Mae West achieved great acclaim in every entertainment medium that existed during her lifetime, spanning eight decades of the 20th century. A full-time actress at seven, a vaudevillian at 14, a dancing sensation at 25, a playwright at 33, a silver screen ingénue at 40, a Vegas nightclub act at 62, a recording artist at 73, a camp icon at 85 - West left no format unconquered. She possessed creative and economic powers unheard of for a female entertainer in the 1930s and still rare today. Though a comedian, West grappled with some of the more complex social issues of the 20th century, including race and class tensions, and imbued even her most salacious plotlines with commentary about gender conformity, societal restrictions and what she perceived as moral hypocrisy. Mae West: Dirty Blonde is the first major documentary film to explore West's life and career, as she "climbed the ladder of success wrong by wrong" to become a writer, performer and subversive agitator for social change.
Acting
West's self-aware performance of herself — decades before 'personal brand.'
Direction
Smart archival weaving with modern admirers who actually get it.
Production
Glossy vintage footage that makes pre-Code Hollywood look delicious.
Director
Sally Rosenthal
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
West was 40 when she starred in her first film, 1933's 'She Done Him Wrong' — the same year the Hays Code cracked down on 'immoral' content. She basically caused the crackdown.
Her famous line 'Why don't you come up and see me sometime' was so impactful that the FBI kept a file on her for decades — for being too sexually powerful for national security, apparently.
No ratings yet
Sign in to join the discussion — comments are spoiler-gated to your watch progress.
Discussion starters