The "Last Showgirl" actor acknowledged that she and Lee, with whom she shares two sons, are not on the best of terms at the moment.
Anderson plays an aging Vegas showgirl in the new movie from Gia Coppola. For so many reasons, it's a role only she could meaningfully deliver.
Pamela Anderson, Kiernan Shipka, Jamie Lee Curtis and director Gia Coppola discuss making "The Last Showgirl," a tribute to Las Vegas dancers to which Anderson could relate.
She's the best part of this underwritten and over-the-top film about a Vegas dancer whose show closes up shop.
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."
Pamela Anderson's critically acclaimed documentary on Netflix is the perfect follow-up to her latest Oscar-contending film, The Last Showgirl.
Pamela Anderson has lived many a life over the decades — "Baywatch" babe, animal rights activist, international sex symbol — and one of those lives brought her to
Demi Moore and Pamela Anderson challenge the "popcorn actor" label, proving their versatility and resilience in Hollywood with acclaimed performances and newfound recognition.
If you're looking for a new series to binge, all 84 episodes of the TV Land comedy-drama Younger are now streaming on Netflix.
This deliberate choice to have Anderson star in the film then makes sense: director Gia Coppola chose her after seeing the 2023 Netflix documentary “Pamela, a Love Story,” which sought to recontextualize the model’s sensationalized life through her own narrative.
There likely aren’t many people who had Pamela Anderson becoming a critically acclaimed dramatic actor on their 2024 bingo card. But, thanks to her starring turn in the Gia Coppola (yes, that Coppola family) film The Last Showgirl, that’s exactly what has happened to the Ladysmith native.
Last week, as the town was grappling with the Palisades and Eaton wildfires the Warner Bros Motion Picture Group saw the double exit of lynchpin executives, Worldwide Marketing president Josh Goldstine and International Theatrical Distribution president Andrew Cripps,