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The Lonely Lady (1983)
Following her role in Butterfly (1982), Pia
Zadora also starred in director Peter Sasdy's trashy The Lonely
Lady (1983). It was an adaptation of a
Harold Robbins novel by Ellen Shepard, about "the story of a
woman's struggle for fame in Hollywood." The main title character
was described in the trailer as "determined
to take nothing less than everything Hollywood has to offer," and
would go on to suffer tremendous abuse from men as she aspired to
be successful in Hollywood.
It was the winner of six Razzie Awards (from eleven
nominations), including Worst Picture and Worst Director. Zadora
won another "Worst Actress" Razzie Award - her multiple
Razzie Awards gave her the additional recognition years later as "Worst
New Star of the Decade" of the 80s.
- in the opening scene set
in her high school, young and aspiring 18 year-old Jerilee Randall
(Pia Zadora), a Southern California 'Valley Girl' screenwriter
from Valley HS, was honored for her writing accomplishments; she
was awarded with an award-trophy presented
by film director Mr. Guy Jackson (Anthony Holland) to "The
Year's Most Promising English Major" for Creative Writing;
during Jerilee's acceptance speech (that was cut short), she stated
why her stories were so successful: "I
always try to make at least one of my characters honest and open and
worried about some important issue. The kind of thing that bothers
us all but we don't usually talk about it because we're afraid that
if we talk about it..."
Jerilee Randall (Pia Zadora)
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Jerilee - Prize-Winner of HS Creative Writing
Award
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Joe Heron (Ray Liotta) Joking About Jerilee's
Trophy Award: "Looks like a penis"
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- Jerilee attended a celebratory school-sanctioned
BBQ, where teenaged, misogynistic bad boy Joe Heron (Ray Liotta
in his feature film debut) joked that her high-school creative
writing trophy looked like a penis; Jerilee accepted a last-minute
invitation to visit the Beverly Hills home of Walter Thornton,
Jr. (Kerry Shale), and accepted - knowing that he was the son of
prominent, Oscar-winning Hollywood screenwriter Walter Thornton,
Sr. (Lloyd Bochner)
- on the drive,
Joe made out with his date Marion/Mary (Glory Annen) in the back
seat, and then grabbed Jerilee's left breast through her clothing;
Joe noted: "Valley girls are anxious to please," as he pushed Mary's
face down toward his lap to perform fellatio
- at the Thornton home, Joe
was swimming in the pool with his topless date Mary, when he impulsively
decided to sexually assault Jerilee - he grabbed her from behind,
threw her in the pool, chased after her and threatened: "I'll
teach you to be more friendly now!"; he ripped open her top
to expose her breasts, slapped her across the face, and yelled: "I'm
gonna show you something special.
I'm gonna give you something special! Come here!"; he
reached for the phallic-shaped garden hose and violated her with it
(off-screen); Jerilee's screams alerted Walter Jr.'s' father who happened
to arrive home and came to her rescue; she was badly bruised and shaken
from the incident
- soon after, Jerilee met the
older Walter when he returned her trophy that was left behind at
his house; enamoured with him and with their shared passion for
writing, she decided to marry him, although Jerilee's widowed mother
Veronica Randall (Bibi Besch) disapproved ("He
is too old for you!"); after wedding him, Walter was often impotent in bed
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After Marrying Him - Jerilee with Husband - Hollywood
Screenwriter Walter Thornton, Sr. (Lloyd Bochner)
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- Jerilee found herself faced with his male-dominated,
sexist colleagues that had negative attitudes toward female writers
such as herself; at a film opening, one of Thornton's friends George
Fox (Olivier Pierre) (who was married and often cheated on his wife)
expressed his sexist attitudes toward Jerilee - and hinted she should
capitalize on her beauty rather than her brains: "Women can't
write dialogue...Hey, honey, with a figure like yours, you don't
have to think"; she proved him wrong by publishing her first
best-selling book
- during another failed attempt
at lovemaking in bed, Walter continued to have erection
difficulties; Jerilee mounted him and tried to coax him:
"Gently, gently"; Jerilee asked: "Walter, how do you
start a screenplay?"; he answered unseriously: "Page one,
scene one, and you take it from there"; she pulled his chest
hair to shock him and claimed: "I'm
serious! Do you think I can do it, Walter?"
- however, over time, her marriage failed to her
older, incompatible husband who often downplayed or deliberately
avoided giving her respect and credit for her talent and success
as a writer, and her aspirations to be a screenwriter
- at a restaurant, Walter also became jealous of her interest in sleazy Kicks nightclub
owner Vincent Dacosta (Joseph Cali), an avowed LA hustler and aspiring
movie producer; she had enough as Walter's trophy wife when on the
lawn of their mansion, he angrily taunted and scorned her
while cruelly referring to the earlier garden hose rape-attempt
incident and also his inability to perform; he sarcastically asked
if she enjoyed making him jealous, or preferred rape: "Why
didn't you go off with Dacosta? He would've enjoyed it! (He picked
up the garden hose) Or is this more your kick?"
- after leaving her husband Walter and moving out into her own rental apartment,
Jerilee experienced a series of more degrading, and exploitative
sexual encounters as she attempted to make a mark in Hollywood
with her screenplays; at a party, she again met up with handsome
rising actor George Ballantine (Jared Martin) who admitted he was
promiscuous: ("You only live once, Jerilee. Not a whole lot
happens after that, kid"); during a torrid affair with her,
although he was married to Margaret (Mary D'Antin), they had
sex in her bed, and then he joined her during a shower; she lowered
herself to provide him with oral sex; he provided her with sexual
pleasure unlike with her impotent ex-husband Walter (Jerilee: "I'm
happy for the first time in a long time")
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Jerilee In the Shower with Handsome Actor George
Ballantine (Jared Martin)
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- after becoming pregnant by
Ballantine, he took no responsibility for her and she was forced
to get an abortion; she then became closer to Vincent Dacosta who
promised to help produce her screenplay with his business financier/partner
Nick Rossi (Cyrus Elias) from NY, although it might take six months
to a year; he sweetly buttered her up: "They can't believe
a dumb blonde could write a movie," and
offered her a job as a club hostess in the meantime;
- when Dacosta turned domineering toward her and
jealous of her association with Guy Jackson:
("When you write for anyone, you write for me, not for Jackson
or anyone else. Me!"), she told him off: "If I write for
anyone, Vinny, I write for me!"; but then, she ended up apologizing
and forgiving him, and spent a decadent night of wild love-making
with him (including champagne, lying naked on a pool table, and having
sex in a hot-tub)
- things went from bad to worse
when she was pimped by Dacosta to go to an LA hotel room with another
business partner - obese Italian producer Gino Paoluzzi (Gianni
Rizzo) and his Italian lesbian starlet Carla Maria Peroni (Carla
Romanelli); Jerilee was propositioned by Carla ("Your
script is beautiful, everything is beautiful. I know it will be
very good"), who kissed
her and stripped off her dress while Gino watched; Jerilee was
disgusted about being used - but didn't resist
- upon her return to cocaine-addicted Dacosta in his club office, Jerilee
found him snorting coke and betraying her with two naked female
assistants, Annette (Daphna Kastner) and blonde Carol (Cindy Leadbetter);
her unread script was thrown in her face amidst mocking laughter
- following the debilitating attack, Jerilee reacted
by showering fully dressed; she also madly typed on the keys of
her typewriter while surrounded by the swirling faces of those
who had wronged her while crying out: "Damn you!"; she
suffered a nervous breakdown, with paranoia, delusions, and acute
depression, described as drug-induced by a doctor ("Tranquilizers,
cocaine, amphetamines, alcohol"); she was institutionalized
and kept for a few days at the Lakeview Terrace Sanitarium; her
ineffectual mother admitted: "She's always been difficult"
- while recovering, Jerilee
was encouraged by her supportive friend Guy Jackson to not give
up and continue typing and working as the best therapy; Jerilee
was proud of her new, semi-autobiographical script: ("This
is me. It's my story. It's my child. It's a part of me");
Guy proposed that she show her script titled The
Hold Outs to wealthy and influential film producer Tom Castel
(Mickey Knox), while Guy would direct the film; the script contained
a scathing expose of all her experiences in Hollywood; she also reluctantly
agreed to having George Ballantine star in her movie (he was the
one who had impregnated her and then ignored her earlier); Guy
persuasively argued for Ballantine: "Kiddo,
in this business, there's only one creed. Make the movie. Make the
movie. Nothing more, nothing less. What goes on backstage, so what?
Who cares? It's the movie that matters. Now, that's just as true
for you as for anyone else. Maybe more so because you're a woman.
So, if you can't get it together, don't even try. Because you'll
just become another bum, and you won't be able to cut it in this
town"
- but again, Jerilee was manipulatively taken advantage
of at producer Castel's home and forced to become friendly with
Castel's bisexual wife Joanne (Kendal Kaldwell) in an outdoor hot-tub
- finally by film's end, the year's awards ceremony was held, and Jerilee
arrived by herself, walking down the red carpet as someone in the
crowd snidely remarked: "She can't be anybody
if she doesn't have an escort"; many of Jerilee's former colleagues
were in the audience: Ballantine, Thornton, and Castel
- during the award presentation for Best Original Screenplay
announced by the MC (Edward Mannix),
Jerilee received the trophy-statue award for her screenplay for The
Hold Outs; during her acceptance speech (a book-end to the film's opening), she thanked
her collaborators (director Guy Jackson, producer Tom Castel and
his wife Joanne, and leading man George Ballantine), but then brutally
denounced the price she had to pay on her rise to fame: "It's
a wonderful compensation for having caught so many unhappy glimpses
of myself while working toward it. Tradition has it that I should
thank all those who had a part in helping to make the film. And
it would be remiss of me to ignore their various contributions....Not
all of them gave as much as they took. But that's no surprise,
because in this business, the price of success is very high, especially
for a woman. I don't suppose I'm the only one who's had to f--k
her way to the top. Many of my so-called friends, agents, producers,
actors, offered to help my career along the way, but always for
a price. And I did nothing to stop them. And Walter dear, I never
did learn the meaning of self-respect. I'm sorry."
- after admitting she hadn't learned the meaning of self-respect
to her ex-husband Walter Thornton, she refused the award, left the
statue on the podium and stiffly stomped off by herself and departed
from the auditorium and into outer darkness, amidst boos from the
audience as the film ended
- a commentator noted: "The movie
industry witnessed a bizarre version of the truth behind the scenes..."
- the film's title song played on the soundtrack: "Lonely Lady" sung
by Ellis Hall Jr.
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Joe Heron (Ray Liotta) Making Out with Date Marion/Mary
(Glory Annen)
Jerilee's Rape Assault by Joe Heron
Jerilee: "Gently, gently"
Jerilee In Bed with Impotent Husband Walter Thornton, Sr.
Wild Night of Decadent Love-Making With Vincent Dacosta
(Joseph Cali)
In an LA Hotel, Jerilee Was Kissed and Propositioned by Lesbian Starlet Carla
(Carla Romanelli)
Betrayed by Vincent in His Club Office With Two Naked Females
Jerilee Showering Fully Clothed
Nervous Breakdown - Reflected in Typewriter Keys
Jerilee Recovering in Sanitarium
Jerilee with Influential Film Producer Tom Castel (Mickey Knox)
Jerilee with Bisexual Joanne Castel (Kendal Kaldwell)
Awards Ceremony: Jerilee Accepting Best Original Screenplay Award
for The Hold Outs
Departing From the Auditorium By Herself - Without the Statue
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