The New York Times, January 23, 1996
Sorrow but No Surprise at a Death
By BERNARD WEINRAUB
On Friday night, Jake Bloom, a Hollywood lawyer with numerous clients in
the movie industry, phoned Michael Eisner, chairman of the Walt Disney Company,
to inform him of the death of Don Simpson, one of Hollywood's most prominent
producers and a one-time colleague of Mr. Eisner's.
The Disney chairman quietly told Mr. Bloom, "I've been waiting for this call
for 20 years."
Mr. Eisner's words mirrored many other comments heard as the news of Mr.
Simpson's death at the age of 52 spread across Hollywood. Paramedics who
responded to a 911 call from business associates of Mr. Simpson's found his
body slumped on a bathroom floor in his Bel Air home. Although one of his
lawyers, Robert Chapman, said the death was due to natural causes, a police
investigation is under way. It has been an open secret in Hollywood that
Mr. Simpson had a recurring drug problem and was a binge eater whose weight
fluctated wildly.
"He was in some dark underworld," said Dawn Steel, the former studio executive
and producer, who was a friend of Mr. Simpson's. "None of the rehabs worked.
We had long phone conversations. He didn't want to see me because of the
way he looked. He got really heavy. I'd say, 'Come on over,' and he'd say,
'I don't really feel good.' "
Shortly before Christmas, Jeffrey Katzenberg, a co-owner of Dreamworks and
former president of Walt Disney Studios, and James Wiatt, president of
International Creative Management, were among several friends who spoke to
Mr. Simpson's doctors and sought some sort of rehabilitation or hospitalization
for him. But Mr. Simpson was reluctant to leave his home. "He was very sad,"
said Mr. Katzenberg. "Sad and depressed."
Little known outside Hollywood, Mr. Simpson and his longtime partner, Jerry
Bruckheimer, helped define 1990's pop culture with such blockbusters as
"Flashdance," "Beverly Hills Cop" and "Top Gun." Beyond the hits he helped
make, though, Mr. Simpson symbolized the kind of extravagant, excessive,
larger-than-life figure who is drawn to Hollywood, one whose personal demons
grow hand in hand with successes and personal fortunes.
He grew up in Anchorage, a child of strict Fundamentalist parents. After
graduating Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Oregon in 1966, he left
almost immediately for Hollywood, where he became a marketing executive.
He worked first at Warner Brothers and later at Paramount, where he rose
quickly in the ranks and was named president of worldwide production in 1981.
He held that position for two years and was instrumental in the making of
"Urban Cowboy," "An Officer and a Gentleman," "48 Hours" and "Beverly Hills
Cop 2."
Mr. Simpson spoke of his childhood as nothing less than a nightmare of
repression. He decided to work in movies after seeing "The Greatest Show
on Earth" as a youngster, he would recall. Hollywood represented, among other
things, personal freedom, which he embraced with a vengeance. His night life,
at least in the 1980's, was often a regimen of drugs, parties and fast cars,
according to people who knew him well. Although wealthy and good-looking,
Mr. Simpson, by most accounts, had only one or two relationships with women
that lasted beyond several weeks. He recently told one close friend: "I don't
think I can live a normal life. I've given up trying."
He was a loner who sometimes called executives or associates at 2 or 3 in
the morning to chat. "I don't think he understood how to balance his life
because I don't think he was ever truly happy," said Mr. Wiatt. "Except when
he made a successful movie. Then he was happy."
Those who worked with him say that Mr. Simpson could take scripts and make
them commercial. "He understood scripts the way no one did," said Ms. Steel.
"He had this fantastic sense of story, of what worked and didn't work." Before
the filming of "Beverly Hills Cop," for example, he helped overhaul a script
that was originally planned for Sylvester Stallone and turned it into an
Eddie Murphy vehicle.
He also had a sense of wardrobe, soundtrack and style for a film. But his
talents, acquaintances say, were shadowed by "an enormous self-loathing that
none of us could understand."
"He had these explosive rages that were really out of control," said one
executive, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "He was an abusive and angry
man. He sometimes saw writers as easy targets, saps, ripe for exploiting.
You talk about Hollywood in the 80's: that whole brittle, cynical, caustic
attitude and style. Well, Don was the kingpin. A kingpin with demons that
tormented him."
By all accounts, his demons worsened in the 1990's, beginning with "Days
of Thunder" (1990), a big-budget disappointment that starred Tom Cruise as
a racing-car driver. After that, the Simpson-Bruckheimer team seemed paralyzed,
unable to produce movies for several years.
In 1994 they returned with an unlikely film, "The Ref," a relatively low-budget
dark comedy with Denis Leary, Kevin Spacey and Judy Davis. The movie was
intended to serve notice that Simpson-Bruckheimer were not only back in business
but also would focus on edgier and less expensive films. At the time Mr.
Simpson, sitting in his elegant study, told a reporter, "The days of drugs,
sex and rock-and-roll are long over, at least for us old guys."
Although "The Ref," too, was a box-office disappointment, the team was soon
on a roll with several big hits: "Crimson Tide," "Bad Boys," and "Dangerous
Minds." It was known in Hollywood that Mr. Bruckheimer, a quieter, tightly
wound and unflamboyant figure, had carried the brunt of the producing chores
on those movies. Executives said that Mr. Simpson's behavior and moods had
been erratic, that he had sometimes been incommunicado and that he had spent
time at drug rehabilitation centers and at the Canyon Ranch spa in Arizona
to lose weight.
The relationship grew increasingly strained. "Much of Jerry's time was taken
up with ways to avoid or circumvent Don's tantrums," the former executive
said.
Five months ago, Stephen Ammerman, a 44-year-old doctor, died of a drug overdose
in a pool-house shower at Mr. Simpson's home. Dr. Ammerman's father told
The Los Angeles Times two months later that his son had been treating Mr.
Simpson for drug problems. By then Mr. Bruckheimer had broken off one of
the most successful film making partnerships of recent years.
Mr. Bruckheimer was described by friends as devastated by the news of Mr.
Simpson's death. "He's as grieved as any spouse can be," said one friend.
Acquaintances say Mr. Simpson had recently seemed intent on picking up the
pieces of his professional life. Last Thursday, he met with Mr. Bloom, Mr.
Wiatt and a lawyer to discuss setting up his own production company.
"For the first time in months I saw him really excited," Mr. Wiatt said.
"He talked about which studio to make a deal with. He had gone through
depressions but he didn't seem that way at all."
The next day Mr. Simpson was dead.