Mary McCormack Movies
Seemingly coming out of nowhere to essay the difficult role of famed shock-jock
Howard Stern's wife in 1997's autobiographical
Private Parts, actress
Mary McCormack has since gone on to offer memorable performances in such fare as
Mystery, Alaska (1999) and
K-PAX (2001). A native of Plainfield, NJ,
McCormack's interest in performing was piqued at an early age when the aspiring, 12-year-old actress gender-bent her way through a production of
Menotti's Christmas opera Amahl and the Night Visitors. Since none of the local boys possessed the necessary vocal abilities,
McCormack donned a hat and hit the notes needed to carry the play. Subsequently performing in regional theater before continuing her education at Trinity College in Hartford, CT, it was there that
McCormack would major in English and painting while continuing to hone her stage skills. After earning her Comparative Arts degree from Trinity,
McCormack decided to further her acting career by studying at the William Esper Studio. Performances at such New York theaters as The Atlantic Theater Company were quick to follow, as was her film debut in the 1994 remake of
Miracle on 34th Street. Simultaneously appearing on the small screen in the popular crime series Murder One (1995), it wasn't long before
Private Parts would offer a stratospheric boost to her onscreen career. A cinematic love letter to
Stern's real-life wife,
Private Parts offered the burgeoning actress a complex emotional role that proved without a doubt what she was fully capable of. Follow-up roles in such high-profile fare as
Deep Impact (1998) and
Mystery, Alaska (1999) didn't quite offer
McCormack the chance to shine that
Private Parts did, though it was obvious to all who viewed her subsequent roles that her star was on the rise. The millennial turnover found
McCormack successfully alternating between drama (
Madison) and comedy (
High Heels and Low Lifes) before once again heading the Hollywood route with a supporting performance in
K-PAX. An unconventional role in director
Steven Soderbergh's
Full Frontal was quick to follow, and
McCormack was soon beginning preparation for the television miniseries based on
Soderbergh's
Traffic (which was in turn inspired by 1989 U.K. series
Traffik). ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide