Beverly McDermott | |
Birth Name: | Beverly Horgan |
Birth Date: | 1928 or 1929 |
Birth Place: | Somerville, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Death Date: | January 19, 2012 (aged 83) |
Death Place: | Hollywood, Florida, U.S. |
Occupation: | American casting director, |
Spouse: | Jack McDermott (19??-2012; her death); 2 children |
Beverly McDermott, C.S.A. (née Horgan; 1928 or 1929 - January 19, 2012) was an American casting director whose career spanned more than forty years. Her 250 film and television credits included Lenny, Cocoon, Scarface, , and Airport 77.[1] [2]
Working from South Florida (rather than California), she became one of the state's highest profile casting directors.[1] [2] McDermott was the first Floridian casting director to join the Casting Society of America.[1] She also cast for television series which filmed in Florida, including Miami Vice from 1966 to 1970[2] and The Jackie Gleason Show, which was taped in Miami for five years.[1] She performed as a champion horse rider, performing alongside some of the best known names of the time, including Arthur Godfrey, Roy Rogers, and Dale Evans.[2]
McDermott worked separately as the Vice President of Women in Motion Pictures and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[1] McDermott and her husband, Jack McDermott, have been credited with discovering Freddy Cannon, a singer popular during the 1960s whose hits included "Tallahassee Lassie" in 1959.[1] The couple produced the comeback performance of family friend Connie Francis, which was held in 1989 at the Diplomat Hotel in Hollywood, Florida.[1]
She cast for Burt Reynolds' 1985 film, Stick.[2] and for Reynolds' short-lived television series, B.L. Stryker, which aired on ABC from 1989-90. The series was filmed in Palm Beach, Florida.[2]
McDermott, a resident of Hollywood, Florida, died at a hospice there on January 19, 2012, aged 83.[1] She was survived by her husband, Jack McDermott; daughter, Cheryl; son, Richard; and two siblings, Paul Horgan and Eileen Crowley.[1]
McDermott cast for more than 250 films, many set or filmed in Florida. Notable films include:[2]