Allison Shearmur

Allison "Alli" Ivy Shearmur (née Brecker; October 23, 1963 – January 19, 2018) was an American film executive and producer. Representing companies including Walt Disney Studios, Universal Pictures, Paramount Pictures and Lionsgate, her production work involved such films as the American Pie and Jason Bourne franchises, The Hunger Games films, the live-action remake of Cinderella, as well as the Star Wars Anthology films Rogue One and Solo.

Career
Shearmur attended the University of Pennsylvania Law School and the USC Gould School of Law, becoming a member of the State Bar of California. While at university, she entered a campus contest and won first prize, lunch with Stanley Jaffe, an executive at Columbia Pictures. Jaffe became a lifelong mentor and role model for Shearmur.

After graduation, Shearmur was hired from a young executive management initiative as a manager in the comedy development department at Columbia TriStar. She worked at Disney as a vice-president between 1994 and 1997, including movies such as George of the Jungle. She then joined Universal as an executive vice-president of production, and worked on Along Came Polly, Erin Brockovich and the American Pie and Bourne series.

Shearmur also worked for two years at Paramount as co-president of production, where she was responsible for the studio's literary productions such as The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Spiderwick Chronicles, Stop-Loss, Zodiac, Dreamgirls, Charlotte's Web, Nacho Libre, and Failure to Launch. In 2008, she moved to Lionsgate as president of motion picture production. While at Lionsgate she produced the first two Hunger Games movies, then executive produced the final two.

Shearmur formed her own production company, Allison Shearmur Productions. In 2017, her company executive produced the television movie Dirty Dancing.

Personal life
Shearmur was born a quadruplet to Martin and Rhoda Brecker, and grew up in a traditional Jewish household. She married film composer Edward Shearmur, with whom she had two children Imogen Shearmur and Anthony Shearmur. In 2014, the Shearmurs had a house featured in House Beautiful.

Allison Shearmur died of lung cancer on January 19, 2018 at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles. She was 54.