AGGIELIFE Page 4 THE BATTALION Disney coping with recent financial difficulties People In the News BURBANK, Calif. (AP)—The Walt Disney Co. has liberally applied salve to the public relations pinpricks and larger financial wounds suffered in the last year or so. Yet even as the entertainment giant tries to heal, new sores develop. After a disappointing 1999 finan cial performance, a public airing of dirty laundry in court and other public ity headaches, Disney was hit last week by the resignation of studio chair Joe Roth — the latest in a string of execu tive departures. It all adds up to the shakiest times for the company since Michael Eisner took over 15 years ago. Disney earned what sounds like a healthy $ 1.3 billion in 1999. But that was down from $1.8 billion in 1998, itself a stagnant earnings year, and revenues showed only a marginal gain. Though the company’s stock has rebounded a bit, trading at about $35 a share, it remains off about 20 percent from its high in 1998. Considering Disney’s rapid expansion and stellar returns under Eisner previous ly, and given the comparative runup else where in the stock market, it’s small won der the House of Mickey has been “One problem is people's closets are just too full of this stuff' — Tom Wolzien Industry Analyst looking a little ramshackle to investors. While conceding the problems, Eis ner said Disney’s difficulties have been exaggerated and the company has made broad moves to promote growth. “When you’re as successful and big as we are and you’re liked as much as we are and your products have as much emotion behind them as ours, any stum ble is elevated to a complete fall,” Eis ner said. “But in the area of creation of content, there’s no company as stable as this company.” A spate of problems converged to put the company down, including overkill on Disney products and home videos, spi raling film costs, heavy spending on theme parks and operations bloated by ac quisitions, ABC television among them. Other than The Lion King, Disney’s recent animated films had not produced durable merchandising characters to join Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and the stu dio’s other icons. “One problem is, people’s closets are just too full of this stuff,” Tom Wolzien, an industry analyst for Sanford C. Bern stein & Co, said. Flat earnings are expected to continue for the first half of tliis year, but analysts said Disney should begin to show im provement after that as some of the com pany’s turnaround measures kick in. Disney is slashing administrative and film-production costs and reducing the number of licensees and product lines at studio stores to better control sales. Slow out of die gate in its onl ine and D VI) pres ence, Disney now is rolling out films in the newer video format and building up its Web presence after acquiring Internet portal Infoseek. The company Inis scrapped its peri odic video reissues of classic animated films. Most of those mov ies now will be available year-round, w ith 10 top titles, such as Snow White, being w ithheld for an annual re-release. Besides money and merchandise troubles, Disney went through cost!) settlements with Michael Ovit/, the Hollywood deal broker who departed as'Eisner’s second-in-command alter barely a year, and former studio chief Jeffrey Kat/enberg. who sued for breach of contract. Roth, Katzenberg's successor as Disney studio chief became the latest in a line of top brass to depart the compa ny in the last few years an executive exodus analysts blame on Eisner's heavy-handed management st\ le. “Have you heard of any executive who’s happy working w ith Michael I is- ner?” Robert Bucksbaum, a film indus try analyst for Reel Source Ine., said. “It’s not easy working for somebod) w ho so much likes to be in control." Eisner insists that a company the si/e of Disney inevitably gets raided and that the studio has retained a deep bench of veteran talent. Actress Redgrave to perform at Globe ■ft REDGRAVE icatre, the Globe. LONDON (AP) — Vanessa Red grave will take on one of her most intriguing roles yet — play ing the decidedly male magician- ruler Prospero in “The Tempest” at Shakespeare's this summer. “I do want to find things for great actors, and Vanessa’s a great actor, male or female." Mark Rylance, artis tic director of the Globe, said Tues day in announcing the restored Eliz abethan playhouse's summer lineup. Redgrave. 62. on “vocal rest" because of a virus, was unable to Rylance said casting Redgrave as the exiled magician, one of the Bard's most melancholy parts. MW always had a very st in people in ex ile and has often encountu pie who are in that very s ’ that Prospero is in," Ry “I think she'll bring hen of the world's troubles tot Editorial Carti treated for ca* RICHMOND. Va. 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