Adrienne Shelly | |
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![]() Shelly in 1992 | |
Born | Adrienne Levine (1966-06-24)June 24, 1966 Queens, New York City, U.S. |
Died | November 1, 2006(2006-11-01) (aged 40) Manhattan, New York City, U.S. |
Cause of death | Homicide bystrangulation andhanging[1] |
Other names | Adrienne Shelley |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1989–2006 |
Spouse | [2] |
Children | 1[3] |
Adrienne Shelly (néeLevine; June 24, 1966 – November 1, 2006) was an American actress, film director, and screenwriter. She gained recognition for her roles in independent films, particularlyHal Hartley'sThe Unbelievable Truth (1989) andTrust (1990). She later wrote, directed, and co-starred inWaitress (2007), which was released posthumously and later adapted into aBroadwaymusical.
On November 1, 2006, Shelly was found dead in her Manhattan office. Though initially ruled a suicide, her husband, Andy Ostroy, pushed for further investigation. This led to the arrest ofDiego Pillco, a 19-year-old undocumented construction worker from Ecuador, who confessed to the murder. Pillco was sentenced to 25 years in prison without parole.
Following her death, Ostroy established the Adrienne Shelly Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to supporting women filmmakers. The foundation provides scholarships, production grants, finishing funds, and living stipends in collaboration with institutions such as NYU, Columbia University, and the Sundance Institute. One notable grant recipient, Cynthia Wade, won an Academy Award in 2008 for her documentaryFreeheld, which the foundation helped fund.
Shelly's legacy is also honored by theWomen Film Critics Circle, which presents the annual Adrienne Shelly Award to the film that "most passionately opposes violence against women." In 2021, Ostroy directed the HBO documentaryAdrienne, which examines Shelly's life, career, and the impact of her death.
Adrienne Shelly was born Adrienne Levine on June 24, 1966, inQueens,New York City to Jewish parents Sheldon Levine and Elaine (née Langbaum).[4] She had two brothers and grew up onLong Island. She began performing when she was about 10[5] atStagedoor Manor Performing Arts Training Center. Shelly made her professional debut in asummer stock production of the musicalAnnie[6] while a student atJericho High School[4] inJericho, New York. She enrolled inBoston University, majoring in film production, but dropped out after her junior year and moved toManhattan.[7]
Shelly's breakthrough came when she was cast byindependent filmmakerHal Hartley as the lead inThe Unbelievable Truth (1989) andTrust (1990).[8][9]Trust was nominated for theGrand Jury Prize at theSundance Film Festival, where Hartley's script tied for theWaldo Salt Screenwriting Award.[10] Shelly guest-starred in a number of television series includingLaw & Order,Oz andHomicide: Life on the Street, and played major roles in over two dozenoff-Broadway plays, often at Manhattan's Workhouse Theater.[7] In 2005, she appeared in the filmFactotum starringMatt Dillon.
During the 1990s, Shelly segued toward a career behind the camera. She wrote and directed 1999'sI'll Take You There, in which she appeared alongsideAlly Sheedy. She won aU.S. Comedy Arts Festival Film Discovery Jury Award in 2000 for direction of the film, and Prize of the City of Setúbal: Special Mention, at the Festróia (Tróia International Film Festival) held inSetúbal, Portugal, for best director.[9][11] Her final work was writing, directing, co-set- and costume-designing, and acting in the filmWaitress, starringKeri Russell andNathan Fillion,[12][13] which premiered at the2007 Sundance Film Festival.[14] Shelly's daughter, Sophie, has a cameo at the end of the film.[13]
Shelly was also active in the theatre scene in New York. She wrote and directed plays for Naked Angels and Alice’s 4th floor, acted in off-Broadway shows, served as the creative director of the Missing Children Theater company for five years, taught acting at One on One Productions in Manhattan, and led a workshop at NYU in acting, directing, and writing.[15]
Shelly, who took her professional surname from her late father's given name,[6] was married to Andy Ostroy, the chairman and CEO of the marketing firm Belardi/Ostroy.[16] They met in 2001 onMatch.com, were married in 2002,[2] and had a daughter, Sophie (born 2003), who was two years old at the time of her mother's death.[17] Shelly had written the filmWaitress during the time she was pregnant with her daughter, Sophie.[18] Shelly described herself as an "optimisticagnostic".[5]
Shelly was found dead at approximately 5:45 p.m on November 1, 2006. Her husband, Andy Ostroy, discovered her body in theAbingdon Square apartment inManhattan'sWest Village that she used as an office. Ostroy had dropped her off at 9:30 a.m. He became concerned that Shelly had not been in contact during the day and asked the doorman to accompany him to the apartment. They found her body hanging from a shower rod in the bathtub with a bed sheet around her neck.[19][20]
Although the door was unlocked and money was missing from her wallet, theNYPD believed Shelly had taken her own life. Anautopsy found she had died as a result ofneck compression.[21] Ostroy insisted that his wife was happy in her personal and professional life, and would never have committed suicide leaving her two-and-a-half-year-old daughter motherless. His protests over the following days prompted further examination of the bathroom, which revealed a sneaker print in gypsum dust on the toilet beside where her body had been found. The print was matched to other shoe prints in the building where construction work had been done the day of Shelly's death.[21][22]
Diego Pillco, a 19-year-old construction worker from Ecuador, was arrested on November 6 and confessed on tape to attacking Shelly and staging the fake suicide.[23][24][25][26] Pillco's original version claimed that when Shelly demanded the construction noise be kept down, he threw a hammer at her. Afraid she might make a complaint that could result in his deportation, since he hadimmigrated into the United States illegally, he followed her back to her apartment. Pillco said Shelly slapped him when he grabbed her at her apartment door and he retaliated by punching her in the face, knocking her to the ground where she hit her head and fell unconscious.[27][28] Believing he had killed her, he then hanged her to make it appear a suicide. This version of events was not supported given the lack of head trauma and the presence of neck compression as the cause of death.[29]
Pillco gave a different account during trial in 2008. He said he was returning to work after lunch when he noticed Shelly returning to her apartment in the elevator, and decided to follow and rob her.[30] He said he waited on the landing of Shelly's apartment as she entered and left the door open, and intended to steal from her purse.[31] When Shelly caught him and threatened to call police, he grabbed the phone and covered her mouth to quiet her screaming.[32][33] After rendering Shelly unconscious, Pillco bound a bed sheet around her neck and strangled her. He then dragged her to the bathroom where he hung her body from the shower rod to make her death look like suicide.[34]
The second version was consistent with the lack of dust on Shelly's shoes that she was not wearing when found, and was apparently a confession to murder. Prosecutors thought if charged with murder Pillco might return to his original account and a jury trial could find him guilty of a lesser charge.[32] The medical examiner determined that Shelly was still alive when hanged.[35] Pillco pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter and was sentenced to 25 years in prison without parole.[36] Since he is an illegal immigrant, he is scheduled to be deported to Ecuador upon release.[32]
At Pillco's sentencing on March 13, 2008, Shelly's husband and family members said that they would never forgive him. Andy Ostroy said of Pillco "...you are nothing more than a cold-blooded killer" and that he hoped he would "rot in jail".[37]
Ostroy said that "Adrienne was the kindest, warmest, most loving, generous person I knew. She was incredibly smart, funny and talented, a bright light with an infectious laugh and huge smile that radiated inner and outer beauty ... she was my best friend, and the person with whom I was supposed to grow old."[37]
According to an acquaintance, Pillco said after eight months he still owed a debt on the $12,000 he had paid to be smuggled into the US, and he lived in the basement of a building owned by his employer. One of Shelly's neighbors told reporters that Pillco's stare had made the neighbor feel uncomfortable when she walked past him.[38] Shelly's husband sued contractor Bradford General Contractors, which had hired Pillco.[39] The complaint alleged that Shelly would still be alive if the contracting firm had not hired him.[40]
Ostroy also sought to hold the owners and management of the building liable for Shelly's murder.[40] According to aNew York Post article, among other allegations, the complaint stated that"'Pillco was an undocumented immigrant...' as were his co-workers,[40] and that "it was in Bradford General Contractors' interest not to have 'police and immigration officials [called] to the job site' because that would have ground their work to a halt".[40]
On July 7, 2011, the lawsuit was dismissed by Judge Louis York. The court determined that Ostroy had not established legal grounds to hold the contractor liable, writing "While this court sympathizes with [Ostroy's] loss, plaintiffs have not presented sufficient legal grounds upon which to hold Bradford ... liable for Pillco's vicious crime,"[41] and that there was likewise insufficient evidence presented to find that either the building's management agents or its owners "had reason to believe that Pillco was a dangerous person who should not have been allowed to work at the premises"[41] in order to find themvicariously liable. Ostroy was said to be considering an appeal.[41]
After his wife's death, Ostroy established the Adrienne Shelly Foundation,[42] a nonprofit organization that awards scholarships, production grants, finishing funds, and living stipends through its partnerships with academic and filmmaking institutionsNYU,Columbia University, Women in Film, IFP,AFI,Sundance Institute, Tribeca Film Institute, and theNantucket Film Festival. One of its grant recipients,Cynthia Wade, won an Academy Award in 2008 forFreeheld, a short-subject documentary that the Foundation had helped fund. The foundation gave an early short film grant toChloé Zhao, who eight years later became the second woman in history to win theAcademy Award for Best Director.[43] As part of its annual awards, theWomen Film Critics Circle gives the Adrienne Shelly Award to the film that "most passionately opposes violence against women".[44]
On February 16, 2007, theNBC crime drama seriesLaw & Order broadcast a season 17 episode titled,"Melting Pot", which was a loose dramatization of Shelly's murder.[45] The plot of "Melting Pot" contains an alteration of the events wherein the murder is committed by the employer of the undocumented construction worker in an attempt to protect his lucrative business. Shelly also guest-starred on the show in the 2000 episode "High & Low".[46]
Shelly's filmWaitress was accepted into the2007 Sundance Film Festival before her murder.[47] The film, starringKeri Russell,Nathan Fillion,Cheryl Hines,Jeremy Sisto,Andy Griffith, and Shelly was bought during the festival byFox Searchlight Pictures for an amount between $4 million and $5 million (news accounts on the actual amount vary), and the film realized a final box-office draw of more than $19 million.[48]Waitress maintains a 90% "fresh" rating onRotten Tomatoes.[49]
Waitress and its cast have collectively won five film awards and received other nominations in various categories, including an audience award for a feature film at theNewport Beach Film Festival, where cast memberNathan Fillion received a feature film award for his role in the film; the Jury Prize at theSarasota Film Festival for narrative feature; the Wyatt Award by the Southeastern Film Critics Association Awards as well as nominations for aHumanitas Prize and anIndependent Spirit Award for best screenplay.[50]
Ostroy producedSerious Moonlight, a film written by Shelly and directed by Hines. The film starsMeg Ryan,Timothy Hutton,Kristen Bell, andJustin Long. It premiered at theTribeca Film Festival in April 2009 and was released later that year in December.[citation needed]
Ostroy spearheaded the establishment of a memorial to his wife. On August 3, 2009, the Adrienne Shelly Garden was dedicated on the Southeast side ofAbingdon Square Park at 8th Avenue and West 12th Street. It faces 15 Abingdon Square, the building where Shelly died.[51]
The musicalWaitress, based on the motion picture written by Shelly, opened on August 1, 2015, at theAmerican Repertory Theater which is atHarvard University. It was directed byDiane Paulus and featured a book byJessie Nelson and music and lyrics bySara Bareilles. It starredJessie Mueller, winner of a Tony Award for her portrayal ofCarole King in the musicalBeautiful. After a sold-out limited engagement, the show moved to Broadway, starting in previews March 25, 2016, and officially opening April 24, 2016.[52] The production closed on January 5, 2020, after 33 previews and 1,544 performances.[citation needed]
Shelly's murder and police investigation is dramatized in season 4, episode 2 of theInvestigation Discovery television series,The Perfect Murder.[53] She is portrayed by actress Emily Stokes. The murder is also dramatized in season 2, episode 15 of theOxygen television series,New York Homicide.
Ostroy directed a documentary about Shelly's life, titledAdrienne in which he meets and has a conversation with Diego Pillco in prison.[54][55] It premiered on December 1, 2021, onHBO.[56]
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Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | The Unbelievable Truth | Audry | |
1990 | Trust | Maria Coughlin | |
Lonely in America | Woman in Laundromat | ||
1992 | Big Girls Don't Cry... They Get Even | Stephanie | |
Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me | Dannie | ||
1993 | Hexed | Gloria O'Connor | |
1994 | Opera No. 1 | Fairy #2 | Short film |
Kalamazoo | Short film | ||
Sleeping with Strangers | Jenny | ||
Homicide: Life on the Street | Tanya Quinn | Episode: "A Many Splendored Thing" | |
Teresa's Tattoo | Teresa / Gloria | ||
The Road Killers | Red | ||
Sleep with Me | Pamela | ||
1996 | Sudden Manhattan | Donna | Writer and director |
1997 | The Regulars | Short film | |
Grind | Janey | ||
Early Edition | Emma Shaw | Episode: "Phantom at the Opera" | |
1998 | Oz | Sarah | Episode: "Ancient Tribes" |
Wrestling with Alligators | Mary | ||
1999 | I'll Take You There | Lucy | Writer and director Festroia International Film Festival Prize of the City of Setúbal – Special Mention The Comedy Festival Film Discovery Jury Award for Best Director |
2000 | Dead Dog | Mrs. Marquet | |
Law & Order | Wendy Alston | Episode: "High & Low" | |
The Shadows of Bob and Zelda | Zelda | Short film | |
2001 | The Atlantis Conspiracy | Samantha | TV movie |
Revolution #9 | Kim Kelly | ||
2004 | Tiger: His Fall & Rise | Terry | Short film |
2005 | Factotum | Jerry | |
2007 | Waitress | Dawn | Posthumous release Final film appearance Writer, director, and co-star Sarasota Film Festival Jury Prize for Best Narrative Feature Nominated —Humanitas Prize for Sundance Film Category Nominated —Independent Spirit Award for Best Screenplay |
2021 | Adrienne | Herself | Documentary about Shelly |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | Urban Legend | Writer & Director | 26-minute short film[57] |
1997 | Lois Lives a Little | Writer & Director | |
Sudden Manhattan | Writer & Director | ||
2000 | The Shadows of Bob and Zelda | Writer & Director | |
2009 | Serious Moonlight | Writer |