Lesleh Donaldson needs
no introduction to die-hard horror film aficionados, but her humble beginnings
were anything but horrific.Studying
acting beginning at the age of ten at the
TorontoSchool
of Drama, she appeared in "For the Record: Homecoming" and "Ambush
at Iroquois Point" for the Canadian Broadcasting Company.Documentary films such as "Teenage Sex
and Going Steady", "Birthright", and "On the Level"
followed, as well as an acclaimed stint as the titular heroine in "The
Diary of Anne Frank" at the Manitoba Theatre Centre.
Lesleh Donaldson
Following her feature film
debut as Michael Douglas' daughter in the Canadian drama RUNNING, Lesleh performed
in four consecutive low-budget Canadian horror films starting in the late
1970's and into the early 1980's that have fans the world over.She began with FUNERAL HOME, an atmospheric
tale of strange goings-on in rural
Canada that featured an eccentric
performance by Kay Hawtry.HAPPY
BIRTHDAY TO ME featured Lesleh as a student who is dispatched early-on in this
revenge thriller starring "Little House on the Prairie's" Melissa Sue
Anderson and released by
Columbia
Pictures.DEADLY EYES followed, a
strange yarn about giant rats invading
Toronto.Her last foray into horror was in this scribe's
personal favorite, CURTAINS, the Jensen Farley flick about six actresses all
hoping to audition for a film director who is casting his new film, AUDRA, and
needs to find the perfect woman to portray her in all her beautiful madness.
Although she does not
consider herself to be a strictly horror-based actress, Lesleh possesses an
affinity for the horror films of the 1960's which helped shape her direction in
the acting world.Coming on the heels of
Canadian genre favorites, Lesleh received critical acclaim in several
television productions and has done considerable stage work in her native
Canada.Having left
Canada in the late 1990's, Lesleh now lives in
New York City with her husband
and two children and is looking to act again.It would be wonderful to see Lesleh in a stage production as
New York is the best
place to showcase one's thespian talents.
House of Horrors spent
some time with Lesleh to discuss her work and love of movies.
Jonathan Stryker:Tell me a little bit about your background
and your experiences growing up as a movie-lover in
Canada.
Lesleh Donaldson:I loved
watching the Hammer horror films when I was a kid.My Aunt Sheila loved them and she took me to
see those when I was about seven or eight; I would sneak off with her!I was raised by my mother and my aunt.I was also very close to my grandmother.My mother was a schoolteacher, and I was an
only child.When I was about nine I
started taking modeling classes and getting booked for modeling gigs and then I
went on to do commercials and television and that led to the film and the theater.I had a pretty normal childhood.
Hammer Horror
Jonathan Stryker:Were you an avid filmgoer when you were
young?
Lesleh Donaldson:Yes,
most definitely.My mother grew up
watching all of these wonderful film musicals.She loved the Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney films about Andy Hardy,
etc.So I pretty much grew up watching
that stuff when I was young.When I was
about eight I went to see OLIVER! and I just fell completely in love with
it.
I must've seen it about 10 times in
the movie theater.And even though I
went to the movies a lot, I didn't have any real plans of wanting to become an
actress.I never thought to myself, Oh, I can really do that.I just loved how you could get lost in a
movie theater.Some of the movies made
you think, some of them were really entertaining and I just loved it.I'd love the idea of just going to the theater
and watching a movie and getting lost for two hours.It was a lot of fun, and was a big part of my
life.
Jonathan Stryker: What are the earliest memories you have of
going to the movies?Did you ever go to
drive-ins?
Lesleh Donaldson:I
don't recall going to drive-ins, I just remember the theaters.I was raised in
Toronto.I would go to the movies very frequently, and the theaters were
huge.Today they're these little
Cineplex things.But, when I was a kid
they had big theaters, like the Ziegfeld-style theaters.So, when you went to the movies, it was a big
deal.But, I don't recall going to the
drive-ins much.
Jonathan Stryker: Do
recall the very first movie you ever saw in a theater?
Lesleh Donaldson:I
believe that it was THE SOUND OF MUSIC.
I have images in my mind of the movies that made the biggest impact on
me, the films that affected me the most.I'm thinking of OLIVER! and LITTLE WOMEN.And I think I saw MARY POPPINS as well.I think kids probably see these movies today
too, but they see them on home video, certainly not in the big movie theaters
that I grew up going to.For me
personally, it was the horror films that really started to pique my interest.
Jonathan Stryker:Do you recall the names of the movie theaters
that you went to?
Lesleh Donaldson:Yes,
they were the Odeon Carlton, the Danforth, and the Fairlawn. There was another
one on
Bloor Street
that they tore down.It's now a
multiplex.Most of the theaters were
named after the studios, you know, like the
Paramount,
etc.I remember another one was the Mount
Pleasant Cinema.
Jonathan Stryker:What were your career ambitions as a teenager?Were you thinking about acting at by this
point?
Lesleh
Donaldson:Well, yes I was because I was
doing it, and I decided that that's what I really wanted to do.I knew early on that I wanted acting to be my
profession.
Jonathan Stryker:When you played Michael Douglas's daughter in
RUNNING, did that lead to FUNERAL HOME?
Lesleh Donaldson:Yes,
RUNNING was my first feature film and that opened up the door to allow me to meet
with other casting directors.We shot
FUNERAL HOME right after I was done with the 9th grade.I was fifteen, and we shot in 1979 during my
summer vacation.We shot that primarily
in
Markham right outside of
Toronto.
Jonathan Stryker:Did you have a good rapport with the cast and
crew?
Lesleh Donaldson:Yeah,
in fact I became good friends with Kay Hawtrey (who played the woman in the
film).We saw each other for a long
time off and on after filming wrapped.It's
funny, because my kids watch "Max and Ruby", a cartoon, and Kay
actually does the voice of grandma on it!
Jonathan Stryker:Was FUNERAL HOME's ending the original
ending, or was the ending different in the script?
FUNERAL HOME (1980)
Lesleh Donaldson:Yes,
the script was pretty much intact.Director William Fruet's wife, Ida, wrote the script.It was all there from the beginning to the
end, so we knew who the killer was from the get-go.
Jonathan Stryker:You're featured in HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME.Is this the extent of what
was filmed for the movie, or did you have more footage that was excised?
Lesleh Donaldson:No,
what you see in the film is what I was involved with.It was a short scene and I knew that going
in.
Jonathan Stryker: Do
you keep in touch with anyone whom you have worked with?
Lesleh Donaldson:No,
not really.It's hard because I live in
New York and so many people I worked with are in the
Toronto and surrounding
areas.I wish that I had kept in contact
with some of them because they were really cool people.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME (1981)
Jonathan Stryker: I have spoken to a lot of actors and actresses
and they say that that is something that is difficult to do.Everyone gets onto a film set and believes
they are going to stay friends with these people for the rest of their lives,
but the reality is that once shooting is over, you're moving on to the next
project.
Lesleh Donaldson:It's true, it's very true.But at
the same time, what's great about it is if I were to get a role in another film
with someone I had already worked with before, we could just pick up where we
left off, you know?
Jonathan Stryker:Can you tell me about your experiences on
DEADLY EYES?
Lesleh Donaldson:Oh,
God.(laughs)I was told about the role through my
agent.I went in to audition, and I
guess because I had done a few movies at that point they felt that I was right
for the part and I got the role.
I knew
Lisa Langois, Joe Kelly, and Kevin Fox, and so I guess that because we all knew
each other, the agents kind of kept us all together.We shot at a house in a location in
Canada, I
really can't remember the exact location.We shot the party scene there, and then the scene where we go to the
movie theater, I think that was in
Mount
Pleasant.I was
on a high at the time because I was nominated for an award for FUNERAL HOME, so
that was kind of neat.I was sort of on
a little high from that.I also remember
the dogs that were forced to wear those over-sized fake rat outfits!Poor little things.
DEADLY EYES (1982)
Jonathan Stryker:When was DEADLY EYES filmed?
Lesleh Donaldson:1982.Probably after
CURTAINS.Or maybe CURTAINS was still
filming!That seemed like that went on
forever!
Jonathan Stryker:CURTAINS was distributed by Jensen Farley
Pictures, Inc., a terrific film company that also distributed PRIVATE LESSON,
THE BOOGENS, MADMAN, HOMEWORK, JOYSTICKS, and CHAINED HEAT.
THE BOOGENS (1981)
MADMAN (1982)
CURTAINS has a reputation of being
problematic on the production side.Were
you always slated to play Christie Burns?
Lesleh Donaldson:Yes,
I was playing her from the get-go.And I
do skate, but I do not figure skate.I've
always gotten these roles wherein I play a disabled athlete, and I am just not
an athlete!I played a blind horse rider,
I played an epileptic swimmer and a mentally handicapped puppeteer in other
productions.But I never had these
skills to begin with.For CURTAINS I learned
how to skate, but I fell and hit my face on the ice, so they had to get a stunt
double!
They actually tried to give me
some backstory.Peter Simpson, the
producer, went out to some college with me and I had a scene where I had an
altercation with a teacher that I was having an affair with.Or he might have been a coach.I don't remember.But,
the script was changed a lot and as the film progresses you're not really sure
what's going on, you know, it gets a little muddied.
Jonathan Stryker:CURTAINS has a truly creepy scene of a
mysterious figure wearing a mask skating towards you in slow motion wielding a
sickle.
Lesleh Donaldson:Yes, that scene was one of the most memorable in the film.
CURTAINS (1983)
Jonathan Stryker:Did you become friends with any members of
the cast?
Lesleh Donaldson:I
was good friends with Annie Ditchburn (who played the dancer).I was doing the skating, and she would come
with me to the lessons and since she was a ballet dancer she would help me with
the choreography.I also spent time with
Sandee Currie and Michael Wincott.I
didn't know Linda Thorson or Samantha Eggar.
Jonathan Stryker:Wincott's role is very small.Was his role larger originally?
Lesleh Donaldson:I
think it was.In the film he's the
director's son, and they wanted to intimate that he was the killer.But, for whatever reason, his role was
reduced.
Jonathan Stryker:Do you have any idea who designed that scary
doll and that face mask?
CURTAINS (1983)
Lesleh Donaldson:Wow, no, I don't.
Jonathan Stryker:Lesleh, you're killing me!I want those props!(laughs)
Lesleh Donaldson:I
suppose if you could get a hold of Roy Forge Smith, the production designer,
maybe he would know.
Jonathan Stryker:He worked on FUNERAL HOME, too.
Lesleh Donaldson:Yes,
he did.
Jonathan Stryker:A different ending of CURTAINS is shown in
stills depicting Lynne Griffin onstage with all the murdered women who vied for
the role of Audra.Was this a scene that
was actually filmed?
CURTAINS (1983) - Alternate Ending?
Lesleh Donaldson:Not
with me.At least I don't remember doing it.Perhaps I buried it deep down in my
mind!(laughs)I cannot imagine it
being traumatic for me, because I remember shooting the ending of HAPPY
BIRTHDAY TO ME, I remember that quite vividly.
Jonathan Stryker:Do you watch your films?
Lesleh Donaldson:I
do now.I hated to at the time.Back then I always felt that I was too fat,
or I hated my voice, you know.If I made
a movie now I probably wouldn't want to watch it!(laughs)When I watch my films now, I can actually
get involved in the story.Back then I
was so self conscious that it was impossible to be objective.
Jonathan Stryker:How long have you lived in
New York?
Lesleh Donaldson:Thirteen
years.I came down here briefly in the
late '80's for a few months.
Jonathan Stryker:Do you still act?
Lesleh Donaldson:I
have a commercial agent now and I am slowly going on auditions, but I have kids
now and I don't have the investment in it that I once had.We'll see how it goes!
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