James Cusumano
- Producer
- Soundtrack
James A. Cusumano has worn many hats throughout his highly successful
and eclectic career; starting out as a 50s rock n' roll recording
artist, then moving on as a research scientist, and finally a Silicon
Valley entrepreneur who founded three public companies. Now he is a
film producer, who with his wife, Jane, formed Chateau Wally Films.
Chateau Wally's mission is to establish a reputation of producing
high-quality independent feature films that reflect the human condition
and touch the heart. What Matters Most (2001) is Chateau Wally's first feature. It also
marks Cusumano's return to the entertainment world after his successful
run in the energy and pharmaceuticals industries. As a rock star, he
sold several million hit records in the late 1950s and early 1960s. His
iconoclastic repertoire includes "Short Shorts Twist," "Lovers Never
Say Goodbye," and the successful album, "Newies But Oldies." Cusumano
was intrigued at the prospect of returning to the entertainment
industry and applying the entrepreneurial skills and experience he
acquired in building three public companies. He found it similar to the
situation that existed when he entered the energy and pharmaceuticals
industries. He sees the film business as one that is primed for change
and offers unusual opportunities to new players who understand the
dynamics and timing of impending changes. Capitalizing on his wife's
skills in screenplay writing and her desire to direct films, he
launched Chateau Wally Films as his fourth entrepreneurial enterprise.
He is also executive producer for a new documentary, "One Tough
Biscotti: A Woman, A Film And A Fight," which chronicles his wife's
journey simultaneously fighting metastatic breast cancer and creating
her first feature film. Dr. Cusumano, born April 14, 1942, obtained a
BA in 1964 and a Ph.D. in physical chemistry in 1967 from Rutgers
University. Upon graduation, he served at Exxon Research and
Engineering Company from 1971 to 1974 as the Director of Catalysis
Research and Development at their Corporate Research Laboratory. He
co-founded Catalytica, Inc. in 1974 in the heart of California's
Silicon Valley. Under his leadership, the corporate mission was and is
to significantly improve the way manufacturing is carried out in the
pharmaceutical and energy industries through economically advantageous
and environmentally friendly catalytic technologies. Catalytica
Pharmaceuticals, Inc. manufactures numerous drugs for other major
pharmaceutical companies at its plants in California, Michigan and
North Carolina. Examples include AZT for treating AIDS, Zyban for
smoking cessation, Wellbutrin and numerous over-the-counter drugs such
as Sudafed and Neosporin. With the sale of Catalytica Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., he gave up his position as chairman to focus on his efforts in
Chateau Wally Films. Dr. Cusumano has authored more than 50 papers, 20
patents, 8 book chapters, and a book entitled Catalysis in Coal
Conversion. He has lectured extensively throughout the United States,
Europe, and Japan. Dr. Cusumano appeared in the PBS TV production on
nanotechnology, "Little by Little." He has been a lecturer at Stanford
University and is the 1989-1990 recipient of the Charles D. Hurd
Lectureship at Northwestern University. Dr. Cusumano is an advisor to
the Fulbright Scholar Program and is listed in Who's Who in America and
Who's Who in the World. On the personal front, Dr. Cusumano enjoys
hiking and mountaineering and has had the good fortune to ice-climb
14,160-foot Mt. Shasta in Northern California, 14,410-foot Mt. Rainier
in Washington and 19,340-foot Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa,
among many others. His wife, writer/director Jane Cusumano, passed away
on June 1, 2001. He has two grown daughters, Actress, Polly Cusumano
and Doreen Nelsen, three grandchildren, and lives on a horse and citrus
ranch in Ojai, California.