Dylan McDermott

Actor

Birthday October 26, 1961

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Waterbury, Connecticut, U.S.

Age 62 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.83 m

#3149 Most Popular

1961

Dylan McDermott (born Mark Anthony McDermott; October 26, 1961) is an American actor.

He is known for his role as lawyer and law firm head Bobby Donnell on the legal drama series The Practice, which earned him a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Drama and a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series.

Mark Anthony McDermott was born on October 26, 1961, in Waterbury, Connecticut, to Diane and Richard McDermott.

He has a younger sister, Robin.

1967

Diane was 15 and Richard was 17 when McDermott was born; by 1967, the couple had divorced, and Diane and her two children were living with her mother, Avis Marino.

On February 9, 1967, Diane died of what was believed for decades to be an accidental gunshot wound.

1979

In 1979, McDermott graduated from Holy Cross High School in Waterbury.

McDermott's father's third wife was playwright Eve Ensler, who adopted McDermott when he was 15 and she was 23.

She later divorced his father.

Ensler, with whom McDermott has remained close, encouraged him to pursue an acting career, and began writing roles for him into her plays.

After Ensler suffered a miscarriage, he took the name Dylan, the name planned for her unborn child.

1983

He then graduated from Jesuit-run Fordham University with a BA in 1983, as well as studying under Sanford Meisner at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre in New York City.

1984

McDermott is also known for his roles in four seasons (first, second, eighth and ninth) of the FX horror anthology series American Horror Story, subtitled Murder House, Asylum, Apocalypse, and 1984 portraying Ben Harmon, Johnny Morgan and Bruce, respectively.

1987

McDermott made his screen debut in Hamburger Hill in 1987 before starring in the 1989 film Steel Magnolias opposite Julia Roberts as her husband Jackson Latcherie.

He also starred in Twister, a film about a man trying to rescue his girlfriend and daughter from a tornado storm.

The same year brought Neon Empire, a film about the rise and fall of one man in Las Vegas.

However, his first big break as an actor was in the film In the Line of Fire.

Through his connection with Clint Eastwood, McDermott was able to land his first major gig in The Practice.

1994

He also starred as narcotics crime lord Richard Wheatley on the Law & Order: Special Victims Unit spinoff Law & Order: Organized Crime; Lt. Carter Shaw on the TNT series Dark Blue; in two short-lived CBS dramas, Hostages and Stalker; and in the 1994 remake of the film Miracle on 34th Street.

In 2022, he joined FBI: Most Wanted as the new lead, replacing the departing Julian McMahon.

In 1994, McDermott starred in Miracle on 34th Street as Lawyer Bryan Bedford, which has grossed $46.3 million dollars in the Worldwide Box Office.

Despite his success on The Practice, McDermott was cut from the show.

Executive producer David E. Kelley cited "economic and creative realities" as a result of pressure from ABC to reduce costs.

McDermott did appear in the final two episodes of the final season.

1998

The show expanded McDermott's stardom, and he made People list of the "50 Most Beautiful People in the World 1998" with the magazine calling him "a prime-time heartthrob".

2000

He got this distinction again in 2000.

2004

In 2004, McDermott starred alongside Julianna Margulies four-part mini-series The Grid, playing FBI Special Agent Max Canary in an anti-terrorist unit.

2006

Returning to theater in 2006, the actor played a returned soldier suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder in the Ensler's play The Treatment.

2007

In 2007, McDermott starred in the television series Big Shots.

2008

Due to low viewership, the show was canceled in January 2008 after 11 episodes without completing the planned 13-episode season.

On October 30, 2008, TV Guide reported that McDermott was due to co-star alongside Shannen Doherty in the film Burning Palms, a satire based on Los Angeles stereotypes told through five intertwining storylines.

2009

Beginning in 2009, McDermott starred in the TNT drama Dark Blue, playing a veteran cop who heads a squad of undercover LAPD officers.

The show ran for two seasons, each consisting of ten episodes.

2012

In 2012 it was revealed that it was not an accident but that she was murdered by her then gangster boyfriend, John Sponza, who had already died by that time.

McDermott and his sister were raised by their maternal grandmother Avis in Waterbury.

As a teenager, he began taking trips to visit his biological father, who owned the West Fourth Street Saloon in Greenwich Village, New York.

McDermott worked in his father's bar, serving drinks and breaking up fights.

He also fast-talked his way into the Mudd Club and Studio 54.

McDermott was uncomfortable with himself as a teenager, saying he had a "Dorothy Hamill hairdo".

He began imitating his acting heroes, such as Marlon Brando and Humphrey Bogart, adopting their demeanor.