Allison Anders
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
Anders weathered a rough childhood and young adult life which not only
encouraged an escapist penchant for making up characters but also an
insider's sympathy for the strong but put-upon women who people her
films. Growing up in rural Kentucky, Anders would always remember
hanging onto her father's leg at age five as he abandoned her family.
Traveling frequently with her mother and sisters, Anders would later be
raped at age 12, endure abuse from a stepfather who once threatened her
with a gun, and suffer a mental breakdown at age 15. Venturing back to
Kentucky from Los Angeles at 17, she would soon move to London to live
with the man who would father her first child. Upon her return to the
US, Anders finally began to pick up the pieces of her life. She
enrolled in junior college and later the UCLA film school and managed
when a second daughter came along. Enchanted with
_Wim Wenders_' films, she so deluged the
filmmaker with correspondence that he gave her a job as a production
assistant on his film
Paris, Texas (1984). After
graduating from UCLA, Anders made her feature writing and directing
debut, Border Radio (1987), a study
of the LA punk scene, in collaboration with two former classmates. Her
first solo effort,
Gas Food Lodging (1992),
telling of a single mother and her two teenage daughters, and her
followup, My Crazy Life (1993),
looking at girl gangs in the Echo Park neighborhood of LA where Anders
settled, have shown her to be a deeply personal filmmaker who has used
her own experience to make grittily realistic, well-observed, gently
ambling studies of women coming of age amid tough, sterile social
conditions.