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Cowan died Wednesday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center of cancer, which was diagnosed three weeks earlier, said Daniel Bernstein of Warren Cowan & Associates. Ruta Lee a longtime friend of Cowan’s said, “The man was a giant. He was an incredible and positive force in the business and many of us learned a lot from this man.”
Charles Champlin, former “Times” film critic and arts editor, said in a statement that Cowan "stood at the peak of his profession, and he gave it dignity and weight. His word was his bond, and in a world of make-believe he stood for honesty, credibility and trust."
As a publicist, Cowan once said, "I like to create news." He was handling publicity for director Frank Borzage in 1950 when he came up with the idea of a celebrity sports tournament for charity to get the two-time Oscar winner's name in the news. Cowan was a pioneer and maverick for many of the things we take for granted today in the business.
During his early days working for Rogers, Cowan provided an unexpected boost to client Joan Crawford that resulted in Rogers & Cowan creating the first independent Oscar campaign. Now it’s something that is done almost every day. Cowan said in a previous interview, “She had just been named 'Box Office Poison' by the theater exhibitors," Cowan recalled in a 2003 interview with Television Week. “After years at MGM, she went to Warner Bros. to do a movie called 'Mildred Pierce.' Three or four weeks into production, I sat at my typewriter and wrote an item, which I sent to [columnist] Hedda Hopper.” Entertainer Constance Towers said of Cowan, “He was not only a great publicist, but a wonderful man as well. Like so many giants of his time, he was very caring of his clients and treated them like friends. Warren was warm and shared his respect for everyone he met in his career and his personal life.”
The hard working publicist was putting in 40-hour weeks, friends and coworkers said, up until two or three weeks of his death. Cowan had the old fashion work ethic that is rare today. He also knew that a publicist’s job is to be behind the scenes of his clients, even though for Cowan, he often outshined many stars.
Cowan, who was born in New York City on March 13, 1921, was married five times, twice to actress Barbara Rush. The family suggests donations be made in Cowan's name to the Hole in the Wall Gang Fund, 555 Long Wharf Drive, New Haven, CT 06511.
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