Brooks Barnes by ﻿ After 18 years at Sony Pictures, the last 11 as studio boss, a position that made her one of the most powerful people in Hollywood, Amy Pascal had her life blown apart. First came the 2014 cyberattack that ravaged Sony. Her private emails were stolen, published online and picked apart by the news media. Aired were her candid assessments of star behaviour (Leonardo DiCaprio, "despicable"), her racially insensitive jokes about President Barack Obama's imagined preference for black-themed movies (the slave drama Django Unchained), her painfully personal shopping list (Mr Bubble bath bomb tray, $18). Then, in February 2015, Sony ousted her – not over the embarrassing emails, although those didn't help, but because her movie operation had failed to keep pace with an entertainment industry shift toward franchise films. For Pascal, this was true devastation: she had been publicly classified as outdated, an executive from another era, when stars and stories mattered more than computer-generated visual effects.

Pascal has regained her professional footing after her final years at Sony, when she found hits such as "American Hustle".

What, she thought with not a small bit of fear, do I do now?

"When you are the head of a studio, you are smart and fabulous and funny and good-looking," Pascal said last month in Los Angeles, from the sofa in her Brentwood living room. "I didn't want to just be me again. The idea of that was kind of terrifying." She added, "That job was my identity." Getting fired is bruising no matter how big the gig, but it packs an extra punch in Hollywood, a realm where power is assessed second by second. To make Pascal's situation worse, her mother and father, with whom she was quite close, died in quick succession not long afterward. Now comes the plot twist.

Pascal was a force behind "Spider-Man: Homecoming", which has arrived in blockbuster fashion from Sony. Chuck Zlotnick/AP

'Life is better now' Pascal, a 59-year-old woman in an industry rife with sexism and ageism, seems to have emerged stronger and happier, having re-invented herself as a producer through her company, Pascal Pictures. She will deliver three films to three different studios this year, with more than a dozen more movies on the assembly line. On a personal level, after a lot of soul-searching, some in a therapist's office, she has tried to see the hack as freeing. After all, she has no more secrets. "My life is better now," she said, pausing to pat her labradoodle, Sky, as scented candles burned nearby. "I would have never imagined I'd say that. But it's the truth." Only Pascal knows how she is doing on the inside. But there is no doubt that she has regained her professional footing after her final years at Sony, when she found hits such as 22 Jump Street and American Hustle but also backed bombs such as After Earth, White House Down and How Do You Know.

Tom Rothman, who replaced Pascal as Sony's movie chairman, describes her as 'one of the best producers this business has ever seen'. Jason Merritt/Getty

Pascal was a force behind Spider-Man: Homecoming, which arrived in blockbuster fashion this month from Sony. She and Scott Rudin produced Molly's Game, a movie set in the world of underground poker that is Aaron Sorkin's directing debut and will roll out through STX Films on November 22, the heart of Oscar season. Pascal is also producing Steven Spielberg's next film, a Nixon-era newspaper drama called The Papers, which is already white-hot as an Oscar contender, in part because of President Donald Trump's war with the news media. Starring Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks, it will be released by 20th Century Fox on December 22. Pascal thinks she has finally cracked Barbie as a live-action comedy; negotiations are underway with an Oscar-winning actress for the tonally tricky title role. Pascal Pictures is also working on a Spider-Man spinoff called Silver & Black, about two female characters, Silver Sable and Black Cat; an adaptation of the hacker novel The Girl in the Spider's Web, with Claire Foy (The Crown) playing the lead; and a drama directed by Christopher McQuarrie and based on Blood in the Water, a Pulitzer Prize-winning account of the 1971 Attica prison uprising.

Pascal during her time at Sony with actor Michelle Yeoh (left) and Steven Spielberg at the premiere of "Memoirs of a Geisha". Pascal is producing Spielberg's next film, "The Papers". Vince Bucci/Getty

Pascal 'one of the best' "Amy has an extremely sharp film mind, but it's really her passionate advocacy for scripts and for talent that will make her, I believe, one of the best producers this business has ever seen," said Thomas E. Rothman, who succeeded Pascal as Sony's movie chairman. Rothman, who has known Pascal for roughly 30 years, since they had adjoining offices at Columbia Pictures as junior executives, added, "Not only is she a survivor, she's stronger than ever." Really? Or was he just being nice? "I'm not that nice!" Rothman said with a laugh. "In all seriousness, she has moved on."

Oprah Winfrey stood by Pascal during the cyberattack revelations, despite Pascal's distasteful jokes about President Barack Obama. AP

Without question, Pascal got a running start as a producer. Her Sony exit package, worth as much as $US40 million ($51 million) over four years, gave her dibs on some of the studio's biggest projects, including Spider-Man: Homecoming. Sony also pays Pascal Pictures an additional $US9 million annually for overhead costs and discretionary script acquisition – the kind of rich deal that has largely vanished in a cost-conscious Hollywood. Even so, the transition from studio mogul to producer is one of the most difficult pivots in show business. Producing requires hustle in a way that running a studio does not. Mustering the necessary self-motivation often proves impossible for older studio royals used to waving a sceptre. The best producers put their own egos aside and let others shine. Climbing corporate rungs usually requires the opposite tactic. Consider Sidney J. Sheinberg. After decades atop Universal Pictures, where he found mega-hits such as Jurassic Park and Back to the Future, Sheinberg stepped aside in 1995 and was given a lavish producing deal. But the skills that made him a successful studio boss did not translate to producing. He floundered, delivering one bomb after another, including McHale's Navy and Slappy and the Stinkers. At least so far, Pascal has not fallen into a similar trap. "It has been a challenge to be patient and allow myself to learn, especially at this ripe age," she said. "There's some discomfort in that. Starting over again means you have to shut up and listen. But you don't want to because you want to show everybody that you know something even when you don't." She continued: "You think you're making a movie when you're a studio executive, but you're not. The bigger the job you have in Hollywood, the less you are actually connected to the creative process. You're in budget meetings and talking about head count all day. Your life is reactive." Excited and engaged In multiple interviews, Pascal came across as excited and engaged. She was not especially interested in rehashing the hack, but she did not shy away from it, either.

Amy Pascal at her summer rental home in New York: 'My life is better now. I would have never imagined I'd say that. But it's the truth.' Andrew White/NYT

Even with almost three years to make sense of the cyberattack, which foreshadowed corporate and governmental hacking that has now become much more commonplace, Pascal said the events of late 2014 still seem too absurd to be true. The stealing and dissemination of some 38 million Sony files – medical records, salary lists, five entire movies – was described by the FBI as likely retaliation by North Korea over a Sony comedy, The Interview, about the fictional assassination of the dictator Kim Jong Un. Before the episode was over, Sony became entangled in a censorship fracas, with free-speech advocates and even Obama criticising the studio for temporarily shelving The Interview as theatre chains balked at showing it. Hollywood stood largely silent, allowing Sony and Pascal to twist in the wind. Was she upset that more people did not publicly support her at the time? "People were scared, and I understood that – I understand fear," she said. "I forgave people, as I hope people forgave me." She added, "A lot of people did stand by me, including people who didn't have to." Oprah Winfrey was one, despite Pascal's distasteful jokes about Obama, which contradicted her long track record in backing black stars and filmmakers. Another was Adam Sandler, whom Pascal bashed in one hacked email. Has she sifted through the stolen Sony emails posted online? "I have never gone through it," Pascal said. "But I assume that I'm the only one who hasn't." More family time

Christian Bale pulled out of the lead role in "Jobs" because he was 'coming up empty in figuring out part', according to a leaked Sony email by Amy Pascal. Stephen Lovekin/Getty

Pascal, who is married to Bernard Weinraub, a former New York Times reporter, and has a 17-year-old son, Anthony, said she was thrilled to have more time to spend with her family. She even has a fun new wardrobe. The conservative corporate ensembles and pearls she wore as a studio chief have given way to bohemian outfits like a crushed-velvet wide-legged jumpsuit (worn to the Spider-Man: Homecoming premiere) and funky platform sneakers with fat pink laces. "I'm at peace," she said. I noted that some of her producing projects seemed to suggest otherwise, including an adaptation of Crash Override, Zoe Quinn's account of being targeted by the #GamerGate online mob. Pascal also has the film rights to Noah Hawley's novel Before the Fall, which she described as being about "the media building you up and then destroying you". Maybe she was still working through some issues? "I will always carry what happened with me," she said. "There's no other way. But you scrape as much grace as you possibly can off the ground and you move forward." Bryan Lourd, the Creative Artists Agency super agent and one of Pascal's closest friends, raised his voice when I asked him whether she seemed fully engaged as a producer. "I literally got nine emails from her yesterday about a phone call that she wanted to set with an actor," he said. "I finally told her she had to stop." He sighed. "But did the call get set? Yes, it did." Lourd declined to identify the actor, and so did Pascal when I followed up with her. But the only question I really cared about was this one: Pascal is back on email? "Oh, I went right back to emailing all the time," she said. "I try not so say stupid things anymore. But what was I going to do? Write letters? Only talk on the phone, which I hate?"

Pascal's changing roles have led to a fun new wardrobe. Corporate ensembles have given way to bohemian outfits like this crushed-velvet jumpsuit worn to the "Spider-Man: Homecoming" premiere. Jordan Strauss/AP

Path to the top Pascal climbed from a small production company, where she started as a secretary, to a palatial Sony office that once belonged to Louis B. Mayer. Unlike many of her male counterparts in Hollywood, she did not benefit from family connections. The daughter of a bookstore-running mother and an economist father, Pascal got her first job by answering a classified ad after attending the University of California, Los Angeles, where she majored in international relations, with a specialty in Chinese foreign policy. As she rose in Hollywood, gaining attention in the late 1980s for spotting the script that became Earth Girls Are Easy, with Geena Davis, and working on the drama Less Than Zero, Pascal logged time for a series of relentless bosses. Rudin, the producer, was one, back when he ran production at Fox. (The Sony hack also exposed him as making racial jokes about Obama's movie preferences; he and Pascal traded emails on the subject. Like Pascal, he apologised.) "I never forgot that early training," Pascal said. "When in doubt, work." So, when she lost the Sony throne, Pascal dove into producing as a remedy. Yes, she spent some time licking her wounds and leaning on family for support, including her younger sister, Jenny Pascal, a Los Angeles psychotherapist. But she set up a new office within days of her Sony departure and joined Ivan Reitman to remake Ghostbusters. It steered her mind away from self-pity, kept her focused on the future and soothed her bruised ego. Ghostbusters did so-so at the box office, collecting $US229 million worldwide, in part because online trolls attacked the film for casting women in the lead roles. But Pascal already had her next project, joining the Marvel wunderkind Kevin Feige to restart the Spider-Man series. The film's opening weekend in the United States raked in $US117 million but – as with the other Spidey movies – takings dropped drastically for the second weekend. But it still has the makings of a hit; it is doing well in international markets and a sequel is already planned with Pascal returning as a producer. (She is also producing an animated Spider-Man spinoff.) Feige, who runs Marvel Studios, said Hollywood now sees Pascal as a role model for dealing with adversity. "There were times when someone would email us about something, and she would respond with detailed notes at 2am before I even had a chance to look," he said. "She's Amy Pascal. She has nothing to prove. But she believes she does." For her part, Pascal described her collaboration with Feige as an apprenticeship. "I learned about 'plussing' on this movie," she said. "That's Marvel's favourite term. They look at something that is pretty good and figure out how to make it even better."

Amy Pascal does not shy away from talking about the leaked Sony emails: 'I will always carry what happened with me ... But you scrape as much grace as you possibly can off the ground and you move forward.' Getty

Wait. Wasn't it her job at Sony to make the best movies possible? "Marvel is unique because it specialises," she said. "When you're running a big studio, you're pulled in a thousand different directions and you sometimes forget that the most important thing is the movie. I don't like saying that, but it's the truth." Female empowerment Pascal's producing projects are varied: superhero movies (Silver & Black), prestige-minded dramas (The Papers), bouncy comedies (Barbie). But almost every film on her docket involves female empowerment. Embarrassed by media attention on its stark gender imbalance and encouraged by blockbuster results for movies such as Wonder Woman, Hollywood is racing to champion female directors and characters. Pascal was often at her best as a studio executive when she was pushing ahead films dismissed by male counterparts as "chick flicks": A League of Their Own (1992, a home run); Little Women (1994, Winona Ryder at her peak); Charlie's Angels (2000, a sequel-spawning hit); Julie & Julia (2009, Meryl Streep's 16th Oscar nomination). "I'm not trying to correct or counterbalance," Pascal said, referring to male-dominated Hollywood. "I'm interested in women because I am a woman, and that's what I understand." To illustrate her point, she turned to The Papers, which stars Streep as Katharine Graham, who hesitantly took over The Washington Post after her husband's suicide in 1963. The screenplay finds Graham trying to catch up to The New York Times, which published the Pentagon Papers in 1971, enraging President Richard M. Nixon and leading to a landmark First Amendment court case, which prohibited the government from ordering that leaked information not be published. "It's first and foremost a movie about Katharine Graham, a woman who went from being a little bit of a mouse to a lion," Pascal said. "And that, to me, was obviously really interesting. She had to struggle to decide to speak up."