In 1985, He began working for Chrysalis Music Group as senior VP/ General Manager of the company. [3] In 1989, Sturges assumed the role of President of Chrysalis where he signed artists, including Smashing Pumpkins, Goodie Mob, OutKast, Green Jelly, Slaughter, Billy Burnette of Fleetwood Mac, as well as songwriters like Antonina Armato ("She Ain't Worth It", "I'll Get By"), Andy Hill ("Restless Heart", "Peace in Our Time"), and Kipper Jones. [15]
Further, He engineered the purchase of the Ring-A-Ding Music catalogue (which features the songs of rockabilly artist Dorsey Burnette "It's Late", and "Believe What You Say"), the Roy Ayers song catalog, and oversaw the revitalization of the Paul Anka catalog.
During his time there, Sturges pitched and secured recordings of numerous Chrysalis songs by artists including Aretha Franklin ("I Knew You Were Waiting", Grammy-winning worldwide #1 duet hit with George Michael), Cher (#1 pop single "Heart Of Stone"), Celine Dion (1 single throughout europe and a worldwide top 5 hit Think Twice), [11] Mariah Carey (I Still Believe" which went to #1 in the US), and Whitney Houston. [16]
After eleven years, Sturges left Chrysalis in 1996, and became the VP/GM of T.W.Is.M Records (Shaquille O'Neal's record label and publishing company). [6] Tom ran Shaq's record company until 1999, sharing that "like all good things, it came to an end". [12]
He then became the Executive Vice President and Head of Creative for Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG). [17] Sturges (working with Zach Horowitz) contributed to the company's growth over the years. While at UMPG, Sturges signed artists including Afroman, 3 Doors Down, 50 Cent, Foo Fighters, Stone Temple Pilots, Jack Johnson, Owl City, Vanessa Carlton, and Chris Brown, as well as writers/producers Mark Batson, Rock Mafia, and Sean Garrett. [6] Like John Hammond, Sturges believes that his music career stems from his musical literacy/talent, and his ability to detect talent in others (artists & writers, or talented creative execs to work with). [12] Sturges retired from UMPG in 2011. [17]
As a father, he sais "I wanted to be so much more than a casual observer of my son's life as it went by me." [18] Sturges' exploration resulted in a host parenting and self-help novels that encourage creativity, including:
In 2019, Sturges wrote a biographic novel about his father, writer-director Preston Sturges', concentrating on the later (and more mysterious) years of his life. [24] After Tom's mother died in 2006, he discovered that she had kept all her correspondence with his father, as well as his papers, journals and diaries. He then collaborated on the book with British author Nick Smedley, and included glimpses of those discovered notebooks, and descriptive "interludes" that elucidate Preston's personal life. [24] Tom is the youngest of Preston's children.
Tom is a contributor for the Huffington Post, and appeared on KTLA, Fox & Friends, CNN, and theToday Show. His contributions have been featured in publications including Best Life magazine, CNN, [25] Fast Company , People , and The New York Times.
He has been involved in music education and philanthropy. [26]
His first philanthropic mentorship program began in 1998 through an informal beginning. Sturges went to speak at the Foshay Learning Center in South Los Angeles, and just kept doing it––every Wednesday for the next many years. His creative workshop mentored a total of 233 inner-city high school students from 1998-2011. [27]
He began working with his first group of mentees when they were in 7th grade. He helped them write songs and served as the choir director until their high school graduation. [28] Tom was available by phone for anything they needed––whether for school or personal support. [26] In 2003, the first 30-plus member Foshay Choir celebrated their release of "Witness to a Dream," an original CD the students created under Tom's mentorship. The CD contains five songs, two spoken word pieces, a solo rap piece and a new arrangement of The Star Spangled Banner. Proceeds from the project went to the Foshay Learning Center and to a scholarship trust fund for choir members. All of the graduating seniors participants made plans to attend college and twelve of the mentees attended USC with full scholarships. [29]
Sturges shared that the Witness to a Dream project "symbolizes the powerful impact that mentoring and service to the community brings to our youth." [30] The Foshay Choir opened on the Disneyland competition, with then-Secretary of State Colin Powell and then-Gov. Pete Wilson in the audience. [27] The Choir also later performed three times for President Obama's re-election efforts. [6] Tom's success with the first group of mentees at the Forshay Learning Center are the subject of the 2008 documentary, Witness to a Dream. The documentary depicts Tom's mentorship beginning when the students were in 7th grade (in 1997) to their eventual graduation from college (in 2007). [28]
Sturges designed and implemented a creative workshop for fifth-graders as a volunteer teacher at Grandview Elementary in Manhattan Beach – where his children went to school. [26] He taught more than 1,000 students for over 14 years. [6] [26]
Sturges participated in the Hip Hop Intellectuals Panel at the 2011 Aspen Ideas Festival. In 2013, he served as an institute contributor and guest speaker for the Aspen Challenge, where teams from 20 schools within the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) are challenged to design solutions by inspirational speakers and entrepreneurs who work everyday on today's tough issues. [31] In 2014, Sturges headed the 7th annual GRAMMY camp panel on creativity and providing hands-on instruction for high schoolers interested in entering the music industry. [5] He briefly joined the advisory board for the NYU Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music. As a board members, Sturges offered advice and guidance to help provide Recorded Music students with opportunities for learning beyond the classroom walls. [32]
In 2001, He helped co-created the UCLA Music Business Now class with fellow music executives Jeff Jampol, Steve Berman and Lenny Beer. [33]
During the 1980s, Sturges had 12 of his father's screenplays published by the University of California Press to preserve them, and began shopping his father's unproduced screenplays. [34] Tom edited a volume of his father's letters, and several of his father's scripts produced for the screen and stage, such as the play "A Cup of Coffee" produced by Marlene Swartz. [35]
The 15th Annual Grammy Awards were held on March 3, 1973, at the Tennessee Theatre in Nashville, Tennessee. The event was the first Grammy ceremony not to be held in either New York City or Los Angeles. The 15th Grammys were also the first to be broadcast live on CBS, which has carried every Grammy telecast since.
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Preston Sturges was an American playwright, screenwriter, and film director.
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Unfaithfully Yours is a 1948 American screwball black comedy film written and directed by Preston Sturges, and starring Rex Harrison, Linda Darnell, Rudy Vallée and Barbara Lawrence. The film is about a jealous symphony conductor who imagines three different ways to deal with the supposed infidelity of his beautiful wife—murder, forbearance, and a suicidal game of Russian roulette—during a concert of three inspiring pieces of classical music. At home, his attempts to bring any of his fantasies to life swiftly devolve into farce, underscored with humorous adaptations of the relevant music. Although the film, which was the first of two Sturges made for Twentieth Century-Fox, received mostly positive reviews, it was not successful at the box office.
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The Sin of Harold Diddlebock is a 1947 American comedy film written and directed by Preston Sturges, starring the silent film comic icon Harold Lloyd, and featuring a supporting cast including female protagonist Frances Ramsden, Jimmy Conlin, Raymond Walburn, Rudy Vallee, Arline Judge, Edgar Kennedy, Franklin Pangborn, J. Farrell MacDonald, Robert Dudley, Robert Greig, Lionel Stander and Jackie the Lion. The film's story is a continuation of The Freshman (1925), one of Lloyd's most successful movies.
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