Born Jul 10, 1939 • Died Aug 10, 2022
Last updated on August 20, 2025
From NYU School of Law:
John Eastman ’64, an entertainment lawyer who represented Paul McCartney, the family of Willem de Kooning, and the estate of Francis Bacon, among other clients, passed away on August 10 at the age of 83. “John was a great man,” McCartney wrote in an Instagram post announcing Eastman’s death. “One of the nicest and smartest people I have had the good luck to have known in my life.”
“John was a brilliant and trusted counselor to his clients and a treasured member of the NYU Law community,” Dean Troy McKenzie says. “His vision and his kindness will be greatly missed.”
Throughout his long career, Eastman remained actively involved with the Law School, serving on his class’s Reunion Committee in 1999 and 2009 and participating in several Dean’s Roundtables. A Weinfeld Benefactor, he helped support NYU Law’s reading group program, which allows 1L students to connect with faculty members and other students on a topic of shared interest.
As co-president of the Willem de Kooning Foundation’s board of directors, Eastman helped arrange the loan of de Kooning’s painting The Key and The Parade from the foundation to the Law School. The work, a bold composition of sweeping orange and blue lines, has been on display in the NYU Law Library since 2019. At a reception to celebrate the painting’s arrival at the library, Eastman discussed the connections between law and art. “I’ve long held the belief—nurtured actually in this room by my mentor at the Law School, Norman Dorsen—that the law at its best really has an elegance intellectually,” he said.
Eastman formed the law firm Eastman & Eastman with his father as a recent graduate of NYU Law, entering the field of entertainment law in order to “do something different,” as he told a Law School audience in 2004. One of his earliest clients was McCartney, who had married Eastman’s sister Linda; Eastman advised the musician in the legal disputes that arose from the breakup of the Beatles and afterward during McCartney’s solo career. Eastman took pride in representing the interests of artists, he said in his 2004 talk. “As a lawyer,” he said, “you have the power to affect those things that are important to you.”


My dear brother-in-law, John Eastman, has passed away. Having known each other for over 50 years it is an extremely sad time for me, and our families.
John was a great man. One of the nicest and smartest people I have had the good luck to have known in my life.
Not only did he help me massively in my business dealings as my lawyer but as a friend he was hard to beat.
His sense of humour always shone through in everything he did and his devotion to his family was supreme.
We had so many fun times together through the years, but when the time came to be serious, he was unbeatable.
There is so much more that can be said of his incredible qualities, but words can hardly describe his passion for life and our affection for this amazing man. He will be sorely missed but always held dear in the hearts of those of us who knew and loved him.
See ya Johnny!
Love Paul
Paul McCartney
Notice any inaccuracies on this page? Have additional insights or ideas for new content? Or just want to share your thoughts? We value your feedback! Please use the form below to get in touch with us.