Cecily Adams(1958-2004)
- Casting Director
- Actress
- Casting Department
American actress, casting director, teacher, and theatrical director.
The daughter of nightclub singer Adelaide Adams and Get Smart (1965) star
Don Adams, she was born in Queens, New York, several months after her
parents' divorce. Raised in peripatetic fashion by her mother, she
survived a particularly Dickensian Catholic boarding school as a
toddler, and grew up primarily in Silver Spring, Maryland. The fourth
of her mother's four daughters, she had a poor upbringing, despite her
father's growing fame and wealth. She was frequently farmed out to
friends and extended-family members while her mother embarked on
various ventures. She spent a good deal of time in Costa Rica with a
family friend, and lived for a year in Italy while her mother attended
medical school there. Later, she spent summers with her father and
stepmother (dancer Dorothy Bracken) in Beverly Hills and, as a teenager, lived
there with her own mother. She attended Beverly Hills High School with
the children of such stars as Robert Cummings and Shirley Jones, and with future
stars like Nicolas Cage. She studied at the University of California,
Irvine, focusing on theatre. Her classmates included future comic star
Jon Lovitz and television writer-producer Nancylee Myatt. Following college, she
worked as a waitress and as a professional clown while attempting to
break into film and television. Encouraged by her aunt Alice Borden and
uncle Dick Yarmy, she joined the prestigious Theatre West company in
Hollywood and remained there as an actor and director for the rest of
her life. Even without the assistance of her father, she managed to
break into television in small roles in the 1980s, while appearing in
numerous plays. A chance offer of an internship with casting director
Reuben Cannon led to a parallel career as a casting assistant and then
associate with Cannon, Carol Dudley, Marc Hirschfeld, and Meg Liberman. Branching out on
her own, she occasionally partnered with casting directors Robert J. Ulrich and
Eric Dawson. She cast a number of feature films and television series.
Simultaneously, she maintained her acting career (although refusing to
accept offers or auditions for projects she herself was casting). She
made notable Los Angeles stage appearances, particularly in Nancylee Myatt's
"Two On the Aisle For Murder", Barbara Beery's "Loretta I'm Sorry" and
"Pressing Engagements" by actor Jim Beaver, whom she had married in 1989.
A starring role in Little Secrets (1991) helped that feature film win a Silver Medal
at the Houston Film Festival. Later, she replaced Andrea Martin in what would
be her most famous role, that of the acerbic Ferengi feminist "Ishka"
(or "Moogie") on the outer space series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993). At the same time, she
was active in improvisational comedy programs with The Groundlings and
the Acme Comedy Theatre. A brilliantly talented acting coach, she
taught extremely popular courses in audition technique. Despite equal
brilliance as a lyricist (usually with composer partner David Burke),
she preferred to devote her energies to stage and screen performing. In
2001, her only child was born. Barely two years later, Adams, a
non-smoker and health-advocate, was diagnosed at age 45 with advanced
lung cancer. Hoping to survive to raise her infant daughter, she
accepted a variety of experimental and innovative (though painful)
treatments, but succumbed to the disease only four months after its
discovery. She was cremated and her ashes scattered in Fern Canyon,
Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, California.