Katt Shea
Kathleen Ann Shea (born October 9, 1956)[1] is an American actress, film director and teacher best known for the film Poison Ivy (1992).
Katt Shea | |
---|---|
Born | Kathleen Ann Shea October 9, 1956 |
Other names | Katt Shea Ruben |
Occupation | Actress, director |
Spouse(s) | Andy Ruben
( m. 1979; div. 1992) |
Early life
Shea was born in Detroit, Michigan to an artist father and nurse mother.[2] She studied teaching at the University of Michigan from which she graduated with honors. After graduating, she spent six months teaching blind children,[3] before taking off at age 19 to Hollywood, California where she started her early modeling career and for a short time attended University of California, Los Angeles.[4]
"I was directing plays I'd written in my back yard when I was twelve", she said later. "I was a total misfit and didn't have any friends, so that's what I did instead. I recruited younger kids from the neighborhood, and their parents paid me to put them in my productions. I made some pretty good money, actually. Helped put me through college. Yay for being a misfit! Yay for not having friends!"[5]
Actor
Shea worked as an actor and model for a number of years, including appearing in a small role in Scarface and Psycho III.[6][7]
"I was never comfortable being an actress", she said in a 1992 interview. "It was the most ridiculous thing; I am like the antithesis of that. I really, truly am very shy. ... I did it for seven years, and I can't believe I lived through that."[8]
Writer and director
In 1986, she was on location in the Philippines when she struck up a friendship with Andy Ruben. The two of them started writing scripts together, and succeeded in getting The Patriot (1986) made for Roger Corman. Corman agreed to finance another Ruben-Shea script with Shea directing, Stripped to Kill. The resulting movie was successful and launched her directorial career.[7]
Shea made a number of films for Corman based on scripts by herself and Ruben. Corman later described her as a ""talented director. She's particularly good with actors, having been an actress herself. She's taught herself about the camera and has gotten better with each picture."[9]
In a 1990 review of Streets, the Los Angeles Times said Shea "continues to show that she is a first-rate talent, as terrific at handling hard action with style and dispatch as a drawing the best from her casts."[10]
According to Corman, the films she made for him cost less than $500,000 on average and made between $5–10 million.[11] She was then hired by New Line to make Poison Ivy which was a critical and popular hit.
In 1992 her films were honoured with a four-day retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art including the New York premiere of Poison Ivy.[12] According to Larry Karidish, a curator of film at the museum:
Katt's work is distinctive for its style, rhythm, the progression of its narrative. Her movies touch something deep in the psyche. They have a consistent and coherent sensibility and I thought it would make sense to show her work as a body.[11]
She now works as an acting teacher.[13]
Personal life
Katt Shea married collaborator Andy Ruben. They divorced in 1992 after 13 years of marriage.[11]
Select credits
- The Asphalt Cowboy (1980) – actor
- My Tutor (1983) – actor
- Scarface (1983) – actor
- Preppies (1984) (TV movie) – actor
- R.S.V.P. (1984) (TV movie) – actor
- Hollywood Hot Tubs (1984) – actor
- Barbarian Queen (1985) – actor
- Psycho III (1986) – Patsy Boyle
- The Devastator (1986) – actor, 2nd unit photography
- The Patriot (1986) – writer
- Stripped to Kill (1987) – writer, director
- Dance of the Damned (1989) – director, writer
- Stripped to Kill II: Live Girls (1989) – director, writer
- Streets (1990) – director, writer
- Poison Ivy (1992) – director, writer
- Dance with Death (1992) – story
- Joe Bob's Drive-In Theater (1994) (TV series) – director
- Last Exit to Earth (1996) – director, actor, writer
- Rumble in the Streets (1996) – writer
- The Rage: Carrie 2 (1999) – director, actor
- Sharing the Secret (2000) (TV movie) – director
- Sanctuary (2001) (TV movie) – director, writer
- Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase (2019) – director
Unmade projects
- Prince Ombra (c 1993) from novel by Roderick MacLeish for producer Sydney Pollack[14]
- Dance of the Damned (c. 2011) – proposed remake of her earlier film[15]
- The Tutor – adapted from the novel by Peter Abrahams
- The List – a teen drama based on her own script
- Hystere, Imps of Perversity – horror anthology TV series developed with Mary Lambert[16]
References
- "United States Public Records, 1970–2009", database, FamilySearch (23 May 2014), Katt Shea, Residence, Santa Clarita, California, United States; a third-party aggregator of publicly available information.
- Michael J. Bandler (June 28, 1992). "Vim and Venom". Chicago Tribune.
- Cowie, Peter (1990). Variety International Film Guide. André Deutsch. p. 377. ISBN 978-0-2339-8613-5.
- Katt Shea Retrieved April 21, 2019.
- "From Corman to Classes: A Conversation with Katt Shea". Full Circle Magazine. February 2009.
- Chris Nashawaty, Crab Monsters, Teenage Cavemen and Candy Stripe Nurses – Roger Corman: King of the B Movie, Abrams, 2013 p 195-196.
- "Director Katt Shea talks about her 1980's Roger Corman produced films" TV Store Online February 3, 2015. Retrieved April 21, 2015.
- Donald Porter (June 1992). "Interview with Katt Shea". The Occasional Critic Blog – via Blogger.
- Tim Purtell (February 5, 1993). "Roger Corman's proteges -- A look at the new batch of mainstream movie makers, from Curtis Hanson to Katt Shea"". Entertainment Weekly.
- K T. (April 6, 1990). "FILM REVIEW: A Low-Budget Gem in 'Streets' Teen Thriller". Los Angeles Times. p. F9.
- LAURIE HALPERN BENENSON. (May 3, 1992). "How 'Poison Ivy' Got Its Sting: The studio wanted a teen-age 'Fatal Attraction.' Katt Shea's movie may be more than that. 'Poison Ivy': Art or Exploitation?". New York Times. p. 70.
- Rob Nelson, (March 17, 1999), "Katt in the Director's Chair" City Pages Archived May 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
- Acting Classes
- Pond, Steve. (Sep 3, 1993). "Dateline Hollywood: 'Jurassic Park's' New Mark". The Washington Post. p. G7.
- Scott Hallam (June 24, 2011). "Director Katt Shea Taps Erik Fellows to Haunt Dance of the Damned Remake". Dread Central. Retrieved April 21, 2019.
- Katt Shea Biography at Katt Shea