The Story Of How A Wall Street Tycoon And A Broadway Actress Nearly Ended The Golden Globes In 1982

Riklis And Zadora
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By the age of nine, Pia Zadora — a little girl from Hoboken, New Jersey — had already starred in her first feature film, Santa Claus Conquers the Martians, and was appearing regularly in a Broadway production of Fiddler on the Roof. When she was 19, the sultry and sinewy Zadora —  by then an accomplished stage actress and singer — traveled with a production of the musical Applause. One night after a performance, a chance meeting would drastically alter the direction of her life as well as the future of the Golden Globes.

The Vision and The Vixen

Meshulam Riklis was the owner of the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas, a chairman of the board at the Rapid-American Corporation, which owned Dubonnet, and held lofty positions in companies that owned Dewar’s, Samsonite, and Playtex — he could have anything he wanted. After witnessing a gorgeous blond vixen light up the stage in a performance of Applause, he eyed the next thing on his wishlist: Pia Zadora. Riklis careened backstage through the gatherings of cast, crew, and swarms of people before finding himself standing before Zadora. At the time, the Wall Street tycoon was 49, Pia was only 19.

“My gut said no,” she said in an interview with the Hollywood Reporter. “He was too old.”

Still, Riklis persisted, and after courting the young starlet for four years, the pair married in 1977. Immediately, the magnate went to work, incorporating Zadora into a marketing scheme meant to turn his wife’s Broadway fame into Hollywood glory. Riklis placed her in Dubonnet commercials and print ads, and she began a residency at the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas.

The Jersey girl was living the lavish life with Riklis: they shared a Beverly Hills mansion equipped with a team of bodyguards and a helicopter. But the commercials and ads were just an appetizer. Riklis had higher ambitions for his wife, and they included stardom on the big-screen. With Riklis as the primary benefactor and producer, Zadora would star in Butterfly, a film based on John M. Cain’s novel about a father and daughter who engage in an incestuous relationship.

The film featured Stacy Keach as Zadora’s dad and sexual partner while Ed McMahon and Orson Welles appeared in supporting roles. On January 21st, 1982, the nominations for the Golden Globes ceremony were released, and Pia Zadora was included in the list of actresses for the “new star of the year in a motion picture” award for her performance in Butterfly. Skeptics immediately began pondering the validity of her nomination — the film still had not been released, and almost no one had seen or heard of it.

The Campaign

On November 4th, a few months before the Golden Globes nominations would be released, Riklis invited at least a dozen member from the Hollywood Foreign Press to see Pia’s act at the Riviera, followed by an exclusive screening of Butterfly. In December, Riklis held another private screening and lunch for even more HFP members. The multimillionaire was also able to gain Zadora placement in Playboy and New York magazine. His efforts proved to be enough to help Pia snatch the award away from Kathleen Turner, who was pegged to win for her role in Body Heat.

Within weeks of the win, rumors started circulating that Riklis had lavished the HFP in the months leading up to the nominations announcement. The biggest piece of evidence was Butterfly itself: it was universally panned. Even worse, the film was nominated for 10 Razzies, winning three including worst actress and worst new star for Pia Zadora. “These rumors are ridiculous,” Riklis said to People magazine in 1982. “The by-laws say okay to a screening in the home. Other people take the judges out to fancy restaurants—what’s the big deal?”

Marianne Ruuth, president of the Foreign Press Association, said the HFPA had no hand in the voting process anymore.

We have nothing to do with it; it’s all in their hands. There is no way this award can be bought. I’m really amazed at the furor. It’s being caused by people who haven’t seen the young lady perform. It’s not even an acting award—it’s a newcomer award.

Despite the claims of the HFPA and Riklis, the court of public opinion was already in session, and CBS — who owned the broadcasting rights to the Golden Globes — decided to negate their contract in 1982 over the controversy. The Golden Globes was without a home.

To The Rescue

Not only had CBS declined to renew their contract with the Globes, but NBC and ABC saw the property as damaged goods, and had no interest in broadcasting the ceremony. Making matters worse, a key producer for the show had quit amid the scandal, and it was unclear when, or if, the awards telecast would ever be seen again.

In January 1983, Dick Clark stepped in and vowed to get the Golden Globes back on track by positioning his production company behind it. His first move was to move the show to syndication, allowing it to screen nationwide. By 1988, the telecast was garnering goodwill again, and Dick Clark Productions made a deal with TBS to allow for the awards show to begin airing on their network. Former HFPA president Mirjana Van Blaricom told The Hollywood Reporter, “If not for Dick Clark, I doubt the show would be so successful. At the beginning, he helped in getting the actors to be presenters.”

After airing the show in syndication and on cable for several years, the Golden Globes had gained momentum, and Fox and NBC began a bidding war for the rights to air the ceremony while CBS still had no interest — the Zadora incident left a bad taste in their mouth. DCP decided to go with NBC, and the broadcast network felt comfortable with Dick Clark at the helm. NBC’s head of programming, Warren Littlefield, discussed the decision.

Who knew what the HFPA was, but Dick was our comfort zone. We had been in business for so many music specials and series, we trusted him. That’s who we moved forward with. That first year, we had more than a 400 percent increase in viewership over the cable broadcast.

In 1995, the Golden Globes officially moved to NBC.

Despite the Golden Globe win in 1982, Zadora’s career never took off. In 1983, her next film, The Lonely Lady, was released. The movie — which depicts her being raped by a garden hose wielded by Ray Liotta — was again panned by audiences and critics and the worst actress Razzie award was once again hers for the second consecutive year. By the end of the decade, Zadora’s two back-to-back Razzie wins also gained her the distinction of being named the “Worst New Star of the Decade” (The Lonely Lady also won “Worst Picture of the Decade”).

Although Zadora and Riklis remain friends and the parents of two children, the pair separated in 1993, with Zadora reportedly receiving an eight-figure settlement. The actress would secure small parts in the final Naked Gun film, as well as John Waters’ Hairspray, but she quit acting in 1999. At least, we’ll always have this duet Pia recorded with Jermaine Jackson in 1984, included in the soundtrack to Voyage of the Rock Aliens. 

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