A too-brief appreciation today, of a too-brief career of eccentric, often poignant delights.
Shelley Duvall died July 11 at age 75, after years of complications from diabetes. She died in Blanco, Texas, in her home state. After director Robert Altman met Duvall in 1970 at a party, he offered her a role and a plane ticket to Hollywood for his first post-”M.A.S.H.” project, “Brewster McCloud.” She’d never been out of Texas before.
The movie world was not a childhood dream for Duvall, but she made that world her own in a career alternately championed or too often thwarted by her directors. She didn’t look or listen or hold a close-up like anyone else. She stood out as singular, tendril-like presence in an industry full of artificial plants.
She’s best known, of course and unfortunately, for “The Shining,” director Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 adaptation of the Stephen King novel about a marriage under some duress. Is she effective in the role of Wendy Torrance, stuck in the Overlook Hotel with a writer husband (Jack Nicholson) who is coping poorly and eventually homicidally with a supernatural dose of writer’s block? Yes, even if it half-destroyed her. Many have compared Duvall’s distillation of raw, gape-mouthed terror, egged on and overegged by Kubrick, to a certain semaphoric version of silent film performance.
I love parts of “The Shining,” including what Duvall does so relentlessly right at the edge of pure mania. You feel the actor’s nightmarish breakdown, plainly beyond the character’s. But in the wake of Duvall’s death, I hope we remember more than “The Shining” when we think of her.