In the later 1960’s when the
television-depicted “Mad Ave” was roaring I arrived at 285 Madison while the
two martinis, two hour, smoke filled lunches were in full force. Graduating from the nationally rated number #2 College of Journalism at the
University of Florida, and fresh out of a mandatory two year stint in the Navy,
I arrived in New York City with $250.00 in my pocket, no job, but following a
childhood voice in my head that constantly said, “this is where you are
supposed to be.”
From my seven by seven foot room
overlooking Central Park at the West side YMCA, I combed the New Times want ads
for a job. Most of my professors at the University of Florida were
ex-advertising people who gave up or were asked to leave the advertising world.
I told myself I would not become one of them.
Sitting on the 13th floor of 285 Madison
waiting for a media trainee program interview, fear set in that I did not know
enough about media planning or buying or even that I even really liked it. But
I sensed this could be an entry point so why not go for it.
Being a fast reader, I picked up a couple of media magazine in the lobby and
quickly began storing the information in my brain. Apparently I impressed my
interviewers and was selected from 200 candidates to join a training program
that would have me spent extended time within each department of the agency:
media, sales promotion, account management and creative. The one-year program
was like my PhD in advertising.
During my training program I had the
opportunity to have private time with Ed Ney who was now heading up the
international department, after having been president of the agency. He was
intrigued by my international family background and encouraged me by saying,
“Young & Rubicam is like a banquet. There is much from which to choose.” Little
did he know I would take that statement literally and it be the focus of my
almost ten years a Y&R when I moved to almost every department that existed
within the agency.
Realizing crunching numbers in media was
not my thing; I quickly maneuvered an assistant position with the sales
promotion department, right next to Ed Ney’s office (allowing many more talks)
within the upper reaches of the building. Sales promotion saw some of my
potential and allowed me to transfer to the account management department where
I became a young AE on Eastern Airlines (Official Airlines of Disney World) and
Johnson & Johnson. My weeks were spent dashing down to Florida working with
airlines that was assisting Disney in building a new park in the swamps of
central Florida and training from mid-town Manhattan to New Brunswick, NJ to
talk about J&J Baby Power, Oil and Crème. How’s that for a career mix!
During my account management days the
best part of the job was allowing me to directly interface with some of the top
talent within agency: Alex Kroll, Henry Holtzman, Fred Goldberg, Alan Zweibel,
Mary Alice Kennedy, Jim Swan, John Rindlaub, Denny Tillman, Betty Fitterman,
Lou Di Joseph, Jim Roach, Laurie Kahn, Clark Frankel, Jean-Yves Mallet, Curvin
O’Reilly, Fraser Purdy, Bob McDonald, Jed Falby, Mike Slosberg, Jeb Falby,
Peter Verbeck, John Emmerling, Barbara Badyna, Peter Georgescu, Neil Tardio,
Ted Storb, Roger Mader, Phil Peppis, Dick Lopez, Bob Steigelman, Forrest Long,
Bob Gleckler, John Pek. Just to name a few. I knew the agency from the inside
out; the people that really made it work. One of the best parts of Y&R THE
LINK is seeing your names and faces again, even though some of you have left
us.
After a couple years within the account
management department I became restless again and hearing Ed Ney’s words
echoing within my head, “Y&Y is a banquet,” I managed to get closer to the
creative product by transferring to the art buying department servicing almost
every client within our impressive rostrum. This was the most fun I made
during my days at Y&R, allowing me to stay closer to some of the people
aforementioned and meeting many others. You guys were simply the best of the
best.
Another voice other than Ed Ney’s began
to speak to me during my seldom silent moments at Y&R. “There is something
else beyond the corporate experience awaiting you,” it said. Eventually life
circumstances created a way for me to wean myself from Y&R after almost ten
years. Y&R was all I ever known of work and New York City. It was painful
but time for me to leave. My heart knew this but my mind stayed in resistance.
Part of me wanted to stay within the ‘comfort zone’ and home of Y&R.
At the time I was personally partnered
(that’s what they called it in those days) to a gentleman who was part of the
administrative staff of The Film Society at Lincoln Center. I had been doing
informal, off the record, consulting for them, helping them any way I could.
The New York Film Festival and the Spring Gala Tribute they produced each year
was pretty heady film stuff. Up close and person I was to meet and interface
with some of the top directorial and acting talent of the world. It was
thrilling to bring Charlie Chaplin back to the States for the first time or
hear Ginger Rodgers say she disliked Fred. Sitting in the limo with Elizabeth
Taylor fresh back from Betty Ford’s for her tribute and hearing her scream when
a leaf from her leaf dress uncovered her breast brought all of it to human
terms. I experienced some 28 years of these festivals and galas, and
sometime soon this is my ‘tale to tell’ of the famous folks (like Bette Davis
and Catherine Hepburn) I was honored to meet and see them in such human terms.
While planning my departure from Y&R,
through my Lincoln Center Film Society connection, I was introduced to the New
York University Film School. Synchronistically my film professors often became
some of the accomplished film director’s I had met in the past. Once involved
in creating and producing my own films, the pain of leaving Y&R began to ease
(I don’t think it ever completely left).
Upon completion of my NYU Film School
Certificate, the ad agency environment that had been my home so long now became
my client base as I moved into the independent commercial production side of
the business. The well- known agency art director, tuned commercial film
director, Jeffrey Metzner became my first commercial film association, and my
introduction into commercial film. It was a new perspective seeing Y&R as a
vendor from the outside in, rather than inside out. Jeffrey has since left us
but his wife Sheila Metzner is still considered one of the top photographers
and sometimes film director.
While serving on the board of The
Associations of Independents Commercial Producers (AICP), I was introduced to
an opportunity you could not say no to. There was an investor in Europe who
wanted to create a new commercial production company in America with the top
British and European film directors. After several months of negations, I
managed to reach a deal where I would found and name FAIRBANKS FILMS based in
New York City with offices in London, Paris, and Los Angeles. With directorial
talent such as Ridley and Tony Scott and many others we soon captured the
American advertising market. Spots such “ Apple Computer 1984” produced
directly for Steve Jobs launched the Apple computer worldwide and quickly
became an advertising icon. Today this spot is still voted the most successful
commercial. America taught the world advertising but this was a matter of
the student now returning and teaching the teacher some new tricks. Fresh
lighting and directorial postproduction involvement brought a new look to the
industry’s film. The British had arrived in music and film and were taking us
by storm. Fairbanks Films was a producer owned and operated company and several
years later numerous directorial owned companies later spun off it. From
Fairbanks Films came such launches as Ridley Scott & Associates (RSA/USA)
in America, allowing the Scott Brothers further successes in feature films.
Ridley is still strong at it in his late 70’s.
The demand within the industry for
Fairbanks Films and its spin off talent was always high but I must confess that
I always favored Y&R as a client. It remained a privilege to return home to
the company that had taught me so much. Y&R had given me the majority of the training I needed to achieve what
I was achieving.
Knock, knock whose there? George Lucas!
Much of the work we produced also caught the attention of the feature film
industry. Several of Y&R’s favored commercial directors and some of their
own creative people had also crossed over into features. The two industries,
features and advertising, represented a huge business and features learned not
to have such a distain for advertising. So it was not so completely unusual
that Lucas films connected me with the intention to create a division within
the studio to service advertising: Lucas Films Industrial Light & Magic
Commercials, we called it.
Lucas films initially invented and
largely taught the world digital technology which caught on quickly and grew
into many companies. But as an early member of the team to introduce the
technology to the advertising world, as Director of Marketing of ILM
Commercials, it was a thrill to fill rooms with hundreds of people and teach
them what was possible with enough time and money (almost anything). The new
technology also took the risk out of dangerous stunts and shots. I had lost
lives on some shoots and it is never worth it. We combined live action
(directors) and the computer generated images to create a whole new world of
possibilities. The ‘what’ and ‘how’ we produced our adverting had changed
forever! I was privileged to be a pioneer of that change.
My final swan song in adverting was when
I associated with an Australian film company where we produced the largest
commercial ever made. It was a 90 day shoot, $11 million dollar spot for the
Ford Motor Company where we shot all over the world, and it ran on a media
‘road block’ worldwide at the same time for each time zone. Did I need another
advertising experience after this? Thirty years was enough!
But there is a life after advertising and
I and many other Y&R folks are vital proof of that. And Y&R THE LINK
proves that with each and every issue, thank God.
For the past many years since leaving
Y&R and advertising for good I have morphed into teaching advanced
metaphysics as an energetic therapist, starting schools, creating web sites and
writing several books. For those interested in this aspect of my life I have
two web sites: www.phillipeltoncollins.com
and www.theangelnewsnetwork.com.
Thanks for sharing my unexpected advertising
journey, where it all started and was always supported by my beginnings at the
amazing Y&R.
Fond Memories,
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