Shelley Duvall has died aged 75. The Shining star died of complications from diabetes on Thursday at her home in Blanco, Texas.
The iconic actress who played Wendy Torrance in the legendary 1980 Stanley Kubrick horror film died in her sleep.
‘My dear, sweet, wonderful life partner and friend left us. Too much suffering lately, now she’s free. Fly away, beautiful Shelley,’ Dan Gilroy, her life partner since 1989, told The Hollywood Reporter.
Following a career that included major roles in Annie Hall, McCabe and Mrs. Miller and the iconic Olive Oyl in Popeye, Duvall retreated from Hollywood in 2002.
She later revealed that she suffered from mental illness and felt she had been ‘hurt’ by the showbusiness world.
Born July 7, 1949 in Fort Worth, Texas, Duvall began her career by appearing in the 1970 black comedy feature Brewster McCloud.
She starred in the psychological thriller Three Woman in 1977, which earned her an award for Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival.
Her most notable role was as Wendy Torrance in The Shining, and although initial reviews for the feature were mixed, contemporary critics have viewed the film in a much more favorable light.
She founded her own production company in 1988, called Think Entertainment, which was behind a ton more kids shows; however, she sold the company five years later. She also released an album that featured her covering popular Christmas hits in 1991.
Duvall was married to Bernard Sampson before her career kicked off, then she went on to date Paul Simon from 1976 to 1979 and Ringo Starr from 1979 to 1980, then Stanley Wilson who she met on the set of Popeye before starting her relationship with Gilroy.
In 2002, Duvall appeared in the independent film Manna from Heaven, before announcing that she was stepping away from the spotlight and retiring from acting.
Following the movie’s release, the actress retreated from public life and retired until last year.
She made her return to the big screen in the 2023 film The Forest Hills about a man who begins experiencing disturbing visions after enduring a head injury during a camping trip in the Catskill Mountains.
‘Shelley leaves behind an amazing legacy and will be missed by so many people, myself included. I am proud of her for overcoming adversity to act again and will always be forever grateful for her friendship and kindness,’ The Forest Hills director Scott Goldberg told People.
In an interview with The New York Times, Duvall said that she left showbusiness in 2002 because people in Hollywood ‘hurt’ her.
‘I was a star; I had leading roles,’ she told the paper. ‘People think it’s just aging, but it’s not. It’s violence.’
She eventually made an appearance on an episode of Dr. Phil in 2016, where she spoke about dealing with mental illness during her time on the show.
The show’s host was subsequently criticized for what many saw as his exploitation of the performer.
Gilroy also chimed in the Times interview saying that her 2016 interview with Dr. Phil was support to help her career, but it ended up being damning and made her appear ‘odd’.
But then he added that he does worry about her, especially when she sleeps in her car.
Gilroy also explained that when her Los Angeles home was destroyed in the 1994 Northridge earthquake, they moved to Texas hoping for a happier life.
That is when things went ‘downhill’ and she ‘started becoming afraid of things, maybe didn’t want to work’.