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词条 Richard A. Smith (businessman)
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Philanthropy

  3. Personal life

  4. References

{{Infobox person
| name = Richard Allan Smith
| image =
| image_size =
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1925}}
| birth_place = New York City
| death_date =
| death_place =
| death_cause =
| residence =
| nationality = United States
| other_names =
| known_for = CEO of General Cinema Corporation
| education =
| networth = $500 million (2006)[1]
| occupation = Businessman
| spouse = Susan Flax
| children = James Smith (predeceased)
Amy Smith Berylson
Robert Smith
Debra Smith Knez
| parents = Philip Smith
| relations = Jeffrey Lurie (nephew)
| website =
}}

Richard Allan Smith is an American business executive who served as CEO of General Cinema Corporation.

Biography

Smith was born in 1925[2] is the son of Philip Smith. His father founded Midwest Drive-In Theaters which in 1941, operated 9 of 15 drive-in movie theaters in the U.S.[3] In 1946, he joined his father's company.[3] In 1947, the company was one of the first to open a theater in a shopping mall in Framingham, Massachusetts.[3] By the 1950s, the Midwest Drive-In Theatres operated 53 drive-ins[4] and branched out into other lines of business including the Richard's Drive-Ins restaurant chain, Amy Joe's Pancake Houses, and several bowling alleys in order to diversify their revenues which were under pressure as more people stayed home to watch television.[4] In 1960, the company changed its name to General Drive-In Corp and went public on the New York Stock Exchange[3] although Smith retained a controlling interest.[5] His father died in 1961 and Richard succeeded him as CEO.[5][3] Smith changed the company's name to General Cinema in 1964 to better reflect the shift in the industry away from drive-in theaters.[3]

Smith diversified and expanded the company through acquisitions.[5] In the late 1960s, General Cinema began purchasing bottling franchises eventually becoming the largest independent bottler in the United States.[5] In 1970, they purchased the Mann Theatres chain (founded by Ted Mann) for $6.6 million.[5] In 1972, they purchased an interest in 47 indoor theaters in Louisiana and Florida from the Loews Corporation (founded by Laurence Tisch and Robert Tisch) for $16 million.[5] Smith's diversification efforts paid off: in 1985, the bottling operations were 70% of operating profits and General Cinema marked its 12th straight year of operating profits (since Smith's being appointed as CEO, General Cinema had been profitable for 24 of 25 years).[5] Smith also participated in greenmailing: he purchased a substantial interest in Heublein Inc. forcing it to find a friendly suitor earning Smith to reap a substantial profit when he sold his shares.[5]

In 1984, General Cinema purchased a controlling interest in Carter Hawley Hale, the tenth largest clothing retailer in the United States and owner of the Bergdorf Goodman, Neiman-Marcus, John Wanamaker's, Thalhimers, and Holt Renfrew chains,[5] saving it from a hostile takeover from Leslie Wexner.[2] In 1989, General Cinema sold its bottling division for $1.75 billion.[5] In 1991, General Cinema purchased Harcourt Brace Jovanovich for $1.5 billion.[5] In 1993, the company split into two companies: Harcourt General consisted of the publishing business and the controlling interest in the retail group (then called the Neiman-Marcus Group); and GC Companies, Inc. consisted of the movie theater division in which the Smith family retained a 28 percent controlling interest.[5] In 1994, Smith re-evaluated the portfolio of theaters and sold 14 theaters for $14 million and closed an additional 37 theaters in 1994 and 12 in 1995.[5] They also cautiously expanded into megaplexes with sit-down cafes, seat-side service, "loveseats," gourmet food and coffee, and liquor; and associated with top brands such as Starbucks, Pepsi, Taco Bell, and Pizzeria Uno.[5]

In 2000, General Cinema sold Harcourt General to publisher Reed-Elsevier for $5.7 billion and in 2005, they sold Neiman Marcus to private equity firms TPG and Warburg Pincus for $5.1 billion (the Smith family earned $600 million from their interest).[6]

Philanthropy

He and his wife founded the Richard and Susan Smith Family Foundation.[7]

Personal life

In 1952, Smith married Susan Flax who was Jewish.[7][8] they had four children: James Smith (who died in 1970), Amy Smith Berylson, Robert Smith, and Debra Smith Knez.[7] His daughter is married to Brian Knez.[9][10] His son, Robert Smith and son-in-law Brian Knez, served as co-CEOs of Harcourt General until its sale then co-founded private equity shop Castanea Partners in 2001.[6] His nephew is Jeffrey Lurie; in 1994, he and his sister provided collateral for a $185 million loan enabling Jeff to purchase the Philadelphia Eagles.[6]

References

1. ^Boston Magazine: "32. Richard A. Smith" March 2006
2. ^Fortune: "The New Show at Neiman-Marcus - A little-known empire of movie houses and soft drink bottlers, General Cinema, is buying up control of the country's most glamorous retailer." by John Paul Newport Jr. April 27, 1987
3. ^Los Angeles Times: "General Cinema More Wall St. Than Hollywood : Investments Pay Off Handsomely for Bottler and Theater-Chain Operator" by Kathryn Harris August 11, 1985
4. ^[https://www.library.hbs.edu/hc/lehman/company.html?company=gc_computer_corporation Harvard Business School Lehman Collection "GC Computer Corporation"] retrieved September 25, 2017
5. ^10 11 12 13 Funding Universe: "GC Companies, Inc. History" retrieved September 26, 2017
6. ^[https://www.forbes.com/profile/richard-alan-smith/ Forbes: "(Richard Alan) Smith family"] retrieved September 24, 2017
7. ^[https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/obituaries/2016/08/01/susan-smith-philanthropist-whose-passion-transformed-cancer-care-and-much-more-dies/8T9jixtMVZPyZDsI8sUC1I/story.html Boston Globe: "Susan Smith, 83; philanthropist’s passion transformed cancer care" By Bryan Marquard] August 02, 2016
8. ^Legacy.com: "SUSAN M. (FLAX) SMITH" August 02, 2016
9. ^Tufts University: "Profiles in Giving - Debra Smith Knez, J82" retrieved September 25, 2017
10. ^Boston College Law School Magazine: "The Canny Investor - When Brian Knez Sees Opportunity, Companies Thrive" by Maura King Scully" Winter 2015
{{DEFAULTSORT:Smith, Richard A.}}

3 : American business executives|1925 births|Living people

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