Predominately best known as a television actor, Dylan McDermott was pretty
much the whole leading man package – movie star good looking, but with
substantial acting chops to match. Despite seemingly hitting the jackpot in
so many different ways, things did not always come easily to the actor.
After surviving a depressing and tragic childhood, McDermott weathered a
string of underwhelming feature film roles before finally landing his Golden
Globe-winning role as Bobby Donnell, the criminal defense attorney heading
up a struggling Boston law firm on “The Practice” (ABC 1997-2004).
Born Mark Anthony McDermott in Waterbury, CT on Oct. 26,
1961, McDermott’s childhood was rocky from the beginning. The eldest of two
children, McDermott’s mother Diane was only 15 years old when she had her
son. At age 17, McDermott’s factory worker father, Richard McDermott, was
not anymore more prepared for marriage and children than McDermott’s mother.
Nonetheless the couple stayed married long enough to have a second child, a
daughter, Robin McDermott, five years her brother’s junior. By early 1967,
the young couple could no longer hold it together and separated. McDermott’s
father moved to Manhattan, gaining work as a bartender, while Diane stayed
behind in Connecticut to raise her two children, with the help of her
mother, Avis. Things took a turn from difficult to tragic in February of
1967 when Diane McDermott was shot and killed at the age of 20 – presumably
accidentally by her boyfriend while he was cleaning his gun – though he
denied it at that time, saying that she shot herself. It was ruled a
suicide, but 40 years later, her death still remained shrouded in mystery
with no clear answers. McDermott was just five years old at the time & his
sister, Robin a mere 6 months old.
Not unexpectedly, the overwhelming responsibility of raising two children
was too much for McDermott’s 22-year-old father. Fortunately maternal
grandmother, Avis Marino was there to step in and raise her grandchildren.
Despite having the love of his grandmother, the loss of his mother at such a
young age made McDermott a lonely and isolated child, who later said he felt
virtually invisible. By the time he hit adolescence, McDermott was angry,
acting out, drinking heavily and getting into fights whenever possible.
Things were looking grim for his future, when luck finally smiled on the
15-year-old delinquent when his father married playwright Eve Ensler, the
writer behind the hit play “Vagina Monologues” (1996-2001) Though she was
only nine years older than her new stepson, Ensler took young Mark under her
wing, eventually adopting the troubled youth when he was nineteen. Acting as
McDermott’s personal cheerleader, life-coach, and mentor, Ensler saw
potential in McDermott’s talent, giving him his first acting role in her
play “Believe It, See It” when he was only 15 years old (c. 1980). With
Ensler’s help, McDermott began to channel his anger into acting and away
from self-destructive behavior. Unfortunately, Ensler’s marriage to
McDermott’s father did not survive, but his beloved stepmother and the young
actor had formed a lasting bond which would continue post-divorce. In fact,
when Ensler miscarried a baby she intended to name Dylan, her stepson
changed his name to perhaps bring her some happiness. Thus, the actor known
as Dylan McDermott was born.
With a newfound ambition, McDermott renounced his wild ways and enrolled
at New York City’s Fordham University to study drama and to get immersed in
the world of theater. In 1985, he appeared in Neil Simon’s “Biloxi Blues.”
It was during one of his stage performances, that an agent spotted the
handsome actor with the piercing blue eyes and sent McDermott packing for
Hollywood. He was off to a solid start, making his feature film debut in the
Vietnam drama “Hamburger Hill” (1987) as Sergeant Frantz. He followed that
up with two consecutively disappointing roles in box office underachievers:
“The Blue Iguana” (1988) and “Twister” (1989).
Fortunately his next film was a major hit. He portrayed Julia Roberts
supportive husband in the southern tearjerker “Steel Magnolias” (1989)
alongside an all-star cast that included Sally Field, Daryl Hannah and
Shirley MacLaine. In real life, he was playing boyfriend to his co-star and
serial monogamist Roberts – that is, until she met Kiefer Sutherland on the
set of her next film, “Flatliners” (1990), and unceremoniously dumped him.
Apparently not one to hold a grudge, McDermott later teamed with Sutherland
– who at that point had also been dumped by Roberts as well – in the 1994
feature flop, “The Cowboy Way.”
After his successful turn in Steel Magnolias,” McDermott suffered through
several box office disappointments like “Hardware” (1990), and “Jersey Girl”
co-starring Jami Gertz (1992) before having the good fortune of starring as
a secret service agent opposite Clint Eastwood in the critically praised box
office success, “In the Line of Fire” (1993). His career was not the only
thing improving. McDermott’s personal life was heating up as well. That same
year he met his future wife, Shiva Rose in a Santa Monica coffee house. It
was love at first sight for McDermott. Oddly enough, Rose was not
immediately taken with the actor, but eventually he won her over. The couple
wed Nov. 19, 1995 and soon became a red carpet staple. A year later Rose
gave birth to their daughter Colette; in 2005, the couple welcomed their
second daughter, Charlotte Rose.
Continuing to rack up impressive credits – as well as to be constantly
mistaken for fellow up-and-coming actor, Dermot Mulroney – in 1994 McDermott
co-starred as the dashing love interest to Elizabeth Perkins in a misguided
remake of the classic film “Miracle on 34th Street” (1994). A year later
McDermott redeemed himself in the underrated Jodie Foster-helmed feature
dramedy “Home for the Holidays” (1995), in which he played to his strengths
as the charming Leo Fish, who tries to win over a frazzled Holly Hunter
during her holiday visit with her dysfunctional family.
McDermott’s association with Clint Eastwood benefited him yet again.
While attending a dinner to honor the screen legend, he met Jeffrey Kramer,
the president of David E. Kelly productions, who asked McDermott to audition
for a new series called “The Practice” (ABC 1997- 2004). McDermott was a
perfect fit for the role of Bobby Donnell, and helped to turn “The Practice”
into a hit, by bringing a smoldering sex appeal combined with a hard-headed
intensity that kept viewers glued to their televisions. The critics agreed,
paving the way for McDermott to win a 1998 Golden Globe award for Best Actor
in a Drama TV Series. On a roll, that same year People magazine named
him as one of its “50 Most Beautiful People.”
In 1999, he was honored again with an Emmy nomination for his “Practice”
work. During hiatus from filming his hit show, McDermott gambled and lost
when he starred in the bland big screen romantic comedy “Three to Tango”
(1999) also starring Matthew Perry and Neve Campbell. By 2003, “The
Practice” was suffering from dwindling ratings. In a surprising move, to say
the least, show creator and writer, David E. Kelly fired most of the cast –
including his star and main attraction, McDermott – in an attempt to cut
production costs. The show was finally cancelled the following year.
With his steady gig over, McDermott went back to the unpredictable world
of feature films. None of which did anything to further his career. In 2003,
he was miscast as a grimy, tattooed drug dealer in a supporting role in the
feature “Wonderland” (2003), based on the real life 1981 Los Angeles drug
murders on Wonderland Avenue. In 2005, he starred as the romantic hero
opposite Indian actress Aishwarya Rai – a.k.a. “the most beautiful woman in
the world” – in the mystical drama, “The Mistress of Spices” (2005). Even
their staggering combination of good looks could not save the film from box
office Siberia. Next, he tried his hand at the horror genre, starring in
“The Messengers” (2007) as a city slicker who moves his family away from the
dangers of urban living to a haunted house in the country. Critics skewered
the film for being a silly snoozefest rather than remotely scary.
In 2007, McDermott returned to the medium television starring in the
dramedy “Big Shots” (ABC 2007- ), which was touted as a male version of
“Desperate Housewives” (ABC 2004- ). Regardless of labels and Nielsen
expectations, he was clearly in his element, starring as womanizing
scoundrel, Duncan Collingsworth, a cosmetics company CEO who has plenty of
time to spend kvetching at the country club with his three best male
friends, as well as carry on an affair with his beautiful ex-wife. At the
same time that McDermott was making his big return to network television,
the sad news arrived via his reps that McDermott had separated from Rose,
after nearly 12 years of marriage – practically a lifetime in fickle
Hollywood.
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