Former LaMoille woman wins Emmy

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Sheila Steele-Taylor (right), 33, of Austin, Texas, formerly of LaMoille, stands with her boss, Beth Sepko of Beth Sepko Casting, following their Emmy win Sept. 8 in Los Angeles for outstanding casting for a drama series for their work on “Friday Night Lights” on NBC. (Photo contributed)

AUSTIN, Texas — After 10 years of working in the TV and movie industry, a former LaMoille woman made it big when her work on the NBC show “Friday Night Lights” won an Emmy Sept. 8.

Sheila Steele-Taylor, 33, of Austin, Texas, has served as a casting assistant on movies like “Hope Floats” and “Miss Congeniality” with Sandra Bullock, “The Rookie” with Dennis Quaid, and “Secondhand Lions” with Michael Cain and Robert Duvall. She’s also worked on the movies “Sin City,” “The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl,” “The Return,” and all the “Spy Kids” movies.

Steele-Taylor, who attended LaMoille High School, moved to Texas in the early 1980s with her mother, Deb Cogdale, and sister, Shelly. Cogdale said her daughter worked as an extra on films while she attended college.

“She would dedicate her whole day to being an extra, and she’d bring her homework to the set,” Cogdale said.

Steele-Taylor dabbled in other work before breaking into the movie industry in 1997. Today she works for Beth Sepko Casting as an assistant to Sepko.

“She volunteered her butt off for movies. One day she was asked to book extras for a film ‘The Quiet.’ She did an amazing thing. They needed 350 extras to work for free, for just a T-shirt,” Cogdale said.

“They started turning them away at 450 people. She got all those people to show up to the set with just a T-shirt as payment. She’s really got a gift for that,” she added.

Cogdale said her daughter decided to switch from casting extras to casting principal actors after years of working long hours. She worked on commercials for a short time before the Beth Sepko Co. landed the local casting work on “Friday Night Lights” in Texas. She and Sepko do the location casting for the show, while the primary roles go through casting agents in Los Angeles.

Cogdale said her daughter and Sepko casted more than 100 principal actors, people who have a role for a single episode, in the first season of the show last year. In August, the company was notified they had been nominated for an Emmy for outstanding casting for a drama series for the 59th Creative Arts Emmy Awards held Sept. 8, prior to the Primetime Emmy Awards held Sept. 16.

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