Herb Nanas Dies: Longtime Agent, Manager & Producer Of ‘First Blood’, ‘Rocky III’ & Albert Brooks Films Was 84
He was not on the list.
Herb Nanas, who started as an agent, became a manager and produced films including First Blood, Rocky III, Lost in America and 2 Days in the Valley, died November 3. He was 84.
Anderson Group Public Relations confirmed the news but did
not provide a cause or place of death.
During his five-decade career, Nanas is credited with
discovering Sylvester Stallone and being an early backer of comedian Roseanne
Barr. He had a long professional relationship with Albert Brooks, whom he
represented from his comedy beginnings through a string of acclaimed films and
TV shows. His client list over the years also included Michael Chiklis, Gary
Busey, Andrew Dice Clay, Lorenzo Lamas, Ray Sharkey — who starred with Stallone
in 1974’s The Lords of Flatbush — and Joe Penny.
Born February 4, 1941, in the Bronx, Nanas went to grade
school with siblings Penny and Garry Marshall and future fashion icon Ralph
Lauren. He moved to Los Angeles in the early 1960s, landing a trainee gig with
William Morris Agency and working his way up from the mailroom.
By the early 1970s, Nanas launched his own management
company, adding producing to his résumé. His credits include Rocky III,
Paradise Alley and First Blood with Stallone and Brooks’ Lost in America,
Defending Your Life, Mother, The Muse, and Looking for Comedy in the Muslim
World. He also produced the feature 2 Days in the Valley, which featured a
just-starting Charlize Theron.
On the small screen, he helped shepherd the multiple-Emmy-winning History Channel miniseries Hatfields & McCoys, starring Kevin Costner and Bill Paxton, as well as Texas Rising starring Paxton, Ray Liotta and Jeffrey Dean Morgan.
Nanas also spent some time working in the music business
with the Scotti Brothers, representing Roger Miller, Eddie Rabbitt, KT Oslin,
and Miami Sound Machine, which featured young Gloria Estefan. Before that he
repped Denny Doherty from The Mamas & The Papas.
Nanas is survived by his daughter, Madeline; sons Rick and Alan; five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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