Career
He was nominated for two Oscars for Best Original Song and created Brut (cologne). Though not one of the first to use celebrities to advertise, he was one of those that made it commonplace. Born in New York City and raised in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, he trained to be a musician.
But in need of steady work, Barrie took a salesman job with the hair products company Rayette during the 1930s.
Barrie was considered to be a pioneer in the area of celebrity endorsements, as he wooed stars such as Laurence Harvey, Cary Grant, Farrah Fawcett, Joe Namath, Roger Moore, Muhammad Ali and Margaux Hemingway to pitch company products. Barrie and his Brut Productions produced the very successful film A Touch of Class (1973) which starred Glenda Jackson and George Segal, as well as Whiffs (1975), Sweet Hostage (1975), Thieves (1977), Nasty Habits (1977), and Fingers (1978).
Barrie and Sammy Cahn were nominated for the 1975 Oscar for Best Original Song, after writing "Now That We"re In Love." Barrie and Cahn had been nominated in the same category in 1973, for "All That Love Went To Waste."
Annual Straw Hat Awards - Party by Fabergé June 16, 1970 at the George Barrie Townhouse with Bette Davis.