Shelley Duvall Movies
Wide-eyed, toothy, pencil-thin leading lady
Shelley Duvall is the daughter of prominent Houston attorney Robert Duvall (not to be confused with
Robert Duvall, the actor). While attending a party in 1970,
Duvall was spotted by director
Robert Altman, who cast her as a Superdome tour guide in his Texas-filmed
Brewster McCloud (1970). She went on to play eccentric secondary roles in
Altman's
McCabe and Mrs. Miller (1971) and
Nashville (1975), and co-starred opposite another
Altman "regular,"
Keith Carradine, in
Thieves Like Us (1974). She earned the Best Actress prize at the Cannes Film Festival for her portrayal of a garrulous, self-involved senior-citizen-center worker in
3 Women (1977), then wrapped up the
Altman phase of her career as Olive Oyl (a role she was surely born to play) in
Popeye (1980). Of her non-
Altman film assignments, her best included
Kubrick's
The Shining (1980) -- in which she was cast against type as the only thoroughly normal person in the picture -- and
Woody Allen's
Annie Hall (1977); she was also perfection-plus as the protagonist in the made-for-PBS adaptation of
F. Scott Fitzgerald's Bernice Bobs Her Hair (1976). From 1982 onward,
Duvall cut down on her acting appearances, concentrating instead on her behind-the-scenes responsibilities as producer of such superlative Showtime Cable Network projects as Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre (1982-1987), Shelley Duvall's Tall Tales and Legends (1985-1988), and
Shelley Duvall's Bedtime Stories (1992). These and other star-studded, family oriented endeavors have been assembled by one or all of
Duvall's three production companies: Amarillo Productions, Platypus Productions, and Think! Entertainment.
Shelley Duvall has also functioned as executive producer of the 1989 TV remake of
Dinner at Eight, and has served on the board of governors of the National Association of Cable Programming. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide