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Charles Evans (businessman)

Charles Evans was an American business leader. He co-founded the fashion house Evan-Picone in 1949 and sold it to Revlon in 1962. He and his brother-in-law, Michael Shure, then founded Evans Partnership, a real estate investment firm. In 1981, he purchased the screenplay for the comedy Tootsie (1982). His brother Robert Evans produced numerous motion pictures, including Rosemary's Baby (1968), The Godfather (1972), and Chinatown (1974).

Early life
Evans was born Charles Shapera on May 13, 1926, in Manhattan, New York, in the United States, to Archie and Florence (Krasne) Shapera. His father was a dentist with a successful practice in Harlem. He had a younger brother, Robert, and sister, Alice. Charles was something of a conformist as a teenager. He graduated from the Horace Mann School in New York City, and attended the University of Miami. during World War II, and left military service in 1946. ==Business career==
Business career
After leaving the Army, Evans found work in an aunt's clothing store in New York City as a salesman. With seed money from Evans' father, Evans and Picone formed a company that same year named Evan-Picone to make and sell their product. Picone set up an assembly line to manufacture the skirts in a storefront located at Fifth Avenue and East 46th Street. In 1962, Revlon purchased Evan-Picone for $12 million in cash. After the sale of his clothing firm, Evans spent several years looking for something to do. He remained under contract with Revlon until 1966. At one point, Evans became interested in designer kitchen appliances, like can openers. But real estate proved more attractive. Evans' sister, Alice, had married the architect Michael Shure. In 1966, Evans and Shure formed Evans Partnership, a real estate investment and development company. The firm purchased its first site (in Fairfield, New Jersey) six months later. The first office building erected by Evans Partnership was a building for Becton Dickinson, the medical equipment company. The United States Life Insurance Company invested in the firm in 1974, becoming a limited partner. Over the next several decades, Evans Partnership erected speculative office buildings and constructed headquarters for AT&T, the Bell System, Johnson & Johnson, the Singer Corporation aerospace division, and other corporations. He and Shure also financed the construction of 1099 14th Street NW in Washington, D.C.—which, at the time it was built, had the tallest tower in the city. William Webber, a financial investment consultant who worked for the firm, said that Evans' status as a fashion magnate and brother to a movie studio executive lent an air of celebrity to the firm that often convinced banks to lend Evans Partnership money to construct more speculative structures. At the time of Evans' death, Evans Partnership had constructed more than of office space. During 1979, Evans co-wrote a screenplay based on the film with director Dick Richards and screenwriter Bob Kaufman. A few months into the writing process, Richards showed it to actor Dustin Hoffman. Hoffman and Richards were partners in a company which bought and developed properties for development into films. Hoffman wanted complete creative control, and Evans agreed to remove himself from screenwriting tasks. Instead, Evans became a producer on the film, which was renamed Tootsie. Charles Evans was also interested in sailing. His yacht, the long Ondine VIII (built in 1988), was, according to the Bermuda Sun newspaper, "considered at the time one of the world's most elegant sailing yachts". ==Personal life ==
Personal life
Charles Evans married his second wife, Frances, a documentary filmmaker, in 1960. The couple had three children: Charles Jr. (1963), Melissa (1965), and Elizabeth (1966). The couple divorced in 1967. In 1975, Frances and her two daughters were asphyxiated by toxic fumes during a fire in their apartment building on East 80th Street in New York City. After the disaster, Charles Evans founded the Crusade for Fire Detection. The nonprofit educated the public about the life-saving nature of smoke detectors, and lobbied cities and states to enact fire codes requiring them in all buildings. Charles Evans married twice more, the fourth time in the 1990s. Both marriages ended in divorce. In January 2005, the 79-year-old Evans married 50-year-old model and nonprofit executive Bonnie Lynn Pfeifer. ==Death==
Death
Charles Evans died from complications of pneumonia at NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital on June 2, 2007. ==Charitable activities and honors==
Charitable activities and honors
In addition to his fire safety crusade, Charles Evans was involved in a number of charitable activities. His father, Archie Shapera, suffered from Alzheimer's disease in the late 1960s. Evans made large donations to various Alzheimer's research efforts throughout his life. He later was national director of the Alzheimer's Association. Among its more notable donations was a $1 million gift to the University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro. A rehabilitation exercise facility for cardiac and stroke patients was named the Charles Evans Pulmonary Rehabilitation Gym, and a surgical procedures suite names the Charles Evans Procedures Room in his honor. In 2010, the foundation donated $1 million to the FDNY Foundation for fire safety education. The New York City Fire Department named its fire safety headquarters at Fort Totten the Charles Evans Fire Safety Education Building in his honor. In 2011, the foundation built a state-of-the-art healthcare facility for people with developmental disabilities for a nonprofit group, Adults and Children with Learning and Developmental Disabilities Inc. The building was named the Charles Evans Health Services Center. In 2006, Fireman magazine honored Evans with an award for his fire safety efforts over the past 25 years. ==References==
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