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Katt Shea


Katt Shea (born 1957) is an American actress, film director and teacher best known for the film Poison Ivy (1992).

Shea was born in Detroit, Michigan, and studied teaching at the University of Michigan.

"I was directing plays I'd written in my back yard when I was twelve," she said later. "I was a total misfit and didn't have any friends, so that's what I did instead. I recruited younger kids from the neighborhood, and their parents paid me to put them in my productions. I made some pretty good money, actually. Helped put me through college. Yay for being a misfit! Yay for not having friends!"

She taught blind children in Detroit before deciding at age 19 to move to Los Angeles and try acting.

Shea worked as an actor and model for a number of years, including appearing in a small role in Scarface and Psycho III.

"I was never comfortable being an actress," she said in a 1992 interview. "It was the most ridiculous thing; I am like the antithesis of that. I really, truly am very shy. ... I did it for seven years, and I can't believe I lived through that."

In 1986 she was on location in the Philippines when she struck up a friendship with Andy Ruben. The two of them started writing scripts together, and succeeded in getting The Patriot (1986) made for Roger Corman. Corman agreed to finance another Ruben-Shea script with Shea directing, Stripped to Kill. The resulting movie was successful and launched her directorial career.

Shea made a number of films for Corman based on scripts by herself and Ruben. Corman later described her as a "”talented director. She’s particularly good with actors, having been an actress herself. She’s taught herself about the camera and has gotten better with each picture.”

In a 1990 review of Streets, the Los Angeles Times said Shea "continues to show that she is a first-rate talent, as terrific at handling hard action with style and dispatch as a drawing the best from her casts."

According to Corman, the films she made for him cost less than $500,000 on average and made between $5-10 million. She was then hired by New Line to make Poison Ivy which was a critical and popular hit.

In 1992 her films were honoured with a four-day retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art including the New York premiere of Poison Ivy. According to Larry Karidish, a curator of film at the museum:


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