Penelope Spheeris (born
December 2, 1945) is
an American
director, producer, and screenwriter.
Biography
Earlier life
Spheeris
was born in New Orleans
, Louisiana
, to a Greek immigrant
father who owned the Magic Empire Shows circus carnival
and was a side-show strong man. Her mother was a ticket
taker for a traveling circus side show. Spheeris is the sister of
singer
Jimmie Spheeris and the first
cousin of musician
Chris Spheeris and
the Greek-
French director
Costa Gavras, whom she says makes her consider
that there is something to the genetic aspects to the job
description. Spheeris spent her first seven years traveling around
the
American South and
American Midwest with her father's
carnival.
She majored in film and
has a Master of Fine Arts degree in Theater Arts from UCLA
in Los Angeles
, California
.
Career
Spheeris launched her career by producing short subjects for
satirist
Albert Brooks, many of them
being highlights in the first season of the
TV series
Saturday Night Live. Her first
feature film was
The Decline of Western
Civilization (
1981), a
punk rock documentary that she produced as well as
directed. She followed up with
The
Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years,
this time about the Los Angeles heavy metal scene of 1988, with
footage and interviews of legendary metal bands such as Kiss,
Ozzy Osbourne,
Aerosmith,
Megadeth and
Motörhead. She later returned to the
streets of L.A. and the punk rock scene in 1998 for the documentary
The
Decline of Western Civilization Part III.
She was offered the chance to direct
This is Spinal Tap, but turned it
down, thinking it wasn't possible to make fun of heavy metal
music.
In addition, she worked as a writer for the TV series
Roseanne (
1988-
1997). In the 1990s, Spheeris directed
Wayne's World, a
comedy based on
Mike Myers' skits
from
Saturday Night Live. The movie grossed an impressive
$121 million and became a popular hit. She directed the Wayne's
World music video work for
Queen's
"
Bohemian Rhapsody", which earned
a Grammy nomination. She had difficulty working with Myers, while
acknowledging him as "profoundly talented," and in an
Entertainment Weekly article
stated she believes Myers dissuaded Paramount from hiring her for
the sequel.
In 1996 she directed
We Sold Our Soul for Rock 'n'
Roll, a documentary about the
Ozzfest, produced by
Sharon Osbourne. It explores life on the
road.
Spheeris directed the TV-show-based comedy
The Beverly
Hillbillies, The Little Rascals (for
which she co-wrote the screenplay, based on the
Hal Roach comedy shorts of the 1920's, 1930's, and
1940's), along with the
Chris Farley
comedy
Black Sheep
and the
Marlon Wayans comedy
Senseless. Spheeris continues to
direct. In 2005 she directed the
Tom
Arnold movie
The Kid &
I. In 2006 she was set to direct the as-of-yet
still-unfilmed
Gospel
According to Janis, about
Janis
Joplin. In 2008, she directed the film
Who is Brad Lenz?. In 2009 she will
direct the comedy
High
School Sweethearts.
Filmography
References
External links