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R e m e m b e r
i n g J a c k V a l e n t i |
In
Memory: Friends Board Member Jack Valenti (September
5, 1921 – April 26, 2007)
With
the passing of one of America’s great media and political figures, Jack
Valenti, the country has also lost one of the cancer community’s great
supporters.
April 26,
2007
While Jack Valenti is remembered for a number of valuable contributions –
from his role as presidential advisor to Lyndon Johnson to his leadership of
the Motion Picture Industry Association (MPAA) where he instituted our
modern-day ratings system, Jack Valenti was also a pioneer in bringing
together the two worlds of Hollywood and The Hill to collaborate on ways to
fight cancer: Under Valenti’s leadership at MPAA, Hollywood began
implementing a number of different efforts to avoid and deglamorize the use
of tobacco in movies and TV programs. As an active member of Friends of
Cancer Research’s Board of Directors, and later an honorary advisory board
member, Jack Valenti was a great supporter of our efforts.
Perhaps one of the greatest highlights of his involvement in Friends was a
February 1997 meeting he chaired with Friends Chair Ellen Sigal and Friends
Board Member and Paramount Pictures CEO Sherry Lansing, in which he brought
together all the major heads of the studios to meet with then Vice President
Al Gore. Under Valenti and Lansing’s leadership, the meeting garnered
participation from almost every head of every major studio: included Bob
Iger, CEO of ABC; Frank Mancuso, Chairman and CEO of MGM Pictures; Lew
Wasserman, Chairman Emeritus, Universal Studios; and Peter Chermin,
Chairman, Twentieth Century Fox. The executives discussed ways that the
entertainment industry could come together to fight cancer, including
identifying celebrity advocates who could capture the attention of the
public and of Congress and speak from personal experience to the need for
federally funded cancer research; encouraging the creators of TV programs
and films to tell the many-sided stories of cancer today, including the
extraordinary stories of scientific discovery that could remove cancer as a
threat to our lives; and identifying new ways the entertainment industry can
help to reduce tobacco use. This meeting set the stage for the industry’s
future involvement and success in raising awareness about cancer issues.
Additionally, Jack Valenti was a supporter of a variety of non-profit
organizations, foundations, and cancer centers dedicated to cancer and great
medical research including The Lasker Foundation and Johns Hopkins.
Valenti died of
complications from an
earlier stroke in March is is survived by his wife Mary Margaret, three
children, and two grandchildren.
***
Friends of Cancer Research, a Washington D.C. area cancer non-profit
organization, is dedicated to accelerating the nation's progress toward
prevention and treatment of cancer by mobilizing public support for cancer
research funding and providing education on key public policy issues. Over
the past ten years, Friends of Cancer Research has pioneered innovative
public-private partnerships, organized critical policy forums, educated the
public and brought together key communities to develop collaborative
strategies in the field of cancer research.
www.focr.org
Media Contact: Alyse Garber, Friends of Cancer Research Communications
Manager: (202)944-.6710 or
agarber@focr.org
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