Kenneth Allan Kragen was born on November 24, 1936, as the son of Billie Bercovich, a professional violinist, and Adrian Kragen, a noted tax lawyer. His birthplace has been variously cited as
Alameda or
Berkeley, California. He attended the
University of California, Berkeley and
Harvard Business School. Kragen was personal manager to numerous musicians, including country music stars
Trisha Yearwood,
Travis Tritt,
Dottie West and
Kenny Rogers for many years. When Kragen was the executive producer of
The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, he met
Kenny Rogers and The First Edition and became their manager. Kragen was the executive producer of their show
Rollin on the River. Kragen married Cathy Worthington in 1978; they had a daughter.
Charity events In 1985, Kragen helped secure the singers who appeared on the fund-raising single and album
We Are the World. Harry Belafonte contacted Kragen, who was managing
Lionel Richie and
Kenny Rogers, about putting together a concert to raise money for African causes. The group, known as
USA for Africa, included
Michael Jackson, Richie,
Bruce Springsteen,
Cyndi Lauper, Rogers, and many other pop music stars of the day. According to Kragen, who brought on
Quincy Jones to produce the song, a record company president suggested that he also organize an album of unreleased songs by the same group of artists. The project ultimately raised $64 million for poverty relief both in Africa and the US. Kragen, explaining his work on these benefit events, said, "I felt like Harry had crawled into my body and was directing everything." In 2010, Kragen founded HomeAid.net, an annual campaign and event to benefit America's homeless, with
David Mathison.
Later life Kragen continued to work as a consultant for several companies and non-profits including the Southern California Jet Propulsion Laboratory; the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation; and Rallysong100. He recently sold a reality show to
Fremantle and was in development on four other shows. He was writing with Tony Robbins the 2015 book entitled
Doing well by doing good and was producing an awards show in 2015 for the magazine
Live Happy. In 1997 Kragen was a featured speaker at, and consultant to, the Interface Corporation's annual meeting, held in Maui, which won the Global Paragon Award for strategic excellence from Meeting Professionals International. He portrayed himself in the 1996 TV movie
The Late Shift about the battle between
Jay Leno and
David Letterman for
The Tonight Show. Kragen received multiple awards, including the United Nations' Peace Medal, the Man of The Year from the Boys and Girls Clubs of Southern California, two MTV Video Awards, In 2013 he started the course "Stardom Strategies for Musicians" at the Los Angeles'
UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music. Kragen died from natural causes at his home in the
Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles, on December 14, 2021, at the age of 85. ==References==