| Mary Harron | |
|---|---|
| Born | Mary Harron January 12, 1953 Ontario, Canada |
| Occupation | film director and screenwriter |
| Spouse(s) | John Walsh |
Mary Harron (born 12 January 1953) is a Canadian filmmaker and screenwriter best known for her films I Shot Andy Warhol, American Psycho and The Notorious Bettie Page.[1]
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Born in Ontario, Canada, Harron grew up with a family that was entrenched in the world of film and theater. Her father, Donald Harron, is an actor, author, director, comedian, and writer. Harron’s first stepmother, Virginia Leith, was discovered by Stanley Kubrick and acted in one of his first films. She also had featured roles in other movies such as the 1956 version of A Kiss Before Dying and The Brain That Wouldn't Die (Leith’s brief acting career partly inspired Harron's interest in making The Notorious Bettie Page). Harron’s stepfather is Stephen Vizinczey, a novelist and screen writer, and another of her stepmothers is the singer Catherine McKinnon. Harron’s sister, Kelley Harron, is an actor and producer.
Harron moved to England when she was thirteen and later attended St Anne's College, Oxford University.[2] Whilst in England she dated Tony Blair, who would later become the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. She then moved to New York City and was part of its 1970s punk scene. She helped start and write for Punk magazine as a music journalist — she was the first journalist to interview the Sex Pistols for an American publication. During the 1980s she was a drama critic for The Observer in London for a time.
In addition to her films, Harron was also the executive producer of The Weather Underground, a documentary looking at the radical activists of the 1970s. She has also worked in television, directing episodes of Oz, Six Feet Under, Homicide: Life on the Street, The L Word and Big Love. She is currently developing a film based on the book Please Kill Me which details the 1970s New York punk scene of which she was so much a part.
She lives in New York with her husband, filmmaker John C. Walsh, and their two children, Ruby and Ella Walsh.
Harron’s first movie, I Shot Andy Warhol, released in 1996, is the story of the real life Valerie Solanas played by Lili Taylor. After a life filled with hardship and abuse, she becomes radically embittered by patriarchy, and decides to shoot the prominent pop artist Andy Warhol as a statement against the arrogant domination of male power figures. Failing to attract serious recognition from Andy Warhol, who says he will look over a play she wrote and wants produced, Valerie is filled with resentment and shoots Warhol, but does not kill him. Solanas has received recognition because of this movie and her extreme views in the now infamous SCUM Manifesto, a book detailing her ideas for ridding the world of men. In the movie Harron uses the character of Solanas to represent the outrage that many women feel towards the repressive patriarchy. While the movie speaks to larger issues of power, it also shows how oppression affects someone on an emotional and personal level. Harron related to Solanas’ struggle:
While Solanas was never able to produce her play, Harron was able to make her movie and was able to tell Solanas’ story. I Shot Andy Warhol does not glorify Valerie Solanas; it pleads her case by showing that she was the product of a larger system of cruelty, and was not a lunatic, but a frustrated member of society.
Harron’s second movie, American Psycho, released in 2000, is based on the book of the same title by Bret Easton Ellis, notorious for its graphic descriptions of torture and murder.[3] The protagonist, Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale), is a rich white man who works for fictional mergers and acquisitions firm Pierce & Pierce, a nod to the name of Sherman McCoy's employer in Tom Wolfe's The Bonfire of the Vanities. The New York Times' Stephen Holden wrote of the film:
Coincidentally, in 1989, Harron directed a Batman special for the BBC series The Late Show which charted the character's history f<rom comic book to feature film. Years later, Christian Bale, the lead actor in American Psycho, would go on to play the title role in Batman Begins and The Dark Knight.[4]
The Notorious Bettie Page, released in 2005, is about the 1950s pinup model who became a cult icon of sexuality and who helped popularize pornography. Harron shows Page as the daughter of religious and conservative parents, as well as the fetish symbol who became a target of a Senate investigation of pornography. For this project, as well as for I Shot Andy Warhol, Harron had to do historical research and interviewed several friends of Page’s, as well as her first husband. Page was legally bound to another project and was thus unable to do an interview, but not being attached to Page meant that Harron was free to create a subjective representation of Page. Harron saw Page as an unwitting feminist figure who represented a movement for women’s sexual liberation, ironically similar, yet dissimilar to Solonas’. About the film, Harron says in an interview:
Like Page, Harron also does not follow a strict feminist ideology, but has instead openly explored issues, instead of tying herself to a single perspective on gender. She is not aiming to create political films, but may end up doing so anyway, in her attempt to express a woman’s point of view. She says in an interview:
As director and screenwriter:
As executive producer:
Harron was also a researcher on a 1987 documentary about Andy Warhol.
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