Dorothy Stratten Movies
The saga of model-turned-actress
Dorothy Stratten is, by now, a familiar tale. Slain at only 20 years old,
Stratten led a brief and tragic life.
Born
Dorothy Ruth Hoogstraten on February 28, 1960, in a cow town outside of Vancouver, Canada,
Dorothy (along with two siblings) was abandoned by her working-class father at an early age, leaving her mother, Nelly, to raise the children.
Dorothy was, by all accounts, a sweet-natured teenager with a gift for writing poetry and a lyrical and innocent view of life. In her mid-late teens, she took a job at a local Dairy Queen and ultimately met Paul Snider, a Vancouver-based pusher, con artist, and pimp who idolized
Hugh Hefner, exuded intense chauvinism, and craved public recognition and celebrity. Cajoling
Dorothy with flattery, gifts and romantic attention, Snider began dating her, then convinced her to begin posing nude for a series of sleazy photographers, and eventually pressured her into marriage; he also changed her surname from
Hoogstraten to the Americanized
Stratten.
Snider sent erotic photographs of
Stratten in to
Hefner. In
Stratten Playboy found not only its next hot property, but -- eventually -- its playmate of the year for 1980.
Stratten and Snider moved to Los Angeles upon receiving the initial interest from Playboy, with
Stratten wheedled by her husband into to posing for a series of spreads in the men's magazine.
Stratten also began accepting acting roles in B-grade productions. She often drew the sole critical praise in reviews of awful movies like
Autumn Born (1979) and
Galaxina (1980), and became one of the few actresses to escape from the Playboy stigma and land increasingly respectable roles. Snider, meanwhile, severely abused
Stratten on multiple levels, driving her increasingly away from him; he also sank into cocaine-induced behavior not simply tasteless and ignorant, but insane and violent. As an embarrassed Playboy distanced itself from Snider,
Dorothy Stratten understandably did her best to escape from her husband's shadow, but repeatedly demonstrated, through comments and generalized behavior, the extent of her husband's mental control over her. She also reportedly longed to end her work for Playboy, but had to deal with contractual obligations.
At about the same time,
Stratten met and then fell in love with A-list director
Peter Bogdanovich, who signed her to appear in his 1981 romantic comedy
They All Laughed, co-starring
John Ritter,
Ben Gazzara, and
Audrey Hepburn. In the summer of 1980,
Stratten and
Bogdanovich -- having wrapped the production of the film in New York City -- spent a romantic vacation in Europe together, and made plans to marry upon returning to Los Angeles, after the finalization of
Dorothy's divorce from Snider. Tragically, that did not occur. Upon returning to her home to collect her things, on August 14, 1980,
Stratten found an enraged, drug-addled Snider waiting for her with a loaded shotgun; he brutally assaulted her and killed her, then turned the gun on himself.
Dorothy's body was interred in the cemetery next to
Marilyn Monroe. Her story was chronicled in a Pulitzer Prize-winning Village Voice article by Teresa Carpenter, 'The Death of a Playmate,' then in the 1981 telemovie Death of a Centerfold (starring Jamie Lee Curtis) and the 1983 theatrical biopic
Star 80 (with Mariel Hemingway as
Stratten, Eric Roberts as Snider, and Cliff Robertson as
Hefner).
They All Laughed appeared in 1981 with an opening dedication to
Stratten and received mixed reviews.
Bogdanovich worked through his grief by writing and publishing a 1984 memoir about
Dorothy entitled The Killing of the Unicorn) (which includes extracts of poems by
Stratten).
Bogdanovich returned to directing with 1985's acclaimed
Mask and, in 1988, married
Dorothy's younger sister,
Louise. The two divorced after 13 years. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

- 1985
-
This video presents the story of Dorothy Stratten, who was Playboy magazine's Playmate of the Year in 1980. Stratten was murdered by her husband, Paul Snider. The film investigates the playmate's past, the dynamics of her relationship with her husband, and the events surrounding her violent demise. ~ Rose of Sharon Winter, Rovi
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- 1981
- PG
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Peter Bogdanovich wrote and directed this quirky romantic comedy that was shelved by Twentieth Century-Fox for a year, until Bogdanovich purchased the film from Fox and tried to distribute it himself, with limited success. Suave John Russo (Ben Gazzara), inept Charles Rutledge (John Ritter), and hip Arthur Brodsky (Blaine Novak) all work for a detective agency, where they are assigned to follow a trio of beautiful women -- Angela Niotes (Audrey Hepburn), Deborah Wilson (Patti Hansen) and Dolores Martin (Dorothy Stratten) -- whom their husbands think are cheating on them. Soon the three detectives all become romantically involved with the women they are trailing. In a real life scenario that overshadowed the film itself, Bogdanovich was having an affair with Dorothy Stratten during the production and they were being followed by a detective hired by her husband Paul Snider, who as a result ended up murdering his wife and himself. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Audrey Hepburn, Ben Gazzara, (more)

- 1980
- R
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This low-budget sci-fi parody pokes fun at such "space operas" as Star Wars and Alien as it chronicles the adventures of the starship Infinity where poor Captain Cornelius Butt finds himself playing "mommy" to a baby alien while handsome crewman Thor falls in love with the beautiful robot pilot Galaxina and tries to turn her into a real woman. The film is best known for being the last screen appearance of rising-starlet Dorothy Stratten, the beautiful 20-year-old Playboy model who was brutally murdered by her estranged husband shortly after this film premiered. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Stephen Macht, Dorothy Stratten, (more)

- 1979
-
An episode of the television series, in which Buck must act as bodyguard to the universe's most beautiful woman. ~ Rovi
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- 1979
-
Autumn Born would have been long forgotten had it not been for its star. Playboy model Dorothy Stratten plays a young innocent who withstands the cruelties and sexual assaults of her nasty guardian. In one scene, she is handcuffed to a bed, and the camera stays fixed on her for what seems like forever as she struggles to break free. It's that kind of film. Prior to her ill-fated attempt to escape from her own real-life nasty guardian, Paul Snider, Stratten realized that this was the sort of fare she would have spent her life making if she stayed married to him. Anyone who has seen Bob Fosse's Star 80 (in which Autumn Born is alluded to under the title Wednesday's Child) will be all too familiar with the tragic outcome of the Stratten-Snider relationship. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Dorothy Stratten

- 1979
- PG
The short-lived roller-disco craze of the late 1970s served as inspiration for this dated comedy, which follows the patrons of a popular roller-disco palace as they prepare for a major race. Naturally, the climactic showdown features a wholesome, upright hero (Greg Bradford) facing the fearsome challenge of a leather-clad villain (a pre-fame Patrick Swayze). ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Scott Baio, Flip Wilson, (more)