Pamela Anderson's critically acclaimed documentary on Netflix is the perfect follow-up to her latest Oscar-contending film, The Last Showgirl.
Shot in Las Vegas over 19 days in February 2024, this indie drama is a compassionate study of families, both found and biological.
Canadian-American actress Pamela Anderson’s new film The Last Showgirl is being lauded by critics and audiences and is generating some serious Oscar buzz. Directed by Gia Coppola, the film centres on a Las Vegas showgirl faced with an uncertain future after learning her long-running show is set to close.
But director Gia Coppola returns to that image so often, in lieu of character development or forward plotting, that it becomes clear Anderson’s starring performance is more substantial than the film housing it.
After “Baywatch,” that “Pam and Tommy” miniseries and a documentary on Netflix, Pamela Anderson was ready for a change. She gets it with "The Last Showgirl."
The actress stars as a dancer at a Las Vegas revue on its last fishnet leg in Gia Coppola’s sensitive and beguiling film.
She did not win at the awards ceremony on Jan. 5, but Pamela Anderson was deserving of her nomination for a Golden Globe for her starring turn in “The Last Showgirl.” Getting a wide release this week,
It seems Pamela Anderson has a new fan. After seeing her performance in Gia Coppola’s “ The Last Showgirl ,” writer/director Aaron Sorkin took to Variety to write a column in praise and support of her cinematic reinvention.
Pamela Anderson says her latest role in the Gia Coppola-directed film, "The Last Showgirl" is close to her heart and one she's "really proud of." During an interview with "Good Morning America," the actress said the script by Kate Gersten had many "parallels" with her own life,
The former “Baywatch” star marks a career high in Gia Coppola’s portrait of an aging dancer.
Gia Coppola's The Last Showgirl, starring Pamela Anderson, Jamie Lee Curtis, is set to be among the most memorable movies of the year.
Ironically, the film is about a showgirl who’s about to be out of work. She’s Shelly, a dancer in “Le Razzle Dazzle,” a Las Vegas throwback that was her home