a short illness. Paul was a man of great warmth, curiosity, humor, and intellect who used his passions for
people, art, and languages to improve the communities of New York City and Israel and make lifelong
friendships. His lifelong passions for people and art took him from a childhood in Brooklyn, to Harvard
and, ultimately, to the classical cultures of the Mediterranean, especially the Levant.
Paul began life as the oldest child of Tillie and Frank Epstein, a first-generation Jewish immigrant family
from eastern Europe. He reveled in the immigrant milieu of 1940-1950s Brooklyn New York with the
cultural and linguistic mixture of Eastern European Jews and Italian Americans. One of his biggest
regrets in life was that he did not learn Yiddish from his grandparents and parents. While at Lafayette
High School he became friendly with the actor Paul Sorvino, the former Congresswoman Elizabeth
Holtzman, and the hedge fund manager Michael Steinhardt.
Because of his academic performance in high school, Paul was admitted to Harvard College at an early
age to study English. While at Harvard, Paul was able to expand his horizons by becoming a member of
the Hasty Pudding Club and the Harvard Student Council. The American real estate tycoon Samuel J.
LeFrak was so impressed by Paul that he offered to pay for Paul’s education at Harvard if he would work
for him after graduation, it was gracious offer that Paul politely declined. While at Harvard, Paul became
a lifelong friend of the author Peter Benchley, enjoying weekend trips with Peter to Manhattan for
dinners in private clubs while wearing tuxedos. During his studies at Harvard Paul took summer jobs that
he was most proud of – as a merchant marine. It was these journeys that first took him to Israel, a
country that he loved and traveled to for the remainder of his life.
Upon graduating from Harvard College, Paul, in his usual fashion, was not sure of what to do so he went
to Harvard Law School. His fellow law school study group partners forgave his disinterested approach to
studying law and still helped him prepare for exams with class notes. The disinterest in the law also
prompted Paul to get a Master’s degree at Harvard (concurrent to his LLB) in Arabic under the tutelage
of famed Scottish historian and Orientalist, Sir Hamilton Gibb. Upon completion of his Law and Arabic
studies at Harvard, Paul enrolled at Hebrew University to maintain his student deferment from the Viet
Nam War draft and Ulpan Etzion so he could learn Hebrew that would allow him to work in the Ministry
of Finance for Israel.
Paul returned to the US from Israel at the beginning of 1967 to start his career in the law at Proskauer
Rose LLP, where he remained for his entire legal career, becoming a partner in 1974. Paul used his
education, intellect, and passion to handle copyrights for composers, choreographers, playwrights,
authors and graphic artists. For over three decades, Paul’s practice focused upon using the law to help
creative artists such as Leonard Bernstein, George Balanchine, Rodgers & Hammerstein, Gian Carlo
Menotti, and Twyla Tharp. Paul also relished in finding new talent for Proskauer. He was happiest going
to university law schools to recruit the men and women who shared his view on how law can be used for
the greater good.
Part of Paul’s novel approach to using the law to benefit artists was the creation of The George
Balanchine Trust, a then novel approach to rights management after the passing of the artist. Paul was
motivated to create the Balanchine Trust because of his love of the choreography of George Balanchine.
During the late 1960s and into the early 1980s, Paul was at virtually every performance of the New York
City Ballet, often guiding Allegra Kent to the New York State Theater for a performance. It was the
infamous Lindsey snowstorm of 1969 and having to walk through the snow to get to a performance of
the NYCB that prompted Paul to move to the Upper West Side of Manhattan, where he lived for the
remainder of his life - first in the Hotel des Artistes and then for 44 years in the famed Dakota.
Paul’s desire to help artists ultimately prompted him to co-found the non-profit Volunteer Lawyers for
the Arts (VLA) and serve as its initial Chair of the Board of Directors in 1969. The first client of VLA was
the famed American dancer, choreographer, and author Twalya Tharp. Because of Paul’s co-founding of
VLA, Leonard Bernstein approached him in the mid-1970s to ask, if in addition to working for free, would
Paul work for pay. Paul continued to work for Leonard Bernstein until his passing in 1990 and for the
family as Executive Vice-President of the Leonard Bernstein Office when Paul retired from the law in
2003 and most recently as a Sr. Consultant working on special projects. Paul was especially proud of his
latter efforts for the Bernstein office which included the Bernstein Centennial celebration, the West Side
Story 2020 revival, early work on the 2021 Steven Spielberg West Side Story film and early work in the
upcoming Bradley Cooper biopic about Leonard and Felicia Bernstein.
Other arts and education related positions for Paul included: Arts Program Consultant, The Ford
Foundation (1976-1979); Chairman, New York City Ballet Tchaikovsky Festival Committee (1981);
Chairman, New York City Ballet Stravinsky Festival Committee (1982); Director, Playwrights Horizons,
Inc. (1981-1984); Member, National Committee, Harvard University Center for Jewish Studies (1975-
1955); Director, American Friends of The Hebrew University; Governor, The Hebrew University; Director,
The Leonard Bernstein Jerusalem International Music Competitions (1994-1998); Director, American
Friends of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (1980-2010). He has also managed various matters
individual artists such as Michael Tilson Thomas, the Estate of Keith Haring, Michel Delacroix, and Pierre
Le-Tan.
Paul’s legal work often took him back to Israel. It was that legal work that resulted in many associations
with the leaders of Israel. One such event was during the early 1990s when Paul hosted a private event
for Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres, and Binyamin Netanyahu in his apartment at the
Dakota. When it was time to go to the public function, the US Secret Service delayed the departure due
to a bomb threat in the lecture hall. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin calmly sat down in the courtyard of
the Dakota to enjoy a leisurely cigarette while waiting for the clearance to go. Years later Paul’s Harvard
connections took him to the American Consul in Jerusalem for drinks. While enjoying drinks, word came
that Yasser Arafat wanted to meet with the American consul and an Israeli representative about
potential peace talks. The American consul encouraged Paul to join the talks because he would be one
of the few people fluent in English, Arabic and Hebrew. Paul graciously declined the offer because of his
lifelong general dislike of politics.
Paul’s early legal efforts in Israel soon caught the attention of Baron Edmond de Rothschild, of the
Geneva branch of the famous banking family. Paul worked for the Baron for many years in Geneva and
in Israel, most notably focusing on the Caesarea Edmond Benjamin de Rothschild Foundation activities.
Paul and the Baron got on so well that one time when Paul was unwell while returning to New York from
a vacation in France aboard the same Concorde flight with the Baron that the Baron had the flight
delayed so that medication could be retrieved for Paul.
Languages were always one of Paul’s great passions during life. During the summer of 1983 Paul took a
course in Italian at the Società Dante Alighieri in Venice. Only Paul and one other student took the class
seriously. That student, Ömer Koç, happened to be the scion of the Koç family of Turkey who remained
close friends for almost 40 years. Paul loved to visit Istanbul to marvel at mix of the ancient world with
the modern world, to see the Yalis along the Bosphorus, to wander in the Hagia Sophia ( a private tour
was arranged for Paul by Ömer of the closed Hagia Sophia), and, most of all, to be stunned by the
architecture of the Mosque of Süleyman.
Anyone who knew Paul for any period of time came to know of his love of nice clothes and parties, Paul
loved to get dressed up for a party. Paul worked collaboratively with his close friend, famed Illustrator
Pierre Le-Tan, to design annual booklets that would tell the story of the year and be an invitation to
Paul’s annual birthday party bashes, usually attended by well over 100 of his friends. The party was
attended by many of the notable performing artists he worked with or knew. People such as Lauren
Bacall, Roberta Flack, Adolph Green, Phyllis Newman, Betty Comden and the legal force of nature Floria
Lasky all attended. For decades Paul also had select parties several times per year that he called Sunday
Suppers. The theme of these all-male parties was performing arts. During one of these parties 10 years
ago, the American television personality Dick Cavett arrived uninvited. He had come to the Dakota to
attend another party but ended up at Paul’s Sunday Supper in error but stayed because he had such an
interesting conversation with Sir Peter Shaffer, of Amadeus fame.
Paul is survived by his husband/partner of 28 years Garry Parton, his sister Marilyn Mitchell, his brother
Arthur Epstein, his mother-in-law Grace Parton, his nephew and his wife Philip and Gwen Weiss, their
children Joey and Jamie, his nephew Michael and Beth Weiss, their children Jacqueline and Rebecca, and
his nephew and his wife David and Erin Parton. There will be a celebration of Paul’s life later this fall in
lieu of a funeral service. People wishing to make a donation in the memory of Paul Epstein should make
the donation to Volunteer Lawyers For the Arts.
Honors and Awards:
Distinguished Service Award {as Founder), Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts, November 7, 1994
Honored by the Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela for Work on Behalf of El Fundaci6n del
Estado para el Sistema de Orquesta Juvenel e lnfantil de Venezuela, January 11, 2008
Floria Lasky Award 2012
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