|
Diablo Cody pays the price of fame
Erin Carlson
NEW YORK—Being the most famous stripper-turned-screenwriter in the world
isn’t always as pleasant as it may sound.
Diablo Cody, whose blog-to-riches fairy tale culminated in an Academy
Award win for “Juno,” has spent the past few months dominating a tiny
little niche of Hollywood stardom: the celebrity writer. Not even
wordsmith heavies Paul Haggis, Wes Anderson or Charlie Kaufman have
stood in a spotlight so bright — but then, none of them had the allure
of a pole-dancing past, punkish attitude or surprising smash-hit,
Oscar-worthy pregnancy comedy.
And in Cody’s case, there’s a downside: The very things that make her
star unique are suddenly being panned and scrutinized. From tabloid
newspapers to well-trafficked celeb- and media-sniping blogs, Cody’s
meteoric rise has made her something of a target.
The first-time scriptwriter from Lemont, Ill., demonstrated her
no-nonsense, rebellious personality last week when she took to her
MySpace blog to vent about the $1 million diamond-laced shoes designed
for her by Stuart Weitzman to wear on Oscar’s red carpet.
“They’re using me to publicize their stupid shoes and NOBODY ASKED ME,”
wrote Cody, who ultimately wore gold flats. “I would never consent to a
lame publicity stunt at a time when I already want to hide.”
Cody, who has been unapologetic and candid about her colourful life,
drew praise in the blogosphere for her remarks at the time. But in the
days that followed, Weitzman told the celebrity Web site TMZ that Cody
actually selected the shoes herself, and bloggers (and subsequent
commenters) had their fun calling her out for what they saw as diva
behaviour.The New York Post chose a picture of Cody for its after-Oscars
cover that prominently featured her bikini-clad stripper tattoo. The
headline: Who’s Tat Girl! And on Tuesday, Photos of a scantily clad Cody
surfaced on the Web site Egotastic — nothing new, considering she’s
posted scantily clad photos of herself before.
With her Oscar firmly in hand, Diablo is laying low for now. She is “out
of town,” spending her time writing — and won’t be available for media
interviews “for the foreseeable future,” her representative, Craig
Bankey, told media on Tuesday.
Earlier this month, the Web site Something Awful posted three pages of a
fake Cody screenplay called “Quotey” that mocked the hipster wordplay
she showcased in “Juno,” which had the oft-mocked line: “Honest to blog?”
And right before the Oscars, New York comedian Jackie Clarke released a
video impersonation of Cody, complete with the writer’s trademark black
bob. In it, Clarke-as-Cody quipped: “Hey, did I ever tell you I used to
be a stripper?”
“Everybody was ... rallying behind her before `Juno’ hit $125 million at
the box office, and now comes the inevitable backlash where they see her
selling out to Hollywood,” observed Tom O’Neil, a columnist for the Los
Angeles Times’ “The Envelope” Web site.
“She always seemed like a rebel, a social rebel who now seems to have
cashed in and joined the club. And I think what we’re witnessing is
resentment to that,” said O’Neil, who noted that Cody’s raunchy
backstory likely proved irresistible to Hollywood types who don’t get a
chance to show their bohemian, darker sides in public.
O’Neil called Cody’s rise a “naughty Cinderella” story. Cody, whose real
name is Brook Busey, caught the eye of manager Mason Novick after he
found her sexy blog while surfing for porn online several years ago. She
wrote a memoir about her year as a stripper in Minneapolis — and whipped
up “Juno” on a laptop at a Starbucks in a Target store.
Cody’s new projects include the Steven Spielberg-produced “The United
States of Tara” for Showtime, featuring Toni Collette as a mom with
split personalities, and the horror film “Jennifer’s Body,” which counts
“Juno” director Jason Reitman among the producers. She’s also taking a
turn as a backpage pop-culture columnist for the magazine Entertainment
Weekly.
“She was wooed by Hollywood from the start to join them,” O’Neil said.
“And once she did, then they exalted her. She became the ultimate
epitome of Hollywood’s free spirit.”
Movie critic Robert Wilonsky of the Dallas Observer thinks potshots
against Cody are rooted in jealousy.
“She deserves what she has coming to her,” Wilonsky said. “This is not
accidental and it’s not undeserved. Anyone who says otherwise is just a
would-be screenwriter with a movie script sitting in their desk that
nobody has any interest in.”
New York magazine recently published a chart showing “Juno” as
experiencing “backlash to the backlash”: “Almost everyone we know hates
it,” the magazine said. “So much so that others are now hating on the
haters.”
One of those haters is the mag’s film critic, David Edelstein, who has
professed to be “almost alone” — among critics, anyway — “in disliking”
the dramedy.
“A lot of people I know have problems with the film because they think
it’s not the way a 16-year-old girl talks,” Wilonsky said. “That’s
probably right to some extent. It’s not meant to be a documentary.”
O’Neil said the trick for Cody now is to deal with the pressure to match
the success of “Juno.”
“She’s got to deliver,” he said. “She’s got to prove that all of this
adulation is not just about her, but was really about her work.”
The self-deprecating, yet self-promoting It Screenwriter seems as awed
by her good fortune as her fans and detractors.
“I’ve always been a writer, I’ve always been a storyteller, but I never
thought about screenwriting,” Cody said after her Oscar victory. “I grew
up in the Midwest, you don’t know any screenwriters. It didn’t seem like
a realistic career possibility.” And until now, neither did the fame —
and all of its pitfalls — that came along with it.
|