Everett De Roche | |
Birth Place: | Lincoln, Maine, United States |
Birth Date: | 1946 |
Death Date: | 2014 |
Occupation: | Screenwriter |
Known For: | Thrillers, horror |
Everett De Roche (1946–2014) was an American-Australian screenwriter who worked extensively in the Australian film and TV industry. He was best known for his work in the thriller and horror genre, with such credits as Long Weekend, Patrick, and Roadgames.
De Roche was born in Lincoln, Maine, and moved to San Diego with his family when he was six. De Roche emigrated to Australia with his wife when he was 22 in 1968, and worked as a journalist for the Queensland Health Education Council.
De Roche wanted to be a writer and wrote a spec script for Division Four. Nine months later he received a telegram inviting him to write for the show. From 1970-74 he was a staff writer at Crawford Productions, mainly working on police shows, then he freelanced.
In the late 70s and early 80s he established himself as the leading screenwriter of thrillers in Australia.[1] [2]
He often worked with director Richard Franklin who said of him:
Everett is a very inspirational writer... Everett gives one too much of everything and you don’t always know what to use. You start editing down and you end up with words and single lines of dialogue that were once scenes. That is maybe how this problem, as you see it, comes about. But that only has to do with Everett’s extraordinarily fertile imagination and his writing speed.[3]
De Roche had cancer during the last three years of his life and died of the disease in 2014.[4] He was survived by his wife, six daughters and several grandchildren.[5]
During De Roche's career he received nominations for two AFI Awards; one for Best Adapted Screenplay for Razorback, and one for Best Original Screenplay for Patrick.
In 2014, De Roche was posthumously awarded the Dorothy Crawford Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Profession.