David Hardin Beaird (August 19, 1952 – February 6, 2019) was an American film and stage director, screenwriter, and playwright. He was born in Shreveport, Louisiana.
Beaird's first feature film Octavia (1982) was about a blind woman who is raped by a motorcycle gang. His next film The Party Animal, a comedy, was released in 1984. In 1986, he came to wider prominence with the comedy My Chauffeur starring Deborah Foreman. In 1987, he shot the comedy Pass the Ammo and It Takes Two a year later.
Beaird founded the Whitefire Theatre in Sherman Oaks, California, and he staged a successful play titled Scorchers, a play he had written about a Cajun wedding night in the bayou. The play ran for at least two years and won several awards. In 1991, he adapted the play into the movie Scorchers, with Faye Dunaway, James Earl Jones, Emily Lloyd, Jennifer Tilly, and Leland Crooke in the leading roles.
In 1992, Beaird created the 13-part television series Key West in which an Ohio factory worker played by Fisher Stevens wins the lottery and goes to live the writer's life in Florida, with Hemingway as his inspiration.
In 1994, Beaird brought 900 Oneonta, a black comedy about a dysfunctional family, to the stage. New York Times: Did Someone Say Mendacity? (No, Not That Play) New York Times: A House of Horrors It had its premiere at the Lyric Hammersmith in London. It later was staged in the Old Vic and then at the West End Theatre. The play was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Play. It was the last play at the Circle Repertory Theatre in New York City before it was closed in 1996. Thomas S. Hischak, Gerald Martin Bordman: Volume Four of the distinguished American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama series offers a thorough, candid, and fascinating look at the theater in New York during the last decades of the twentieth century.p 395. Oxford University Press US, 2001. Eddie Izzard, Leland Crooke, Jon Cryer, and Douglas Henshall performed in the play.
Beaird married actress Shevonne Durkin in 2001.
Beaird's final film, released in 2005, was The Civilization of Maxwell Bright, starring Patrick Warburton, Marie Matiko, Jennifer Tilly, Eric Roberts, and Simon Callow. The film's subject, according to Beaird, was "how one person pulls the other out of hell." The film won awards at the Beverly Hills Film Festival, the WorldFest Houston and the Florida Film Festival in 2005.
Beaird died on February 6, 2019, in Tarzana, California.
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