Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

The indie It Girl

Adrienne Shelly’s final film, Waitress

Actress and filmmaker Adrienne Shelly. (Bowers/Getty Images)
Actress and filmmaker Adrienne Shelly. (Bowers/Getty Images)

Last November, the actress and filmmaker Adrienne Shelly was murdered in her New York apartment by a construction worker. At first, her death was reported as a suicide (grotesquely, the killer hung her body from a shower rod), and this seemed both sad and possible, a Hollywood Babylon ending for someone who once mattered to a certain segment of the popular culture, then faded away.

Bad endings come to It Girls, and in the early ’90s, Shelly was very It: Jolie-lipped-before-Jolie, a stylish and aloof muse to director Hal Hartley in the films The Unbelievable Truth (1989) and Trust (1990). But it turns out that Shelly’s death wasn’t a suicide, and she hadn’t vanished into obscurity at all. Since her brief moment as a hipster idol, Shelly had been training as a filmmaker. Her final movie, a lovely dark comedy called Waitress — in theatres May 11 — is a bittersweet lesson that some starlets do endure, and even thrive, long past the moment in which we freeze them.

The April 23, 1993 cover of Spin magazine featured a disheveled 26-year-old Shelly and a shirtless Evan Dando (lead singer of The Lemonheads), tongues intertwined and eyes closed, as if caught in a drunken grope in the back row of a Mother Love Bone show. It was Spin’s “A to Z of Alternative Culture” issue, which included stories on Pearl Jam, Naughty By Nature, Ice Cube and a polemic about “Clinton and the New Optimism” (also, sadly, a long essay on AIDS in Africa; plus ça change...).

Fourteen years later, most of these pop references are hilariously dated, as is the phrase “alternative culture,” a term which meant little more than the stuff being consumed by youth at the time. It was the height of grunge, a quick couple of years that reacted to ’80s materialism with an ascetic aesthetic of combat boots and Kurt Cobain-inspired new bohemia. While the Seattle vibe was quickly co-opted by the mainstream — Brenda wore Doc Martens to her prom on Beverly Hills 90210 — there was, for a moment, some flicker of agreement among young people that it was time to be angry and poetic, deliberately un-scrubbed. It’s over, man. Paris Hilton is the closest thing to a youth icon today, her porn star glasses and one-quarter-present gaze the preferred style mode of 20-something women.

Shelly was a different kind of pop figure. Her fame wasn’t tracked on YouTube and Gawker; you had to line up at a repertory cinema to find her, and consequently, those who loved her felt like they had made a discovery. Shelly had been a struggling stage actress when Hal Hartley cast her in his (and her) first film, a low-budget talker called The Unbelievable Truth. She played Audry, a teenage bookworm who agrees to attend Harvard on the condition that her father donate cash to an anti-nuclear group. An unlikely love interest appears in the form of an ex-con who wreaks havoc simply by being a Zen addition to her dull Long Island suburb.

A year later, in Trust, Shelly was a trashy high school dropout named Maria who announces to her dad that she’s pregnant. He has a heart attack and dies, and she goes on to find some kind of salvation in the arms of a furious slacker who carries a grenade in his pocket “just in case.”

Martin Donovan and Adrienne Shelly in a scene from the Hal Harley film Trust. (Channel Four Films)
Martin Donovan and Adrienne Shelly in a scene from the Hal Harley film Trust. (Channel Four Films)

Hartley tinkered with Trust to suit his new star. With her flat delivery and wide eyes that projected incredulous intelligence, she was a sky of irony flashing with sincerity, usually brought on by encounters with beauty or great literature. “I am ashamed of being stupid. I am ashamed of being young,” says her character in Trust, transforming from a gum-smacking bimbo to a glasses-wearing nerd in under two hours.

In the early ’90s, after the surprise success of the independent film sex, lies and videotape (1989), the number of filmmakers working outside the American studio system boomed. But most indie directors were male, making movies about men’s lives: Spike Lee, John Singleton, Quentin Tarantino (with notable exceptions like Rose Troche and Allison Anders). Hartley’s early films are about girls trying to escape the limits of their circumstances, and Shelly is the escape artist. Trust’s Maria confronts abortion and sexual violence, always finding her agency in the most complicated situations of a young life. If a sleazy man hits on a Shelly girl — her beauty assures he will — she uses her smarts to get away. She might have been tiny, but never helpless.

For all this, Shelley was featured in Vanity Fair, and photographed often for glossy magazines. Her films, her ginger looks and her sense of style — layers, vintage, wild hair — earned her the moniker “quirky. ” “When you read ‘quirky’ over and over again, ‘quirky’ starts to feel like an insult,” she once said, affirming her sharp, skeptical persona.

But then Shelly seemed to vanish, as It Girls do. The term It Girl comes from romance novelist Elinor Glyn’s script for the 1927 Clara Bow movie It. The film’s title card says: “‘IT’ is that quality possessed by some which draws all others with its magnetic force. With ‘IT’ you win all men if you are a woman — and all women if you are a man. ‘IT’ can be a quality of the mind as well as a physical attraction.”

But “It” is also fleeting, and specific to time and place; an ingénue’s calling, not a grown woman’s. When times change, the It Girl changes, too. Would Edie Sedgwick have been so beloved outside her shiny ’60s milieu? Marianne Faithfull, Twiggy, Parker Posey (currently starring in the upcoming Hal Hartley film Fay Grim) all had their moments as signifiers, and then their currency changed because the culture did. Would fans of the young Adrienne Shelly, who are now grown up and sold out, want to be reminded of her scrappy quest for authenticity anymore?

But Shelly had her own ambitions, steamrolling any expectation that she would become obsolete. Post-Hartley, she made frequent small appearances in small films (Hexed, Factotum), and on television (Law & Order, Oz), saying that she only acted to support her aspirations as a director. And so she wrote and directed short films and features: a 1997 comedy called Sudden Manhattan and a 1999 followup, I’ll Take You There, starring Ally Sheedy. The latter was particularly well-received on the festival circuit, but neither feature had wide distribution.

Director Adrienne Shelly (centre), with Keri Russell (left) and Cheryl Hines (right) on the set of Waitress. (Fox Searchlight)
Director Adrienne Shelly (centre), with Keri Russell (left) and Cheryl Hines (right) on the set of Waitress. (Fox Searchlight)

Shelly was in the final stages of completing her third film, Waitress, when she died. The film stars Keri Russell as Jenna, the titular Southern pie slinger caught in a loveless, violent marriage. When she finds herself pregnant, her ambivalence about this “parasite” baby is at once shocking and funny, as is her sudden romantic entanglement with a gynecologist (Nathan Fillion). Shelly’s dialogue has some of the stagy, melodramatic rhythm of Hartley’s work, but a warmer pulse, too. To Jenna’s simple question, “Are you happy?” a fry cook takes his time with a beautiful soliloquy on the nature of solitude that ends with the just-right line: “I’m happy enough, and that’s my truth summed up for your feminine judgment.”

Waitress is small-scale Douglas Sirk: a film about a woman who is trapped. When it ultimately becomes a cotton candy ode to motherhood, Shelly strikes note after note of pure joy. By the time Sundance accepted the film, where it was a hit, Shelly had been killed; she never knew of its vindicating, warm reception.

Shelly plays a waitress in the film, too; a shy, gawky woman who is aging, but who refuses to give up on love. When Jenna does her friend’s makeup for yet another evening out, Shelly looks in the mirror and says: “Why, I almost look pretty.” It’s a rare false line in the film, because of course, Shelly is as beautiful as ever, even 40 years old and hiding under dorky glasses. It’s not surprising she would cast herself this way: Waitress is her escape from her face, from the pixie youth that could have penned her in forever. She strikes me as a woman who might have looked forward to getting old.

Shelly left behind a husband, Andrew Ostroy, and a three year-old daughter. Ostroy has started a foundation in her honour to help young women filmmakers, and this seems like a fitting legacy: a sobering reminder of all the women artists out there, struggling to get beyond It.

Waitress opens May 11.

Katrina Onstad writes about the arts for CBC.ca.

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window.

More from this Author

Katrina Onstad

Lost in transition
The Golden Compass on screen: opulent but misdirected
The many faces of Bob
Todd Haynes discusses his Dylan biopic, I'm Not There
Twisted sister
Margot at the Wedding is a venomous look at family
Guns blazing
Brian De Palma's antiwar film Redacted is a preachy mess
Five questions for...
Laurie Lynd, director of Breakfast With Scot
Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

Afghan raid on insurgents a 'great success': commander
A raid on Taliban insurgents early Monday in two volatile districts in Afghanistan is being hailed as a success by the Canadian military, but a commander warns that such gains hinge on Afghan involvement.
December 17, 2007 | 2:57 PM EST
Won't cling to power forever: Castro
Ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro said in a letter read on state television Monday that he does not intend to cling to power forever, but invoked the example of a renowned Brazilian architect who is still working at 100.
December 17, 2007 | 9:29 PM EST
Israel launches air strikes, targets militants in Gaza City
An Israeli aircraft hit a car filled with explosives in Gaza City after nightfall Monday, setting off a huge blast and killing a senior Islamic Jihad commander and another militant, witnesses and hospital officials said.
December 17, 2007 | 7:04 PM EST
more »

Canada »

Harper announces more rigorous product safety law
The federal government on Monday announced a plan that will allow for greater product recall powers, stiffer fines for manufacturers and more product safety inspectors.
December 17, 2007 | 4:13 PM EST
Winter storm wallops N.L. after pummelling Maritimes, Ont., Que.
A massive winter storm blew into Newfoundland and Labrador Monday after battering Central Canada and the Maritimes.
December 17, 2007 | 4:19 PM EST
Taliban focus attacks on fellow Afghans: Hillier
Canada's top soldier says Taliban fighters are increasingly attacking fellow Afghans in an attempt to halt progress without facing the deadly consequences of fighting NATO forces.
December 17, 2007 | 11:03 AM EST
more »

Health »

Blood pressure dropped when pill taken at night: study
Taking a blood pressure pill at bedtime instead of in the morning might be healthier for some high-risk people.
December 17, 2007 | 8:29 PM EST
Cancer report shows disparities between developing, developed countries
There will be more than 12 million new cancer cases and 7.6 million cancer deaths worldwide in 2007, the majority in developing countries, a new report says.
December 17, 2007 | 12:18 PM EST
Pakistan reports first cases of bird flu
Authorities in Pakistan have announced that country's first reported cases of H5N1 avian flu in a cluster of family members which may have involved human-to-human transmission.
December 17, 2007 | 6:57 PM EST
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

Satellites align for Canadian film Juno
Canadian director Jason Reitman's Juno has won three Satellite Awards. The Satellites are handed out annually by the International Press Academy, which represents entertainment journalists.
December 17, 2007 | 6:09 PM EST
Monia Mazigh to publish memoir of Arar tragedy
Monia Mazigh, who won the admiration of Canadians during her long fight to get her husband Maher Arar freed from a Syrian prison, is writing a memoir.
December 17, 2007 | 5:46 PM EST
The honeymoon is over: Anderson files for divorce
After a quickie wedding just two months ago, Canadian actress Pamela Anderson is showing she can be just as quick in pursuing a divorce.
December 17, 2007 | 3:18 PM EST
more »

Technology & Science »

Distant galaxy threatened by 'death star'
The powerful jet produced by a massive black hole is blasting away at a nearby galaxy, prompting researchers to dub it the "death star" for its destructive effect on planets in its path.
December 17, 2007 | 4:24 PM EST
RIM to open U.S. base in Texas
Research In Motion Ltd. has picked the telecommunications hub of suburban Dallas as the site of its U.S. headquarters, with a plan to employ more than 1,000 people in the city of Irving within the next several years.
December 17, 2007 | 5:15 PM EST
Edmonton researchers to test LG health data cellphone
Health researchers in Edmonton are teaming up with Korean-based LG Electronics to fine-tune a hand-held device that transmits patients' home test results to nurses using a cellphone.
December 17, 2007 | 6:16 PM EST
more »

Money »

Former Black confidant Radler gets 29-month term
The 29-month jail sentence Conrad Black's one-time top lieutenant David Radler agreed to serve as part of a deal to testify against his former boss was approved on Monday.
December 17, 2007 | 11:31 AM EST
Metals and mining stocks lead broad TSX sell-off
Stock markets in Toronto and New York endured sharp sell-offs Monday amid persistent worries about the health of the U.S. economy.
December 17, 2007 | 5:33 PM EST
RIM to open U.S. base in Texas
Research In Motion Ltd. has picked the telecommunications hub of suburban Dallas as the site of its U.S. headquarters, with a plan to employ more than 1,000 people in the city of Irving within the next several years.
December 17, 2007 | 5:15 PM EST
more »

Consumer Life »

Harper announces more rigorous product safety law
The federal government on Monday announced a plan that will allow for greater product recall powers, stiffer fines for manufacturers and more product safety inspectors.
December 17, 2007 | 4:13 PM EST
Attractive clerks ring up sales: study
Male customers will choose to buy a dirty shirt if it's been worn by an attractive saleswoman, a University of Alberta study has found.
December 17, 2007 | 7:49 PM EST
Canada Post fixes data-revealing web glitch
Canada Post said Monday it has fixed a security flaw that allowed log-in records from a small business shipping website to be viewable through search engines such as Yahoo and Google.
December 17, 2007 | 12:55 PM EST
more »

Sports »

Scores: CFL MLB MLS

Canucks' Morrison out 3 months
Vancouver Canucks forward Brendan Morrison will be sidelined up to 12 weeks following wrist surgery.
December 17, 2007 | 7:57 PM EST
Leafs lose McCabe for 6-8 weeks
Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Bryan McCabe will be sidelined six to eight weeks following Monday's surgery on his left hand.
December 17, 2007 | 6:07 PM EST
Vina used HGH for injuries
Former major-league infielder Fernando Vina admitted Monday that he used human growth hormone four years ago, as suggested in the Mitchell report on drug use in baseball.
December 17, 2007 | 9:27 PM EST
more »