towards the end The last showgirlPamela Anderson stands alone and exposed on stage while, for perhaps the millionth time in her life, a man assesses and evaluates her. Anderson's character Shelley auditions for a show in Vegas and tries to keep the job she's loved her whole life. But as she flashes under the bright lights, the director, played by Jason Schwartzman, tells her: “What you sold was young and sexy. You're not that anymore.”
This may be a fantasy, but, says Anderson, “I could feel it in my body.” The script required her to scream at that director, “I'm 50!” But at that moment, Anderson decided to include her real age in the line: “Me 57 And I'm beautiful you son of a bitch! While this scene was being shown at the Toronto Film Festival premiere, shouts came from the darkness of the theater: “Yes, girl!” and “I love you, Pamela!”
Anderson's work lately has been a real one. She left Hollywood and returned home to Canada. She made a documentary Pamela, a love story. She started appearing at events without makeup. “I came home to discover why I made some of these choices, and my damaged relationships,” she says. “I wanted to know who I was? I wanted to be myself.” She's always been an actress, but her creative ability has often been overshadowed by that outdated idea: a woman must first be “young and sexy” in order to be appreciated in the industry. The world put her in a box that began with a 1990 Playboy shoot, but inside, Anderson knew herself as an artist and a creative spirit.
Those old, limited assumptions of Anderson's were profound. Her agent died The last showgirl Without even telling her. “He thought it wasn't for me. He thought I couldn't do it,” she says. “At that point, I wasn't being offered anything. But I also kind of gave up, in a way.
But behind the scenes there was a woman who watched Anderson's documentary and, frankly,… visual She: Director Gia Coppola. “Because I said no within an hour, I knew she didn't even see me [the script]. “And I just needed to find a way to get there,” Coppola says. “I saw a woman who was bursting at the seams wanting to express herself creatively.” In Anderson's documentary, Coppola found herself “very impressed with her knowledge of film, art, and philosophy.” I just knew Anderson could play Shelley.
In Kate Gersten's book the last showgirl, Shelley was forced to submit herself for this audition because her offer was long-term. If you are impressedit was closed. It was considered outdated. In reality, she It was considered ancient. But Shelley loves dancing in Vegas. For her, If you are impressed It was a reference to the Parisians Les Folies BergèresAn elegant and timeless evocation of feminine freedom. It was a kind of agency and vision in the midst of single parenthood. Until it is taken from her and she finds herself confused.
“There were obviously similarities to Pamela and Shelley's personality traits,” Coppola says. “She looks like a woman who was turning her frown upside down and making lemonade out of lemons, and that's a lot of what that character does. This bright, bright spirit was sometimes protecting herself in a way. I saw that with Pamela, and even though there were similarities because she wanted to express “For herself as an actress, I think there was enough of a difference that you would be excited for her as a role and not just in this documentary approach.”
Fortunately, Anderson's son, Brandon Thomas Lee, who produced her documentary, happened to stop by her agent's office. He noticed the text on a pile marked “Pass” and grabbed it. When Anderson read it, she said, “I felt it.” “I had to do it. Shelley felt it right away. I knew he was right. “There's something karmic there because if Brandon hadn't made this documentary and Gia hadn't watched it, I wouldn't have done this.”
Finally, Coppola and Anderson connected. Anderson recalls his first “really funny Zoom meeting.” I was saying to her: Are you sure you want me to do this? I know I can do this. She says: No, no. I He wants You can do this. We spent a lot of time with me selling her and her selling me. And eventually, we both realized, okay, we're doing this. But I couldn't believe it.
Now, Anderson describes the film as “a story about a woman who's overlooked and overlooked. She fights back in her own way, and rethinks her choices in life. I think that's just a representation of a lot of us who work against the odds to do what we love. Dave Bautista plays Eddie, If you are impressedStage manager, Shelley is buoyed by the friendship of Jamie Lee Curtis, the sarcastic and unapologetic cocktail waitress Annette, and her colleague Annette. Dazzle Dazzle Dancers Mary Ann (Brenda Song) and Judy (Kiernan Shipka). As filming began, with Coppola at the helm, Anderson says, “It was a very beautiful sisterhood on set. It was very nice to have all these women supporting the women.”
Much has been made of Anderson's personal life and the phenomenon of tabloid fame she experienced during her five-year stint in the 1990s in Baywatch Especially during her turbulent marriage to rock singer Tommy Lee, the father of her two children. In 2022, Hulu released a limited series Pam and TommyWhich depicted that era in her life, starring Lily James in the role of Anderson. I asked her how this show affected her and she simply replied: “I can't be the past. I'm so much more than that. You can't have regrets, otherwise you wouldn't be the person you are.”
In the days following our interview, just before the election, a strong view of Anderson's previous work would emerge. In a video titled Baywatchset to the music of “Bodyguard” from which it is excerpted Cowboy Carter Album, Beyoncé disguised herself as Anderson's characters from Baywatch And her 1996 movie barbed wire, In an attempt to encourage Americans to vote. In response, Anderson joked on her Instagram: “Don't call me Bey,” followed by a kiss emoji.
When she looks back, Anderson sees herself as a woman who has performed her entire life. “I had never been on a plane before coming to Los Angeles,” she says. “All this time I was acting. I was playing, 'What's a model? What's a wife?' I was acting all the time.”
She's grateful she made the decision to move away from the narrow space the industry allowed her at the time. “I took a lot of time to be with my family. It was better to be with my children as much as possible rather than go down the path of this career that I didn't want. And the timing of this new professional era seems right, in many ways. “The most amazing thing is that I I'll be able to do this movie after my kids grow up and I don't have a destructive relationship that takes up all my energy. I was 1000% focused on the movie. It really excited me and increased my energy, as I was inspired to work and have people look at me in a different way.
As we speak, she's fresh off the Academy Museum Gala — a star-studded evening in Los Angeles. “It's always scary to walk into a room like this with a lot of your peers and people you admire, but a lot of people came up to me and were excited about me being in the movie, and it just feels like it,” she says. A different time and I really embrace it.
At that party, she avoided makeup again, a habit she had first begun almost unconsciously. “I went to Paris Fashion Week, and I was wearing Vivienne Westwood clothes and that was just my idea [left unadorned]. I thought I didn't want to sit in the makeup chair for three and a half hours. I thought no one would notice. It's just this little head, it doesn't matter. This way I was able to go to the Louvre and see all these things I wanted to see. Then I went to the show, and I never expected this reaction. This has become a whole thing. But I was doing it for me. I wanted to be myself, for me. I had people come up to me with their daughters to thank me, but I just wanted to be myself.
At the TIFF premiere The last showgirlFrancis Ford Coppola was in attendance. Anderson congratulated. “For Francis Ford Coppola to praise you,” she marvels. “He is an honest man.”
It was the first time any of the actors had seen the film, and during the ensuing standing ovation, the director and actors gathered on stage. “I've been preparing my whole life for this movie,” Anderson told the audience. Beside her, Curtis said through tears: “Dreams become a very harsh reality, especially for women… I am a product of this same reality.” Lourd also cried, explaining how the film gave her a new perspective on the experience of her late mother Carrie Fisher and grandmother Debbie Reynolds. “I was able to understand my mother on a deeper level than ever before, and it was a beautiful experience. Doing this with Pamela was an absolute gift. She's an amazing mother and she was also a beautiful mother to me in this film.”
Now, as we wrap up this interview, Anderson is heading to the airport, heading to Spain where she will be filming Karim Aïnouz's film. Pruning the rose bushalongside Riley Keough, Elle Fanning, and Callum Turner. “He is a wonderful artist and storyteller,” she says of Ainouz. “It's a beautiful film. I play the mother. I'm really excited. I've already shot it The bare gun The reboot stars Liam Neeson, an experience she calls “hysterical fun.”
This unexpected turn of things is still difficult to comprehend. “I can't believe it,” she says. “I'm just starting my career at 57 years old. It's taken me this long to be myself.”