Beverly Setlowe(1935-2012)
- Additional Crew
Beverly Jean Setlowe was a longtime film and TV production coordinator,
who late in life became a noted wildlife photographer.
Beverly Setlowe began her entertainment industry career in the 1960s as a publicist for ABC-TV in San Francisco, promoting nationally syndicated shows shot there, including those starring Tennessee Ernie Ford and Gypsy Rose Lee. She moved to Los Angeles, when her husband Rick Setlowe, then Variety's S.F. correspondent, was appointed the paper's lead film critic.
Beverly segued into television and motion picture production, most notably on the Emmy-winning "Eleanor and Franklin" and "Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years" and then with DGA and Motion Picture Academy president Arthur Hiller's Golden Quill Prods.
Setlowe graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute, later doing graduate work at UCLA. While at the Art Institute she interned as a photographer on the location shoot of the 1968 film "Bullitt." Her candid studies earned its own exhibit at the Art Institute's Diego Rivera Gallery. Subsequent work and photo essays were published in the San Francisco Chronicle-Examiner Sunday rotogravure California, the art magazine San Francisco Camera and TV Guide.
She first became a volunteer in the Wildlife Waystation while still working in film production. Her studies of the animals at the Wildlife Waystation have been widely published. She died in Toluca Lake, California in 2012 after a long battle with metastatic breast cancer. At the time of her death, Setlowe was editor of the Wildlife Waystation magazine.
Beverly Setlowe began her entertainment industry career in the 1960s as a publicist for ABC-TV in San Francisco, promoting nationally syndicated shows shot there, including those starring Tennessee Ernie Ford and Gypsy Rose Lee. She moved to Los Angeles, when her husband Rick Setlowe, then Variety's S.F. correspondent, was appointed the paper's lead film critic.
Beverly segued into television and motion picture production, most notably on the Emmy-winning "Eleanor and Franklin" and "Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years" and then with DGA and Motion Picture Academy president Arthur Hiller's Golden Quill Prods.
Setlowe graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute, later doing graduate work at UCLA. While at the Art Institute she interned as a photographer on the location shoot of the 1968 film "Bullitt." Her candid studies earned its own exhibit at the Art Institute's Diego Rivera Gallery. Subsequent work and photo essays were published in the San Francisco Chronicle-Examiner Sunday rotogravure California, the art magazine San Francisco Camera and TV Guide.
She first became a volunteer in the Wildlife Waystation while still working in film production. Her studies of the animals at the Wildlife Waystation have been widely published. She died in Toluca Lake, California in 2012 after a long battle with metastatic breast cancer. At the time of her death, Setlowe was editor of the Wildlife Waystation magazine.