Billy Sammeth, Longtime Manager of Cher and Joan Rivers, Remebered as Industry Trailblazer

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Old-school, yet ahead of his time, Sammeth —who died this week at 66 — also worked with Donny Osmond, Olivia Newton-John and K.C. & the Sunshine Band

NEW YORK (PRWEB) June 21, 2018

Billy Sammeth, the gregarious personal manager who shepherded icons Cher and Joan Rivers, along with Donny Osmond, K.C. & the Sunshine Band, Olivia Newton-John and other stars, is being remembered this week as a loving, quick-thinking manager who made trailblazing deals for his stars.

Sammeth, who was 66, died Monday at Weill Cornell Medical Center after a battle with pancreatic cancer. News of his death [June 18, 2018] was shared by his sister, actress Barbara Sammeth, via a blog post: "Fly high my love. I will find you," she wrote.

Sammeth was a throwback to an earlier era in music and show business when colorful managers took on just a handful of entertainers and catered to them personally, often around the clock. A witty negotiator and a devoted advocate for his clients, he would often greet his pals with a festive, "Hi, Doll!"

"Passion for talent has been overridden today by greed," Sammeth said, in a 2012 interview with The Daily Beast, of the corporate consortiums that manage big-name performers today. "You're a lightweight now if you only have one or two clients. If you're a manager these days, you've got to be Octomom."

Born in Brooklyn in 1951, Sammeth was 12 when he moved to Los Angeles with his family. His father, Philip Sammeth, was a merchandising pioneer with Walt Disney Productions.

Sammeth was just 18 years old when he got his start writing press releases on behalf of Donny Osmond and The Osmond Brothers. Two years later, he had left college and was managing that family's global licensing empire — everything from lunch boxes to bubblegum — as the singing brothers became teen sensations.

"How do you appropriately pay tribute and honor someone who was so important in your life?," Osmond said on Twitter. "Billy was so much more than my talent manager. He was my friend."

By 1973, Sammeth was working full-time for Sandy Gallin, the famed manager who mentored icons such as Neil Diamond, Barbra Streisand, Dolly Parton, Lily Tomlin and Michael Jackson — not to mention Cher, Rivers and Newton-John.

Ten years later, he struck out on his own, creating The Bill Sammeth Organization, taking Cher, Rivers and Newton-John with him.

Cher and Sammeth spent more than two decades together (including breakups and reconciliations) during years that saw the entertainer move from pop music and network television with Sonny Bono to solo superstardom, the concert stage, Broadway, serious films and a 1988 best actress Oscar for Moonstruck.

Cher remembered her friend and former manager on Monday in a simple heartfelt tweet: "Bumpy is gone" — a play on Sammeth's nickname Bumper, which she had bestowed upon him decades ago. She promised to post photos of them together when she returned from an overseas trip.

During their years together Cher also made two hard-fought Top 40 comebacks, which included a run of late-'80s pop hits — among them "If I Could Turn Back Time" — and then, when she was 52 — the 1998-99 No. 1 smash "Believe."

The Believe album was Sammeth's final project with Cher. The title track had just taken hold on the charts when they parted for the last time.

Known for his wit and larger-than-life personality, Sammeth was recruited in 2006 by the U.K. reality show Soapstar Superstar, on which he appeared as an acerbic judge. Around this time, he relocated from Los Angeles to Miami Beach, where he continued to manage clients including Harry Wayne Casey (the K.C. of the Sunshine Band) through 2016.

Casey called Sammeth an artful negotiator who could make even the most challenging deals work out.

"Billy had that magic touch," Casey said. "He could fix anything. He could move mountains. No matter how difficult a situation was, he would leave the negotiation with exactly what he wanted."

Through the 2000s, Sammeth was also still managing Rivers, whose sprawling career as a stand-up comic, creator of a billion-dollar fashion and jewelry empire, author, TV host and activist seemed to peak and re-peak throughout her 60s and 70s. Earlier, Sammeth had written for Rivers' 1986-87 late-night show on Fox.

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They were close for decades but parted in 2009 soon after she won the season eight installment of NBC's The Celebrity Apprentice. The split was noted in the 2010 IFC documentary Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work, which Sammeth said "defamed him."

Despite the acrimony and his law suit against her (settled out of court), Sammeth was crestfallen when Rivers, then 81, died suddenly after surgery in September 2014.

"Being on the road with Billy and Joan, yes, it was business, but it was also family," said concert producer Ed Kasses, founder of Princeton Entertainment who worked closely with Sammeth for decades. "Joan was like Mom to everybody. Billy not only was a killer manager for his clients, but he loved them. And all of us loved him back."

Longtime client Olivia Newton John wrote on Facebook: "My darling Billy left us today. I will miss my funny friend."

Friend Paul Shaffer added, "When you saw Billy, he showered you with all his love and affection."

A cancer diagnosis last year led Sammeth and his sister Barbara on a journey for treatment — experiences she chronicled almost daily in her blunt and often humorous blog. Along the way, the two dined with old friends, saw Broadway shows and proudly took on the medical establishment.

Survivors also include sister Ellen; niece Lynn; niece Sarah; nephew David; nephew Kevin, and cousins Patricia, Jack, Laurie, Jeffrey, Susan, Anna, Mitch, David, Cherie, Daniel, Ed, Karen, Bill and Lynn.

Private services will be held in Los Angeles this week. Charitable donations in Sammeth's memory are welcome at http://www.lustgarten.org, a pancreatic cancer research foundation.

Portions of this news release originally appeared as part of a news story, published by The Hollywood Reporter - 7:20 AM PDT 6/18/2018, and are used here with permission. To view the original story please visit [[The Hollywood Reporter.

For more information please contact:

Ellin Sanger
Sanger Blackman Media Solutions
914 355 0541
ellin@sangerblackmanmedia.com
http://www.sangerblackmanmedia.com

For the original version on PRWeb visit: https://www.prweb.com/releases/2018/06/prweb15580757.htm

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