Categories: CULTURE

Shelley Duvall on her defining performance in The Shining


Getty Images

US actress Shelley Duvall spoke to the BBC in 1980, just after The Shining was released. In this clip, she describes her intense role and what it was like to work with the meticulous director Stanley Kubrick.

The US actress Shelley Duvall has died at the age of 75. A protégé of the film-maker Robert Altman, she starred in seven of his films, including Nashville and Popeye. Yet arguably her defining role was as Wendy, the wife of Jack Nicholson’s hotel caretaker in Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 horror classic The Shining.

In September 1980, Duvall spoke to the BBC about her intense role and what it was like to work with the meticulous director. “My stamina has increased so much since The Shining,” she said. “The role required me to cry, all day long, every day – it was so difficult being hysterical for that length of time.”

WATCH: ‘My stamina increased so much since The Shining’.

After doing many repeated takes, Duvall told the BBC, “you forget all reality other than what you’re doing – it’s like a miracle, it comes out better than it did before – and it’s fresh, too”.

“I was very pleased to have done it,” she told Film 80’s presenter Barry Norman, “because I learned more on that picture – and strengthened myself, and broadened the scale that my emotions can reach, I think, more than any other picture I’ve ever done.”

See more of the interview in the video clip above.



Source link

Mainedigitalnews.com

Share
Published by
Mainedigitalnews.com

Recent Posts

A Conversation with Brian Rogers

By Kristin Marting. On 27 April 2026, TORCHES continues with a conversation with theatre and…

17 hours ago

NY Rangers Game 81 Open Thread: Rangers at Florida

The New York Rangers are in Sunrise to take on the Florida Panthers C team…

17 hours ago

Former CFTC Chair to Focus on Crypto Advisory Work

Chris Giancarlo, the former chair of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission, is stepping away…

17 hours ago

The 'bizarre' story of the world's first LSD trip

Dr Albert Hoffman discovered the hallucinatory effects of LSD in April 1943 Source link

17 hours ago

Learn Japanese online: Your guide to effective language learning

Learning Japanese can be an exciting journey, full of new sounds, characters, and cultural insights.…

17 hours ago

Alex Copper and Alix Earle Beef, Explained

Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Maya Dehlin Spach/WireImage, Maya Dehlin Spach/2026GG/Penske Media via Getty Images The girlies…

17 hours ago