Morry Schwartz

Morris Zoltan "Morry" Schwartz, AM (born 11 March 1948) is an Australian property developer and publisher based in Melbourne. He is the owner of Black Inc., the publisher of the influential Quarterly Essay, The Monthly and The Saturday Paper.[1][2]

Morry Schwartz

AM
Born (1948-03-11) 11 March 1948
Vámospércs, Hungary
OccupationProperty developer and publisher
OrganizationPan Urban
Schwartz Publishing

Early life

Morry Schwartz was born in 1948 in Vámospércs, Hungary. His Jewish family soon moved to Israel, but after 10 years decided to move again to Australia to avoid military service. Schwartz started studying architecture at the University of Melbourne but dropped out during the second year to become a movie distributor for independent films.[2]

Book and magazine publishing

In 1971, at the age of 23, Morry started Outback Press, publishing poetry and fiction.[2]

In the 1980s he established Schwartz Publishing, mainly publishing American self-help books. Its all-time bestseller was Life's Little Instruction Book with 300,000 copies sold.[1]

In the 1990s Schwartz Publishing set up the Black Inc imprint, publishing since 2001 the Quarterly Essay and, since 2005, The Monthly.[1] On 1 March 2014 he launched The Saturday Paper,[3]and in 2017 Australian Foreign Affairs, a journal discussing foreign policy.[4]

Property development

In 1974 he moved into the construction and property development industry. His company first named Aardvark was later renamed Pan Urban.[5]

Schwartz is currently the major stakeholder of Pan Urban. [6] Its portfolio includes the St Falls, Silverski and Huski hotels in Falls Creek, Victoria, the Watergate towers in Docklands and the refurbishment of the Melbourne General Post Office.[1][7] Several of these projects have been designed by his stepdaughter, architect Zahava Elenberg.[8]

In 2009, he set up a real estate website, listing only houses for sale valued at over $1 million.

gollark: I didn't claim you did. This is a relevant point when discussing Turing-completeness.
gollark: No language functionally is due to memory limits, but quirks of the C spec directly limit addressable memory to a finite value while other language specs don't.
gollark: Technically, C is not Turing-complete.
gollark: They should also have ominous blinking lights on them and many graphs.
gollark: The screens are cooler but also probably less practical.

References

  1. Susan Wyndham: "Developer adds another story" in The Sydney Morning Herald, 12 June 2004
  2. Paul Barry: "Morry Schwartz" Archived 22 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine, in The Power Index, retrieved 10 February 2014
  3. Heffernan, Madeleine (28 February 2014). "'Right time' for The Saturday Paper, says publisher Morry Schwartz". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
  4. Samios, Zoe (10 August 2017). "Morry Schwartz launches foreign affairs journal, Jonathan Pearlman joins as editor". Mumbrella. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  5. Lucinda Schmidt: "Profile: Morry Schwartz" in The Brisbane Times, 29 April 2009
  6. The Homepage: "Our Team", retrieved 10 February 2014
  7. Scott Elliott: "Schwartz to sell snow holding" in The Australian Financial Review,14 July 2011
  8. Ashley Crawford: "Daring to dream", in The Age, 6 May 2005
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.