Biography
In the '80s, filmmaker Amy Heckerling was one of only a handful of American female directors (alongside
Penny Marshall,
Martha Coolidge, and
Penelope Spheeris) known for consistently producing A-budget box office draws. Born in the Bronx, NYC, on May 7, 1954, Heckerling graduated, sequentially, from Manhattan's High School of Art and Design, NYU's prestigious Tisch School of Film, and the AFI - where she received her Master's in filmmaking.
Heckerling served her apprenticeship with five years' worth of short subjects, and graduated to a feature-length effort with the sleeper hit
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982). Adapted from the book of the same title by Rolling Stone journalist
Cameron Crowe, the picture recounts Crowe's experiences impersonating a student at a southern California high school. The innuendo-laden film divided critics, but permanently carved a niche for "teen" films in American cinema (and probably paved the way for
John Hughes); it also became a box-office smash and established several young stars, including
Jennifer Jason Leigh,
Judge Reinhold,
Nicolas Cage and Eric Stolz, and most of all
Sean Penn, who dazzled everyone with his evocation of stoner surfer Jeff Spicoli. The picture briefly typed Heckerling as a "youth market" director.
Heckerling subsequently directed
Johnny Dangerously (1984), an uneven gangster spoof starring
Michael Keaton,
Joe Piscopo and
Marilu Henner, and helmed the vulgar and ugly
National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985), from a script by
John Hughes and Robert Klane. Critics quite rightly lambasted both. Perhaps as a result, it would be four years before Heckerling's fourth feature outing, and she spent that time going back to the roots of her first big success, with an attempt to adopt
Fast Times at Ridgemont High for the small screen. The effort failed; CBS's 1986 series
Fast Times lasted approximately one month, debuting to dismal ratings.
Heckerling's fourth big-screen venture,
Look Who's Talking, starred
John Travolta,
Kirstie Alley, and
Bruce Willis (voicing a cute baby) as the three leads; it shot up to become one of the most towering box-office draws of 1989 when it hit theaters late that year, surpassing even Back to the Future, Part II. Heckerling's decision to stick with the franchise for a follow-up proved less intuitive; 1990's
Look Who's Talking Now featured Roseanne Barr voicing a second Alley/Travolta childThe director returned to form with her 1995 feature
Clueless, a modernization of Jane Austen's novel Emma, about a spoiled and airheaded Beverly Hills teen. The picture made a star of
Alicia Silverstone and charmed just about everyone; it also became a box office blockbuster.
Heckerling continued to work as a producer throughout the late nineties, and returned as a director with less success for 2000's
Loser, an oddball romance starring
Mena Suvari and
Jason Biggs. The romantic comedy
I Could Never Be Your Woman followed, starring
Michelle Pfeiffer and Paul Rudd as lovers with an eleven-year age difference. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide