logo
Pamela Anderson is a dramatic revelation in the raw, honest The Last Showgirl

Pamela Anderson is a dramatic revelation in the raw, honest The Last Showgirl

Independent27-02-2025
The first moments of The Last Showgirl hit like a static shock. We know the face that occupies its frames – shot tight, unnervingly tight – all too well. It belongs to Pamela Anderson, the pop culture behemoth and unfairly maligned bombshell who, in recent years, has wrested back the narrative through a stint in Chicago on Broadway, a paired autobiography and documentary, and a decision to go makeup free at public events. She's come into full ownership, now, of the power that was always hers, generated by that megawatt smile, in those hazy blue eyes and peroxide blonde curls.
In Gia Coppola's portrait of an artist in the midst of identity collapse, though, Anderson's Shelly Gardner, a showgirl we first meet mid-audition, seems shockingly vulnerable. Her smile is a nervous twitch. Her eyes dart left and right. When an offscreen voice (Jason Schwartzman, cousin to Coppola, who's the granddaughter of Francis Ford) asks Shelly her age, it's as if she's just been struck by the interrogator's spotlight. '36?' she whimpers. 'Sorry, I lied, I'm 42.' She's 57. 'Distance helps!' she jokes.
It doesn't feel quite right to say The Last Showgirl is Anderson's comeback role. But it does feel significant – a way to memorialise, on film, the kind of career she's wanted to shape for herself, by playing a character who's less an echo of herself than an echo of what she's had to fight against. There is something raw and honest in all of Shelly's self-effacing giggles. Coppola's film doesn't just tackle the cruel dismissal of women who dare to age, but of every modern artist's deepest fear: that the day will come when the bottom falls out of their industry, leaving them with nothing to show for it but a lifetime of sacrifice.
Shelly has been with the Vegas revue show Le Razzle Dazzle for three decades. Her younger colleagues, Jodie (Kiernan Shipka) and Mary-Anne (Brenda Song), don't value their work beyond the paycheque. But Shelly feels immense pride in it and can barely sustain a conversation without alluding to its prestige origins as 'the last descendant of Parisian Lido culture'. So when the show's producer Eddie (Dave Bautista, proving he's at his best in quiet, soulful roles) announces its closure, it's accompanied by the drone sound of Shelly's entire universe imploding.
Is she valiant or delusional? Coppola doesn't let us see much of Le Razzle Dazzle itself, and not until the very end, and Shelly's elegant descriptions are always combated by other people's dismissal of it as a 'stupid nudie show'. But all artists are delusional, to a degree, and Autumn Durald Arkapaw's grainy 16mm cinematography invites us to scrutinise faces and emotions while the borders around them – the stuff that makes up concrete reality – are largely a blur.
At the heart of Kate Gersten's script lives a small found family living under less-than-ideal circumstances. Shelly's best friend Annette (Jamie Lee Curtis) insists she'll die in her cocktail waitress uniform; Jodie and Mary-Anne cling to Shelly and Eddie as unwilling parental figures, while Shelly's actual daughter, Hannah (Billie Lourd), remains detached and bitter under the belief her mother chose her career over her child.
Coppola's previous films, Palo Alto (2013), about disaffected teenagers, and Mainstream (2020), about the lure of viral popularity, were similarly centred around people trapped in their own minor delusions. But the director shows great empathy for the pull of self-romanticisation, even when it wounds the dreamer. Shelly lingers around car parks and grimy rooftops, adorned in all her rhinestones and feathers. We're watching her write her own poetry.
Dir: Gia Coppola. Starring: Pamela Anderson, Kiernan Shipka, Brenda Song, Billie Lourd, Dave Bautista and Jamie Lee Curtis. 15, 89 minutes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Brigadoon better than most of us ever hoped to see
A Brigadoon better than most of us ever hoped to see

Spectator

time12 hours ago

  • Spectator

A Brigadoon better than most of us ever hoped to see

The village of Brigadoon rises from the Scotch mists once every 100 years, and revivals of Lerner and Loewe's musical are only slightly more frequent. The last major London production closed in 1989; and if you know Brigadoon at all it's probably through the lush 1954 movie. The new staging at Regent's Park takes a very different approach. The songs, the basic story and the heather (lots of it, pink and looking only slightly artificial) are all still there, but the director Rona Munro has rewritten the book, backdating the action to the second world war and turning Lerner and Loewe's American tourists into a pair of shot-down bomber pilots. It's a bold stroke, and it pays off. Brigadoon premièred in 1947 under the shadow of the war: escapism was what audiences needed and escapism was what it delivered. Munro's adaptation restores that context, so instead of Broadway whimsy we get something that feels more like Powell and Pressburger – an undertow of tragedy against which the show's mysticism and hope glows all the more poignantly. The fate of these characters genuinely does feel like a matter of life and death, and as with Regent's Park's superb Fiddler on the Roof, songs, story and exuberantly inventive dance routines combine to create an experience that's deeper and richer than you could have imagined. Not everything works. Lerner and Loewe seem to have done their research from shortbread tins, and the new production overcompensates. It opens with live bagpipers; elsewhere, a Broadway fantasy of the Highlands is replaced with a 21st-century Londoner's equivalent – tastefully washed-out tartan, tourist-board Gaelic and a new-agey wise woman. There's a startling lurch in tone as one character turns rogue and is hunted by a torch-wielding mob (part of me hoped that Munro was about to go full Wicker Man, which would certainly have been a stark reinvention). And 'The Heather on the Hill', which in the movie supplies the pretext for a particularly dreamy ballet, gets a simple once-through. In a revival as dance-driven as this, that felt like a missed opportunity, if only because it really is such an incredibly lovely song. But no production can do everything and it's never a bad idea to leave us wanting more. This is a better Brigadoon than most of us could ever have hoped to see; it's intelligent, moving and hugely entertaining, and the cast is first-rate. As the airman Tommy and his Highland lass Fiona, Louis Gaunt and Danielle Fiamanya are sunny, confident leads, more than able to sell a melody even if (in classic operetta style) the secondary couple of Jeff (Cavan Clarke) and Meg (Nic Myers) tended to run away with the show. Myers, in particular, is a knockout as the man-eating village minx, whether turning somersaults mid-song or dropping into a suggestive growl ('Are ye even real?') that's somehow both sexy and irresistibly funny. Meanwhile the orchestra swings (a touch of Glenn Miller in 'Almost Like Being in Love'), the trees of Regent's Park supply the scenery, and the downpour which halted the performance for 15 minutes on press night only added to the fun. Go and see it, but take a pac-a-mac. Over in Dalston, a shower would have been welcome at the tiny Arcola Theatre, which lacks any noticeable ventilation or air conditioning. Three hours into Tristan und Isolde, with the mercury inching upwards, humidity at tropical levels and a full audience crammed into that airless black hole, I definitely felt Tristan's misery, but mostly because I was poaching in my own sweat. For much of the opera, the unfortunate cast were wearing long formal gowns or trench coats. It's difficult enough to sing Tristan under normal conditions. On this occasion you worried that the performers might actually pass out. What was clear, nonetheless was that the Tristan (Brian Smith Walters) has a chiselled, textured tenor, that the Isolde (Elizabeth Findon) had huge reserves of luminous tone as well as an intense capacity for pathos and that this Kurwenal (Oliver Gibbs), Brangäne (Lauren Easton) and (particularly) King Marke (Simon Wilding) all had plenty to offer in these roles, if only the director (Guido Martin-Brandis) had given them more than the absolute basics to work with. The sets were crude; and while the conductor (Michael Thrift) clearly has sound Wagnerian instincts, his chamber-sized orchestration included a piano – an instrument that should never come within 100 miles of a Wagner orchestra. This Grimeborn project was clearly well meant, but scaled-down Wagner is no longer unusual, and its justification (as with the recent Regents Opera Ring and Grimeborn's own Covid-era Ring cycle) has to be its greater intimacy: productions that open new and otherwise unobtainable perspectives on the drama. It needs to be reimagined, and not simply shrunk. Or in this case, dehydrated.

Nicole Scherzinger's BRUTAL comment about the Pussycat Dolls goes viral again as fans take sides
Nicole Scherzinger's BRUTAL comment about the Pussycat Dolls goes viral again as fans take sides

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Nicole Scherzinger's BRUTAL comment about the Pussycat Dolls goes viral again as fans take sides

Nicole Scherzinger 's old comments about the Pussycat Dolls are coming back to bite her. Long before the 47-year-old superstar scored her 2025 Tony for Sunset Boulevard, she was climbing her way through the pop scene — first with the short-lived girl group Eden's Crush, and then as the breakout face of the Pussycat Dolls. The Dolls exploded onto the charts with their 2005 debut PCD, led by the smash single Don't Cha, which shot to No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100. Hits like Stickwitu and Buttons soon followed, with Stickwitu even snagging a Grammy nomination for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. The lineup — Nicole, Carmit Bachar, Ashley Roberts, Jessica Sutta, Melody Thornton, and Kimberly Wyatt — was marketed as a united front, sharing the spotlight and the glory. But behind the scenes, that image wasn't as picture-perfect as fans thought. In a resurfaced 2012 Behind the Music interview — now recirculating as the series marks its 28th anniversary — Nicole dropped a bombshell, claiming she carried the vocals while the rest of the Pussycat Dolls were mostly sidelined from the recording process. 'I was the one singing,' she admitted, even alleging the other Dolls hadn't heard the tracks until after she'd already laid them down. That resurfaced clip has gone viral all over again, reigniting fan backlash and stirring up the age-old debate about just how much of the Pussycat Dolls was really a 'group effort.' In the video, Nicole nervously laughed before spilling tea that rocked the fandom all over again. 'Oh man, I hope I don't get in trouble for the stuff that I say,' she warned, moments before dropping her confession. 'I'll never forget I finished the album PCD,' she continued in the confessional. 'And [we] brought the girls into the studio and we played it for them... and that was the first time they ever heard the music.' Nicole doubled down, making sure no one misunderstood her point. 'Do you understand what I'm saying? We played the music for the Pussycat Dolls... It's the first time they ever heard the songs.' The comments quickly reignited old debates among fans. One critic slammed her for dragging the group, writing, 'This truly was such a nasty thing to divulge. lol. I don't think Nicole ever got shorted on credit for her work in PCD, but I guess she wasn't satisfied.' Another piled on, saying, 'As if we didn't know that she was the main one. Hell she made it known that if one of the other girls had a little part, she wasn't happy.' But plenty of others rushed to defend her. One supporter shot back, 'I still don't get the Nicole-lead-singer-hate thing. She's not the first and she won't be the last to sing mostly all the vocals for a group. Why does she get so much flack for being honest and unabashed about it?!' The resurfaced clip surfaced just weeks after Nicole closed a major chapter in her career with a powerhouse farewell as Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard. She gave audiences chills in her final performance, taking the stage one last time as the tragic silent film star and shocking fans with a dramatic curtain call look that featured theatrical blood trickling down her neck. Critics hailed her haunting portrayal in Andrew Lloyd Webber's dark classic, a role that not only earned her rave reviews but also a Tony Award. Reflecting on the journey, Nicole shared an emotional message with fans on Instagram: 'Today, the sun sets on Sunset Blvd for the final time. 'After living and breathing Norma Desmond for the past two years, it's almost impossible to grasp that today is the last show. What began as a limited run, then extended, now somehow, nearly 10 months on Broadway have flown by. 'Norma's story is for anyone who's ever felt alone. Lonely. Abandoned. Outcast. 'For anyone who never felt like they belonged. For those who once loved something deeply and had it taken from them, aching to reclaim it. For the dreamers. The fighters. The believers. The warriors. For those unshakable in their purpose and power, doing what they love most. '"This is my life. It always will be. There is nothing else."' She concluded with a heartfelt note: 'Norma has changed me forever. Thank you, Broadway 'for the magic in the making.''

The Vivienne was going to play 80s legend in movie - 'we had it all planned'
The Vivienne was going to play 80s legend in movie - 'we had it all planned'

Metro

time2 days ago

  • Metro

The Vivienne was going to play 80s legend in movie - 'we had it all planned'

The Vivienne was on the cusp of the biggest year of their life in 2025. Their career was entering a whole new league. Riding high off the success of a hugely popular tour in Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Wizard of Oz, the world was finally paying attention to this drag queen who was far more than enormous hair and dangerously high heels. They were a talent destined for more than just gay bars—Viv was headed for the West End, Broadway, and beyond. But The Vivienne's life was tragically cut short at age 32, on January 5. Viv—real name James Lee Williams—died from misadventure after suffering cardiac arrest from taking ketamine, a drug they had candidly admitted they'd been addicted to since their hedonistic early years performing in Liverpool's club scene. Just eight months after their death, a new documentary exploring Viv's extraordinary character, success, and the bright future they were building is set to air on BBC Three. Titled Dear Viv, the documentary features raw, emotional interviews with her family and friends—celebrating one of the most pivotal drag artists in recent memory, while also acknowledging her demons. Filming began somewhat accidentally, just five days after Viv's body was discovered, as the drag community reeled in shock. It was DragCon—the annual event that unites fans and their drag idols—typically a highlight during the otherwise gloomy days of early January. It's meant to be a celebration, but this year, it felt impossible to celebrate. Viv was supposed to be there, centre stage. 'Everyone was in a state of shock,' says Fenton Bailey, co-creator of RuPaul's Drag Race, who was at the event, speaking with grieving queens and fans who left heartfelt messages in a memorial booth called Dear Viv. A week earlier, Viv had been alive—now, a documentary about her life and death was already in motion. 'It was seeing that come together, and feeling the outpouring of grief, that we thought, you know, we really should document this.' The film will be released on BBC Three at the end of August. Bailey, who worked closely with Viv on numerous projects in the five years since they won the first-ever RuPaul's Drag Race UK, recalls their final conversation: the plans that were in motion for Viv, just weeks before her passing. 'Viv called me up and said, 'There's a role I want to play in a movie, and I want you to make it: Pete Burns, Dead or Alive.' We were in the early stages of putting that film together.' Viv was unrivalled when it came to impersonations—her Donald Trump is Snatch Game legend. But calling them impersonations almost undersells them. They didn't just imitate; they embodied queer icons like Kim Woodburn, Cilla Black, and Patsy Stone. A Pete Burns biopic starring Viv could have been game-changing. 'It would have been absolutely perfect, and I just feel only Viv could tell that incredible story,' Bailey says. 'It's almost like a doppelgänger. It's not an actor playing the part—it's like a spiritual twin. There are brilliant acts out there, but it had to be The Vivienne.' Dear Viv is a delicately balanced tribute—saluting Viv's unstoppable career, astronomical ambition, and the joy and hope they brought to so many lives, while also confronting her death with unflinching honesty. Viv's parents, Lee and Caroline Williams, and her sister Chanel remember the little boy James, who, even as a child, found the camera irresistible. So soon after his death, they speak openly about the shock and heartbreak surrounding it. It's perhaps a testament to Drag Race that so many of its contestants have felt safe enough to share stories they've kept buried—even from those closest to them. Viv was one of those contestants, revealing on national television that they were a drug addict—before telling her family. 'It was the easiest way I could have done it,' they later explained. 'I couldn't have done it to their face.' 'He held that from us to protect us,' Chanel says, through tears. Moments later, she somehow finds the strength to describe the moment she found her brother's body: 'He looked really peaceful.' It's an extraordinary thing to share so publicly, in the greatest depths of grief. 'I'd understand if in that moment they didn't want to participate in this film,' says Fenton. 'We're so honoured that they agreed to. Their love for their child is so powerful. And that's what so many kids need to hear—we all hope for parents who are supportive. I can't imagine how they were so open.' Viv's family, especially her sister, is now campaigning to reclassify ketamine from a Class B to a Class A drug in the UK. Illegal use of the drug reached record levels in the year ending March 2023, with an estimated 299,000 people aged 16 to 59 reporting use in that year alone. Even in death, The Vivienne might still save lives if her family succeeds. But Fenton wants to make one thing clear: Viv's legacy is not defined by addiction. Even in the depths of relapse, Viv brought joy—and her talent never faltered. They weren't defined by her demons. They thrived despite them. 'We tend to feel badly about addicts—we pity them. But Viv wasn't any more wounded than the rest of us. Her strength of character, her compassion, her emotional generosity—those were real and genuine. Those were the dominant pieces of her character. More Trending 'I wouldn't want to focus on addiction as some disease in the face of which she was helpless—because it wasn't like that. She owned it.' I wonder how Viv would have felt watching the film—so much love and affection poured out for her. So many hearts broken by a world without her in it. 'I think inwardly she'd be deeply touched,' Bailey smiles. 'But she'd probably blow it off with some flippant comment—I don't know what that line would be, but it would be f**king brilliant.' Dear Viv airs August 28 on BBC Three and will be available to stream on BBC iPlayer. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. View More » MORE: Tommy Fury shares 'terrible' moment he hit rock bottom after Molly-Mae Hague left him MORE: 'I play Wallace and Elon Musk – only one of them actually made it to space' MORE: BBC bosses 'unable to retrieve Huw Edwards' £200k salary' amid huge job cuts

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store