Entertainment 360, the management‑and‑production firm behind Game of Thrones and other marquee projects, has added another trophy name to its roster: Emmy, Golden Globe and newly minted Tony winner Sarah Paulson has signed for representation, ending a 13‑year stretch in which she handled her own management affairs while remaining with CAA for agency services.
The agreement was finalized just six months after Entertainment 360 accepted a minority investment from global private‑equity giant Carlyle, capital earmarked to scale client services and fuel “extraordinary opportunities for artists,” according to the companies’ joint statement.
Paulson’s move comes amid a wave of consolidation across Hollywood’s representation sector, where private equity has begun targeting management companies following a decade of agency roll‑ups. Analysts say the Carlyle deal positions Entertainment 360 to compete more aggressively for A‑list talent and develop in‑house productions around its clients, a strategy that has already yielded prestige titles such as Steve Jobs and the upcoming Ryan Gosling action film The Fall Guy.
For Paulson, the timing aligns with a career upswing. Last year she collected her first Tony Award for Branden Jacobs‑Jenkins’s Broadway play Appropriate, becoming one of the few performers to claim major honors on stage and screen. She is also executive producing and co‑starring in Ryan Murphy’s Hulu legal drama All’s Fair, now in post‑production for a fall launch, and is expected to reprise her guest role on FX’s The Bear.
Industry observers note that Paulson’s arrival follows recent signings of Margot Robbie and Jeremy Allen White, underscoring Entertainment 360’s ambition to leverage fresh capital into a top‑tier, cross‑platform stable. While financial terms were not disclosed, sources familiar with similar deals peg multiyear management packages for actors of Paulson’s stature in the mid‑seven‑figure range, sweetened by backend participation on any projects she generates through the company’s production arm.
A representative for Paulson said the 50‑year‑old star was drawn to the firm’s “entrepreneurial ethos,” adding that she will continue her long‑running collaboration with CAA on film and television negotiations. The signing reinforces a broader shift in representation economics, as talent increasingly seeks management partners able to package IP, secure financing and shepherd ventures across streaming, stage and digital verticals.





















































