Pascal started her career as a secretary working for producer
Tony Garnett at the independent production company Kestrel Films. From 1986 to 1987, she served as Vice President of Production at
20th Century Fox.
Sony Pictures Pascal joined
Columbia Pictures in 1988, where she was responsible for the development of films including:
Groundhog Day,
Little Women,
Awakenings, and
A League of Their Own. She left Columbia in 1994 and served for two years as the President of Production for
Turner Pictures while
Scott Sassa was president of Turner Entertainment. During her time at Turner, Pascal hired Damon Lee as a development director. Pascal rejoined Columbia in 1996 as the studio's president after Turner Pictures merged with
Warner Bros. In 1999, Pascal became Chair of Columbia Pictures. Pascal was named Co-Chairperson of Sony Pictures Entertainment in September 2006. She also served as Chairman of SPE's Motion Picture Group from December 2003 to February 2015. Pascal and SPE's Chairman and CEO
Michael Lynton led all of SPE's lines of business, including: motion picture production, acquisition and distribution; television production, acquisition and distribution; television networks; digital content creation and distribution; operation of studio facilities; and development of new entertainment products, services and technologies. Pascal has overseen the production and distribution of many films, including the
Spider-Man franchise; the
James Bond films
Casino Royale,
Quantum of Solace and
Skyfall, the first Bond film to gross over $1 billion at the worldwide box office;
The Da Vinci Code and
Angels & Demons;
Sony Pictures Animation's
The Smurfs,
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, and
Hotel Transylvania; and Best Picture Oscar nominees
American Hustle,
Captain Phillips,
Zero Dark Thirty,
Moneyball and
The Social Network. Pascal, along with Lynton, also oversaw
Sony Pictures Television, which produces and distributes television programming for multiple platforms in the U.S. and internationally. In 2013, Pascal was elected to the Board of Governors of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. She clashed with investor
Daniel S. Loeb, who accused both Pascal and Lynton of "poor financial controls." Pascal's contract with Sony was scheduled to expire in March 2015. Pascal stated during a
Women in the World discussion on February 11, 2015, that she had been "fired" by Sony.
Pascal Pictures Pascal started her own production company, with a four-year contract for funding and distribution via Sony Pictures Entertainment. The company's first production was the reboot
Ghostbusters (2016). She subsequently produced
Spider-Man: Homecoming with
Marvel Studios, in addition to theatre and television work.
TriStar President Hannah Minghella obtained rights to
Maestra by L. S. Hilton with the intent for Pascal to produce the film. Pascal Pictures made a winning bid for a memoir by
Zoë Quinn about "
Gamergate" called
Crash Override: How to Save the Internet from Itself, which was sold to Touchstone/
Simon & Schuster for publication in September 2016. Pascal and Elizabeth Cantillon optioned rights for a TriStar TV series based on books by
Eve Babitz set in 1960s-1970s Los Angeles. For a sum in the "mid-six to seven figures", Pascal made a deal for Michael Diliberti's
Athena, about a descendant of the goddess Athena who is recruited to a secret organization. Together with Sony, Pascal obtained rights for the TV crime drama
Darktown, which she plans to executive produce with
Jamie Foxx. In May 2019, it was announced that Pascal and her production company Pascal Pictures is leaving Sony and moving to
Universal Pictures for a first-look deal after 30 years at Sony Pictures. In March 2025,
Amazon MGM Studios announced that Pascal and
David Heyman would oversee the
Bond film franchise moving forward and produce future installments in the series through their Pascal Pictures and
Heyday Films banners, respectively. Shortly afterwards, she had moved from Universal to MGM for a first-look deal.
Activities and awards In 2001, Pascal was honored with the
Women in Film's
Crystal Award, which recognizes those whose work has helped to expand the role of women in the entertainment industry. Pascal has been included in
The Hollywood Reporters annual
Women in Entertainment Power 100 list and
Forbes ranking of the World's 100 Most Powerful Women. , she was ranked as the 28th most powerful woman in the world by
Forbes, up from 36th in 2013. In March 2024, Pascal was one of 1000 Jewish figures in Hollywood who signed an open letter denouncing
Jonathan Glazer's acceptance speech at the 96th Academy Awards, in which Glazer condemned the
Israeli occupation of the Palestinian Territories and new comparisons between Israel and
Nazi Germany. ==Philanthropy==