John Lesher (born May 12, 1966) is an American film producer, best known for winning the
Academy Award for
Best Picture for the 2014 film Birdman.[1][2]
John Lesher was born on May 12, 1966, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He graduated from
Harvard University in 1988 before starting his career as an agent at the Bauer-Benedek Agency.
Later, Lesher moved to the
United Talent Agency (UTA), where he became a partner. After 15 years at UTA, Lesher left for Endeavor, where his clients included
Martin Scorsese,
Paul Thomas Anderson,
Alejandro Iñárritu, and
Judd Apatow. In 2005, he was made head of
Paramount Vantage, a brand derived from Paramount Classics that produced and distributed arthouse-oriented titles. The company produced such Oscar-winning pictures as Inarritu's
Babel (2006), the Coen Brothers'
No Country for Old Men (2007), and Paul Thomas Anderson's
There Will Be Blood (2007). The success of these films led to Lesher's appointment in 2008 as President of Paramount Pictures, where he oversaw several major features, including J.J. Abrams' reboot of the Star Trek (2008) franchise and David Fincher's The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008). "Star Trek" was his only blockbuster. Other titles released by Paramount during his tenure, like Iron Man (2008), were distribution titles made at other companies, while other projects, like the Mike Myers comedy
Love Guru (2008) and
Imagine That (2009) were failures. Lesher was dismissed as Paramount president in the summer of 2009. He formed his own production company, Le Grisbi, which released several box office hits between 2012 and 2014.
Among their most popular efforts was Birdman, which was directed by Inarritu and earned Lesher an Oscar for Best Picture in 2015.[3][4]