Allison Shearmur, 54, ‘Star Wars’ and ‘Hunger Games’ Producer, Dies
She was not on the list.
Allison Shearmur, a studio executive and independent producer
who helped bring a string of box-office hits to the screen, including the
“Bourne” franchise, the “Hunger Games” series and the yet-to-be-released “Solo:
A Star Wars Story,” died on Jan. 19 in Los Angeles. She was 54.
The cause was lung cancer, said her husband, Edward Shearmur.
Ms. Shearmur, who died at U.C.L.A. Medical Center, had
received the diagnosis in 2016 but disclosed it only to her family and closest
associates as she continued working on movie projects, including “Rogue One”
(2016), an earlier installment in the Star Wars Anthology series (set before
the events of the original “Star Wars” blockbusters), as well as “Solo.”
“She didn’t want to be defined by her disease,” Mr. Shearmur
said. “She felt that if people knew of this very difficult detail, it would
overshadow everything else.”
For 20 years Ms. Shearmur maintained a high profile in
Hollywood. She helped to oversee feature film production at Universal Pictures
before moving on to Paramount Pictures, where she was co-president of
production, and Lionsgate, as president of motion picture production, and then
setting out as an independent producer. Among the other prominent films she
helped shepherd along were the Julia Roberts hit “Erin Brockovich” (2000); “The
Curious Case of Benjamin Button” (2008), with Brad Pitt; and the raucous
“American Pie” sex comedies.
Beyond the studios, Ms. Shearmur collected contemporary art
and photography and amassed an enviable wardrobe. Five feet tall in high heels,
she was considered one of the best-dressed women in Hollywood. She even had her
T-shirts tailored.
Her ability to wrangle filmmakers, actors and studio
executives in common purpose was cultivated in childhood, when she learned to
share and compromise as one of a celebrated set of quadruplets. Allison was
Baby C, the third of the Brecker Quads, who were born in 1963 in Manhattan to
great news media fanfare.
Ms. Shearmur attended law school at the University of
Southern California while also taking film classes. After getting her law
degree, she was hired as an assistant at Columbia TriStar. From there she moved
to a junior executive role at the Walt Disney Company, and by 1998 she had
joined Universal Pictures as a senior vice president for production.
That year, Ms. Shearmur asked the filmmaker Tony Gilroy to
help write a screenplay based on “The Bourne Identity,” Robert Ludlum’s
best-selling 1980 spy thriller.
“It was a lackluster project” that was not generating much
excitement in Hollywood, Mr. Gilroy said in an interview. He told Ms. Shearmur
he was not interested, but she persisted, pushing him to commit two weeks to
writing a script.
“She was so relentless,” he said. “She absolutely connived me
into the two weeks.”
Two weeks, he said, turned into two years, and the project
turned into a billion-dollar franchise for Universal.
Ms. Shearmur left Universal in 2004 for Paramount and, four
years later, joined Lionsgate, where she produced the first two films in the
“Hunger Games” series and served as an executive producer for the third and
fourth installments.
She left the company in 2012 to become an independent
producer. “However successful she was as a studio exec,” Mr. Shearmur said,
“this was the moment in her career when she really blossomed.”
The first project she took on as a producer was the
live-action “Cinderella,” directed by Kenneth Branagh and released in 2015.
The year before that release, Kathleen Kennedy, the president
of Lucasfilm, asked her if she would help produce “Rogue One.” It was during
her work on that production that Ms. Shearmur learned she had lung cancer.
“When you see the success of the movie and complications of
its production and the triumph of its reception, those things are to her
credit,” said Mr. Gilroy, who helped write the script. “It’s as much her movie
as anyone else’s.”
While undergoing treatment, Ms. Shearmur continued to work
with Ms. Kennedy and Lucasfilm on “Solo: A Star Wars Story,” directed by Ron
Howard and scheduled for release in May.
“That she won’t be able to see her work is unbearably sad,”
Ms. Kennedy said.
Allison Ivy Brecker was born on Oct. 23, 1963, to Rhoda and
Martin Brecker. Her mother was a schoolteacher, her father a lawyer. Allison
was born after her siblings Lisa and John but before her sister Jodi.
The children grew up in Woodmere, N.Y., on Long Island,
became known as the Brecker Quads and were cast in a series of television and
print ads for Beech-Nut baby food.
Ms. Shearmur attended the University of Pennsylvania,
graduating in 1985, and then headed to the West Coast for law school.
She met Mr. Shearmur, a British film composer living in Los
Angeles, in 2000 on a blind date. They married about a year later.
In addition to her husband, Ms. Shearmur is survived by her
sisters, Lisa Hartstein and Jodi Kahn; her brother, John; her parents; and two
children, Imogen, 15, and Anthony, 10.
Ms. Shearmur’s husband said that despite her cancer, she was
working till the end. The day before she died, he said, Ms. Shearmur attended a
meeting about visual effects for “Solo.” And on the day she died, while in the
hospital emergency room, she asked her husband to bring a certain script for
her to read. It had been written by her former assistant, and Ms. Shearmur
wanted to help it find its way onto a screen.
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