Randi Michel, a Lecturer at Annenberg School for Communication, heads up the New York office of management-production company Artists First and is Emmy Award-winning producer. She is a Visiting Lecturer in Cinema & Media Studies in the College of Arts & Sciences and has been active at Penn as a leader and mentor since she graduated. She is a founding member of Penn Arts & Sciences Professional Women’s Alliance and serves on the Director’s Advisory Council of Penn Live Arts and as an Alumni Ambassador.
Who are you beyond your CV and resumé?
I am a loyal Penn alum. I loved my time at Penn—it’s shaped who I am. I am a lifelong fan of cinema, a devoted mom to two great teenagers, a wife of a Penn alum, an enthusiastic lecturer in both the Cinema Studies Department and the Graduate School of the Annenberg School of Communications and their new Master’s degree in Communication and Media Industries. And… I hope a good human.
Can you tell us your arts pathway to where you are now?
I have always been a fan of the arts—all types, all media: live performance, TV, film, theater. Growing up in LA, I had a ton of internships through high school and during my summers home from Penn. When I started narrowing it down, I realized the business aspect of show business was more for me. As an arts lover, I could do great things: I could help artists and performers become what they wanted to be. So, by my junior year at Penn, was walking around telling my professors I wanted to be an agent. I think even earlier—maybe at Annenberg in my sophomore year—I mentioned to Professor Joe Turow that I wanted to be an agent, and he said, “You don’t have to know that yet.” But then I spent a summer in the mailroom at the William Morris Agency in the months before my senior year, and that cemented my desire. It was everything that I felt I had the skill set and the passion for. When I graduated Penn, I went back to William Morris and started in the training program there. And I stayed there for 22 years. So, when they say your first job’s never your last… well, for me it kind of was. But then I took a turn to management and production and left the agency business to be more hands-on with my clients and produce film and television with them. And that’s where I am now, for the last 13 years. I’ve really only had two jobs since I left Penn.