Sony Pictures co-chairman Amy Pascal and actor Jonah Hill at the premiere of 22 Jump Street on June 10, 2014
Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Amy Pascal, the longtime co-chairman at Sony Pictures, will step down from the job she's held for roughly 15 years to launch her own production company, the studio announced in a release on Thursday.
The decision comes two months after Sony Pictures suffered a massive and unprecedented hack that plunged the studio into a month of embarrassing and damaging stories, especially for Pascal. The ordeal reached a climax of sorts when Sony pulled The Interview from movie theaters after the group that claimed responsibility for the hack issued a threat against theaters showing the movie. The Interview was eventually released in a limited number of theaters, and received a far more lucrative digital release on many VOD platforms — but it could still take years before the film could see any substantial profits for Sony.
The hacking scandal was a true nightmare for Pascal, who faced a level of intense scrutiny — including from the White House — that most studio chiefs never face. In a statement to the press regarding her decision to leave the position, however, Pascal noted that she had been discussing it with her fellow co-chair Michael Lynton "for quite some time," and that, after finalizing Sony's slate for the next two years, "it felt like the right time to transition into this new role."
“I have spent almost my entire professional life at Sony Pictures and I am energized to be starting this new chapter based at the company I call home,” Pascal said. Her new company, which will focus on film, television, and theater, will be based at Sony's Culver City, California campus.
The studio has not yet made an announcement about who could potentially succeed Pascal.
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