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Richard Cook Chairman, The Walt Disney StudiosAs chairman of The Walt Disney Studios, Richard Cook oversees all aspects of
the development, production, distribution and marketing for all live-action
and animated films released under the Walt Disney Pictures, Touchstone Pictures,
Hollywood Pictures and Miramax banners worldwide. He is also responsible
for Disney’s worldwide home entertainment operations under Walt Disney
Studios Home Entertainment, as well as Walt Disney Music Group, Walt Disney
Theatrical Productions, Disney-ABC Domestic Television, Disney-ABC International
Television, the Studio’s legal and business affairs and all areas of
new technology.
Under Cook’s leadership, the Studio has been one of the leading domestic
distributors for ten of the last 13 years with box office receipts in excess
of one billion dollars each. Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures International
passed the one billion dollar mark for 12 consecutive years, the only distribution
company to have achieved this milestone. To date, the Studio has released
54 films that have grossed more than $100 million each domestically. No
other studio has accomplished this extraordinary feat.
During his tenure, Cook has overseen such box-office successes as “Pirates
of the Caribbean: At World’s End,” which broke industry wide records
with the highest global opening at over $404 million, “Pirates of the
Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest,” the highest grossing film in Disney
history with over a billion dollars at the worldwide box office, “Ratatouille,” “Cars,” “The
Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe,” “Chicken
Little,” ‘National Treasure,” “The Incredibles,” “Pirates
of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest,” “Finding Nemo,” “Lilo & Stitch, “ “Remember
the Titans,” “Signs,” “Armageddon,” “The
Santa Clause,” “Princess Diaries,” “Pearl Harbor,” among
many others.
With Cook at the helm, the Studio has attracted some of the most powerful
as well as diverse producers and directors in the industry including Jerry
Bruckheimer, Scott Rudin, John Lasseter, Robert Zemeckis, Tony Scott, Lasse
Hallstrom, Wes Anderson, Army Bernstein, Gore Verbinski, Walter Salles and
Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy among others.
Cook has enjoyed success in the area of Home Entertainment as well. He
spearheaded the highly successful launch of the “Disney DVD” brand,
and has consistently broke industry records with hit video and DVD releases.
A 36-year Disney veteran, Cook began his career in 1970 at Disneyland in Anaheim,
where he was a ride operator on the park’s steam locomotives and monorail. Within
a year, he became a representative in the Disneyland sales department and three
years later was promoted to department manager. In 1977, Cook moved to
The Walt Disney Studios in Burbank to serve as manager of pay television and
non-theatrical releases. In this capacity, he was responsible for Disney’s
first entry into the burgeoning world of cable television, developing what
would become The Disney Channel.
Cook entered the motion picture business at Disney in 1980 as assistant domestic
sales manager for the Buena Vista Distribution Company. He quickly moved
up through the ranks, becoming vice president and general sales manager, then
senior vice president of domestic distribution. In 1988, he was promoted
to president of Buena Vista Pictures Distribution. At that time, he supervised
the release of numerous hit films, including “Down and Out in Beverly
Hills,” “Three Men and a Baby” (the first Disney film to
break the $100 million mark), “Good Morning, Vietnam,” “Honey,
I Shrunk the Kids,” “Pretty Woman,” “Father of the
Bride” and “Sister Act.” Cook’s tenure in distribution
also placed him on the front lines of Disney’s animation renaissance
and the revitalization of the animation genre as a whole, releasing animated
blockbusters including “The Little Mermaid,” Beauty and the Beast,” “Aladdin,” “The
Lion King” and “Pocahontas.”
In 1994, Cook assumed the additional responsibility of film marketing when
he was promoted to president of Buena Vista Pictures Distribution and Marketing. In
this position, he oversaw the marketing and distribution strategies for hit
films such as “The Santa Clause,” “Crimson Tide,” “Toy
Story,” “The Rock,” and “The Hunchback of Notre Dame.” Two
years later, Cook was promoted to chairman of The Walt Disney Studios Motion
Picture Group, and then assumed his current role in 2002 as chairman of The
Walt Disney Studios.
A graduate of the University of Southern California with a degree in political
science, Cook has been a USC trustee and has served as president of the USC
Alumni Association. He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences,
was president of The Chandler School Board of Trustees and past chairman of
the Flintridge Preparatory School Board of Trustees, and sits on the board
of directors for the Will Rogers Foundation, and the Foundation of Motion Picture
Pioneers. In 1976, the Freedoms Foundation of Valley Forge awarded
him with the prestigious George Washington Medal of Freedom. In 2004, Cook
was honored with the Motion Picture Showmanship Award by the publicists of
the International Cinematographers Guild. Other prestigious past recipients
include Jack L. Warner, Joanne Woodward, Paul Newman, Alfred Hitchcock, Lew
Wasserman, Steven Spielberg, and Tom Hanks among others. In 2005, Cook
was honored with “The Walt Disney Man of the Year Award" by Big
Brothers Big Sisters. Most recently, Cook was recognized by Variety – The
Children’s Charity of Southern California with the 2006 Lifetime Achievement
Award.
Cook currently resides in La Canada with his wife Bonnie, who he met at Disneyland
where she served as the Disneyland Ambassador to the World. He and Bonnie
have two daughters, Elizabeth and Roxanne.
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