Hollywood publicist Nancy Seltzer, known for Oscar campaigns and representing Garth Brooks, Julia Roberts, Sean Connery dies at 79 |
Nancy Seltzer, a veteran Hollywood publicist who helped shape how stars and films met the public, has died at 79. She spent decades guiding careers in music and film, representing names such as Garth Brooks and Sean Connery while steering awards campaigns for some of the industry’s most recognized films. Seltzer died Thursday in Los Angeles after a brief hospital stay. Her cause of death was not disclosed. She stayed far from the spotlight, but her fingerprints were on moments audiences remember, from red carpets to awards nights and long Oscar runs.Her death was confirmed in a note posted on Garth Brooks’ official website, a detail also reported by News18 and other international entertainment outlets. The note described Seltzer as a steady presence at the top of the business for decades. That description fits. She worked quietly, moved fast, and knew when to push and when to step back. Her work crossed music, opera, publishing, and film, often in the same week.
Inside Nancy Seltzer’s lasting impact on Hollywood publicity
Seltzer built her reputation on trust and calm judgment. According to News18, she became one of the most respected names in entertainment publicity by representing a wide range of talent. Her roster extended well beyond film, bringing together figures such as Brooks and Connery, writer Danielle Steel, acclaimed soprano Joyce DiDonato, and Spanish opera icon Plácido Domingo.The list went on: Whitney Houston, Julia Roberts, Bette Davis, Nicole Kidman, Johnny Depp, Hugh Jackman, Ian McKellen, Ian McShane, Stana Katic, Annette Bening, Kathy Bates, and Tom Wilkinson. Colleagues often pointed to her steady approach, especially when pressure spiked, and headlines turned harsh.Brooks summed it up in a tribute that resonated with many readers. “Public relations is the hardest job in show business. She always handled every situation with the utmost class.”
Films, awards, and the work Nancy Seltzer left behind
Seltzer launched her own firm, Nancy Seltzer & Associates, and built it as a bi-coastal operation. She got her start in New York, then made Los Angeles her base, where she became closely tied to film publicity and Oscar-season strategy.She once oversaw publicity for the Oscars red carpet and handled Academy Award campaigns for films including ‘Amadeus’, ‘Misery’, ‘The Silence of the Lambs’, ‘Philadelphia’, ‘The Shawshank Redemption’, and ‘Dead Man Walking’.Her film credits also covered hits and favorites such as ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’, ‘Breaking Away’, ‘All That Jazz’, ‘Splash’, ‘RoboCop’, ‘Spinal Tap’, ‘Aliens’, ‘When Harry Met Sally’, ‘A Few Good Men’, ‘Scream’, ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’, ‘Good Will Hunting’, and ‘Finding Forrester’.Seltzer rarely appeared on camera, but she helped decide what the world saw. Her influence remains in the artists she backed and the films that reached audiences because she knew how to tell their story.