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  • Mary V. Buck
  • Mary V. Buck
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  • In a career which spans 23 years, Buck has cast dozens of made-for-television movies. She has also worked extensively in episodic television, casting for such shows as The Wonder Years (starring Olivia d'Abo), ER, Friends, Party of Five, The Drew Carey Show (starring Diedrich Bader), The West Wing, Gilmore Girls, Smallville, Without a Trace (starring Enrique Murciano), George Lopez, Malcolm in the Middle and Two and a Half Men.
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abstract
  • In a career which spans 23 years, Buck has cast dozens of made-for-television movies. She has also worked extensively in episodic television, casting for such shows as The Wonder Years (starring Olivia d'Abo), ER, Friends, Party of Five, The Drew Carey Show (starring Diedrich Bader), The West Wing, Gilmore Girls, Smallville, Without a Trace (starring Enrique Murciano), George Lopez, Malcolm in the Middle and Two and a Half Men. Star Trek II was her first casting work for a feature film. She also cast voice actors for the animated Disney films Oliver & Company and The Little Mermaid. The latter featured the voices of DS9 actors Rene Auberjonois and Kenneth Mars. Buck was a casting director on Paramount Television's 1982 movie A Woman Called Golda, which aired two months before Star Trek II's release. Like Star Trek II, Golda starred Leonard Nimoy and was executive produced by Harve Bennett. After Star Trek II, Buck went on to work with one of that film's co-stars, Merritt Butrick, in the 1986 TV movie When the Bough Breaks. David Huddleston also had a role in this movie. Buck has been nominated for two Emmy Awards. Her first was for Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series for Malcolm in the Middle in 2000. Her second was for the TV movie Life with Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows in 2001. She has also won five Artios awards and received eleven additional nominations from the Casting Society of America. In 2004, she and Susan Edelman were honored by the CSA with the Hoyt Bowers Award in recognition of their contribution to the casting profession. April Webster received this award two years later.