Pamela Anderson is as surprised as anyone.
“The Last Showgirl,” which opens in theaters this week, is the first movie she’s headlined that’s earned more than a bare-bones theatrical release since “Barb Wire” misfired in 1996.
Now Anderson, who became one of the most recognizable women on the planet in the 1990s thanks to the potent combination of “Baywatch” and Playboy, is being taken seriously as a dramatic actor, including being nominated for a Golden Globe for her portrayal of a veteran performer whose life is disrupted when the show she has worked at for 30 years suddenly closes.
“It’s just so fun,” Anderson said of this newfound acclaim. “Who would have thought? I never thought I’d ever be in this position.”
Her return to the spotlight has been one of the awards season’s great feel-good stories. For once in her career, it seems as though much of the public is in her corner. Even the media that dismissed her early and often has been mostly kind.
“I actually have people jumping out of their cars on street corners to give me a hug. Like, ‘You can do this!’” Anderson said, laughing. “I guess I’m doing this for everybody. This is great.”
“Le Razzle Dazzle,” the show depicted in the movie, has seen better days. It’s the last show of its kind in Las Vegas. The dancers outnumber the paying customers. Those who bother to see it often appear disinterested.
“This,” Anderson said, “is breasts and rhinestones and joy!”