In 2022, Patricof wrote "No Red Light," about his career in venture capital, government, philanthropy, the arts, and politics. In its review,
The Wall Street Journal noted that Patricof wrote about his failures as well as his success, notably passing on an early opportunity to invest in a coffee shop named
Starbucks. Patricof began investing in the theater in 1959 when he backed first-time Director Peter Bogdanovic in the Off Broadway production of Clifford Odette's,
The Big Knife. After that, he joined the board of King's Road Productions which produced
The Last Picture Show that won two Academy Awards in 1972. He subsequently joined the board of directors of Cinecom that produced Merchant Ivory's
Room With A View which won an Oscar in 1987. In 1978, he invested in the Manhattan Theater Club's production of
Ain’t Misbehavin’. Most recently he invested in the musical revival of the Billy Wilder film,
Some Like it Hot, Tom Stoppard's
Leopoldstadt, and Lin Manuel Miranda's
Hamilton. His musical productions include a folk concert at Town Hall in New York City in 1962 starring Oscar Brand and Jean Ritchie. In 1967, he co-produced a music and light show featuring Bobby Goldstein and Joshua White in The Lightworks, which was featured at the Parrish Museum in Water Mill, New York in 2020. Patricof has served on the Boards of The Brooklyn Academy of Music, the New York Academy of Science, the Actors Studio School, and the New York Academy of Science. ==Personal life==