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  1. Pat Moran
    American filmmaker

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  1. Patricia Moran Yeaton (born c. 1946), known professionally as Pat Moran, is an American actress and casting director active in Baltimore, having won three Emmy Awards for her work.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0602946Pat Moran - IMDb

    A long-time associate and assistant to John Waters, Pat has become the foremost casting director for major Hollywood productions filming on location in the Baltimore area as well national searches for new talent.

    • 1.52 m
    • Pat Moran
    • Casting Department, Casting Director, Actress
  3. Mini Bio. Mid-Atlantic based Casting Director, Pat Moran, C.S.A., has worked with national and international directors for many years. A longtime member of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences - she was thrice awarded the industry's highest honor, the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Casting in 2015 for HBO's Veep (2012): Season 4 ...

  4. three time emmy award winner and four time artio award winner pat moran, csa in addition to casting for feature film and prime-time television, we also cast commercials, training videos, psa's, print and more.

  5. Patricia Moran Yeaton is an American actress and casting director active in Baltimore County, having won three Emmy Awards for her work. Since early in her career, Moran has been a member of the Dreamlanders, director John Waters' regular cast of actors, notably being, along with Mink Stole and Mary Vivian Pearce, the only actress to appear in ...

  6. May 23, 2017 · Casting legend Pat Morans maximalist Baltimore townhouse. Moran cut her casting teeth working with John Waters on films like Polyester, Hairspray and Cry Baby, and more recently on hit shows...

    • 4 min
    • 166.1K
    • NOWNESS
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  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pat_MoranPat Moran - Wikipedia

    Patrick Joseph Moran (February 7, 1876 – March 7, 1924) was an American professional baseball player and manager. He was a catcher in Major League Baseball from 1901 to 1914. The year after his retirement, he became a manager, and he led two teams to their first-ever modern-era National League championships: the 1915 Philadelphia Phillies and ...

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