1970s–2000 During his youth, Tisch made a number of small films with
Columbia Pictures' backing. , including the feature rights to the
Mr. Magoo character (
Disney eventually made the project in 1997 as a
live-action film) and three original projects. Tisch also produced several critically acclaimed films, including
Forrest Gump,
American History X, and
Snatch. He received a Best Motion Picture Academy Award and a
Golden Globe for
Forrest Gump, which was nominated for 13 Academy Awards and won six, and remains one of the highest domestic box-office grossing films. Tisch is also the only person to have received a Golden Globe, an
Academy Award, a
Primetime Emmy Award nomination, and a
Super Bowl Ring. In 1999, he developed and produced a television pilot,
Mission Extreme, for
Film Roman and Max Degree TV, but it was canceled due to lack of international backers.
2001–present Tisch is a partner at
Escape Artists, an independently financed film production company based at Sony Pictures Entertainment that resulted from a merger between the Steve Tisch Company and
Todd Black's and Jason Blumenthal's production company Black & Blu. Escape Artists released
The Weather Man in 2005 and Columbia Pictures released
The Pursuit of Happyness in 2006. In 2005, Tisch became chairman and executive vice president of the New York Giants football team. Tisch appeared in season 5 of the reality show
Shark Tank. After the 2021 season, when the Giants finished 4-13, Tisch "pushed"
John Mara to fire head coach
Joe Judge when Mara was reportedly willing to give Judge a third season. On March 11, 2026, amid backlash from the publicization of his relationship with
Jeffrey Epstein, Tisch and his siblings,
Laurie and
Jonathan, requested the NFL's approval to transfer their ownership stakes in the Giants to their children's trusts. Until the transfer request is approved, Tisch is expected to remain involved in the franchise. ==Personal life==