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In mid-July of 1995—when American culture was fixated on such matters as O. J. Simpson’s ill-fitting glove, TLC’s insistence on not chasing waterfalls, and the box office domination of Batman Forever, Pocahontas, and Apollo 13—the fact that a modestly budgeted teen movie called Clueless was about to arrive in theaters, become a major hit for Paramount Pictures, catapult the careers of its stars, influence fashion for two decades, and become a permanent cultural touchstone for multiple generations . . . well, let’s just say it was something most people couldn’t predict at the time. (You can’t blame them, really. They were very busy focusing on the rivers and the lakes they were used to.)
Executives at Paramount Pictures—the studio that took on the film after others, regretfully, it would turn out, passed on the project—had great confidence in writer-director Amy Heckerling’s shiny, girly comedy about a shopaholic Beverly Hills teenager with a few Jane Austen DNA molecules in her genetic code. Sherry Lansing, then the head of the studio, liked it so much that after screening it, she didn’t have a single story note. “She said, ‘This is fantastic. I don’t have anything I think you should change,’ ” remembers Adam Schroeder, one of the film’s producers.
It’s not like Clueless was flying entirely below the public’s radar. The comedy benefited from some serious promotional juice courtesy of MTV, which, like Paramount, was part of the Viacom family, and pitched the film heavily to its Real World–addicted Gen X and Y audience. Media buzz about the break-out potential of Alicia Silverstone—then best known for her appearances in a trio of Aerosmith videos and the thriller The Crush, in which she stalked a post–Princess Bride, pre-Saw Cary Elwes—also started to build well before the film’s release. Entertainment Weekly splashed an image of Silverstone in a shimmery baby-doll dress on its cover in March of ’95, headlining it with the supremely confident statement “A Star Is Made.” “If all goes as planned, the coming months will witness Silverstone’s transformation from gym-locker pinup to household name,” the story read. “En route to theaters are Silverstone’s True Crime, a thriller in which a Catholic schoolgirl turns gumshoe; Le Nouveau Monde, a Gallic coming-of-age story directed by Alain Corneau; and, most notably, Clueless, a teen comedy due this July that’s described by its creators as a Rodeo Drive version of Jane Austen’s Emma.” “Most notably” was, it turned out, an understatement.
But in Hollywood, even a gorgeous, on-the-rise young starlet and a director with a track record for making profitable hits (see Heckerling’s Fast Times at Ridgemont High, European Vacation, and the Look Who’s Talking pics) do not guarantee success. Given the landscape for teen movies at the time, it’s understandable that industry insiders and observers weren’t necessarily sure that Clueless would click with ticket buyers. While TV shows and movies about adolescents and young adults had not disappeared entirely from the landscape, the high school movie as a bankable genre had more or less petered out by 1995.
Then Clueless made its debut on July 19, 1995 (a Wednesday), and became the number one movie in the country that day. The weekend of July 21–23, it generated $10.6 million—it was the number two movie in America for that three-day period, right behind Apollo 13—and immediately was branded as one of the summer’s most unexpected triumphs. “In the midst of a summer of mostly desultory films, along came ‘Clueless,’ ” said a New York Times piece that ran the Monday after that strong debut, confirming in print that it had emerged as “a sleeper hit of the summer.”
The movie went on to earn $56.6 million in the US and Canada, a figure that Hollywood data-tracking site Box Office Mojo equates to $105.7 million in contemporary inflated dollars. That’s a nice return for a film whose production budget landed in the $13 million range. Reviews were positive as well. “Heckerling walks a fine line between satire and put-on, but she finds it, and her dialogue could be anthologized,” wrote Roger Ebert. New York magazine critic David Denby proclaimed it a “comedy of goodness” that made “the nastiness of a ‘smart’ teen movie like Heathers” seem “like a failure of imagination.” In the New York Times, Janet Maslin called the movie “as eye-catching and cheery as its star.”
More importantly, Clueless touched a chord in the culture that was clearly primed and ready to be struck. Preteen and teen girls—some of whom would eventually grow up to share their Clueless love with their own daughters—raced to malls in search of plaid skirts and knee-high socks, surprising higher-ups at major department stores who had not anticipated the hordes of wannabe-Cher shoppers. Almost immediately, Paramount began working with Heckerling to develop a TV show adaptation. Within a year, the movie’s soundtrack would sell enough copies to be certified gold; it would eventually reach platinum status. The success of Clueless also would defibrillate the barely breathing high school movie genre, resulting in a flood of teen movies in the late ’90s and early ’00s, many of which featured Cher-esque female protagonists and blatantly targeted the young-and-XX-chromosomed demographic that had made Clueless such a smash.
Career doors began to open wider for almost everyone involved after the movie came out, most notably Silverstone. At the age of eighteen and mere weeks after Clueless sent her industry stock into the stratosphere, she inked a reported $10 million deal with Columbia Pictures that made headlines in the trades and elsewhere. Suddenly, it felt like the whole world was making a cameo at the Val party.
Coverage of Silverstone went from excessive to inescapable, with stories and photos of her everywhere: in Vanity Fair, Time, and New York magazine, and on the cover of Rolling Stone, where she dressed in all pink and parked her frilly-bikini’d bottom next to the headline “Ballad of a Teen Queen.” Entertainment Weekly name-checked both Austen, whose Emma inspired the Clueless narrative, and Silverstone in its year-end list of the most significant entertainers of 1995, while Vanity Fair’s 1996 Hollywood issue featured Heckerling in an Annie Leibovitz photo spread focused on the industry’s most influential female filmmakers. Heckerling also won an award for best screenplay from the National Society of Film Critics and was nominated for best original screenplay by the Writers Guild of America. The media credited Clueless for, as New York Times columnist Peggy Orenstein put it, proving there’s a market for movies “in which girls are in charge of their own fates, active rather than reactive.”
What’s even more remarkable is that twenty years later, Clueless is still as omnipresent in American culture as it was back then. Thanks to its presence on cable, DVD, and streaming services like Netflix and Amazon Instant Video, Clueless is still watched on a regular basis by longtime fans as well as young people discovering the magic of Murray’s freshly shaved head for the first time. Tributes to the movie—in the form of Twitter accounts, Buzzfeed listicles, and start-up tech companies that encourage users to dress their bodies just like Cher does in Clueless—are ubiquitous in the digital sphere. Fashion designers and labels continue to riff on the costumes created for the film by Mona May. (Are you in a Macy’s, H&M, or Urban Outfitters, like, right now? Stop. Look around. There’s probably a sheer shirt, a pleated miniskirt, or some knee-highs in your field of vision that, thanks to the circle-of-life nature of fashion trends, easily could have been yanked out of Cher Horowitz’s ridiculously substantial closet.)
The idea of molding Jane Austen’s narrative structures and themes into something more modern? That has been everywhere post-Clueless, from Austenland to Web series like The Lizzie Bennet Diaries and Emma Approved. The influence of the film can be seen in the pop cultural creations of some high-profile influencers of today’s girls and young women, including Katy Perry, Lena Dunham, Tavi Gevinson, Mindy Kaling, and Iggy Azalea, just for starters. I mean, when Azalea, the Aussie rapper, decided to make a music video for “Fancy,” otherwise known as the most inescapable song on planet Earth during the year 2014, to what 1995 film did she opt to pay homage? Hint: it wasn’t Waterworld, y’all.
Clueless, then, isn’t merely a touchstone for the nineties generation. It’s a teen movie that continues to be passed from one generation to the next and is just timeless enough for every generation to think it’s speaking directly to them.
So how did it all happen? How did Amy Heckerling come up with the idea to bend and twist nineteenth-century England into an exaggerated, luminescent version of Beverly Hills circa the mid-1990s? How did Silverstone, Paul Rudd, and others get cast in this movie and who else was considered for their roles? What was the vibe in the classroom during the filming of the debate scene that taught us all how to mispronounce the word Haitians, or during the robbery scene that taught us all what an Alaïa was? Why does this movie still resonate so much, with so many people, two decades later?
Those are all questions that this book will answer, along with some incredibly nitpicky ones that only serious fans would be inclined to ask. Questions like: Who painted that picture of Cher’s mother that hangs in the foyer of the Horowitz household? What’s the deal with the hair clip that Cher wears on her date with Christian, and in what way is it connected to Amanda Bynes? (Swear to God: there really is a connection.) What happened to all of Cher’s costumes after production wrapped? Who described his experience at the premiere of Clueless—held on Malibu’s Zuma Beach and broadcast on MTV—by noting that he got “white-boy wasted”? (Forget it, I’ll just tell you the answer to that: Coolio. It was Coolio.)
But this complete history of Clueless is about more than just fun pieces of trivia. Using material gathered from more than eighty interviews with people who worked on the film, as well as professors, fashion experts, industry insiders, cultural critics, and fans of the movie, this book will tell the story of how hard it was—and often still is—for a female filmmaker with a point of view to get a movie green-lighted in Hollywood. It will explain why so many Jane Austen scholars consider Clueless, a film some initially and wrongly dismissed as nothing more than a fun romp about a ditz with a credit card, the best Jane Austen adaptation ever made. It will shed light on the amount of work, creativity, and craft that went into making Clueless look so effortlessly bright and glossy. It will delve more deeply into how Clueless used fantasy to create a world that, in a way, achieves a social ideal that reality can’t quite match: a place where a gay kid is accepted among his peers, where young girls are empowered to be their confident selves, and where the best friendship between a white girl and a black girl is so natural that no one bothers to bat a heavily mascaraed eyelash in its direction. This book will do a lot of other things, too, as you’ll see when you start turning these pages.
As If! couldn’t explore any of those subjects without the generosity of the many, many people who spoke with me as part of this project. Please peruse the long list of Clueless oral history sources, which acknowledges their contributions and also tells you more about the impressive things many of them have accomplished since graduating from Bronson Alcott High School. (I’ll thank a few particular individuals even more effusively in the acknowledgments.)
This book is written primarily in an oral history format. The material in that oral history was gathered from interviews conducted while I was working on a 2013 Vulture piece about the Val party scene (the director’s-cut version of that piece is in part 2) and during extensive interviews conducted specifically for the book.
Memories of things that happened twenty years ago can sometimes get a little fuzzy. When cast or crew members occasionally recollected the same event a little differently, I have presented both sides of the story. I also relied heavily on the movie’s 144-page production report to verify information, particularly regarding exactly when and where certain scenes were shot.
When writing a book like this, it’s inevitable that some key people—including cast members and musical artists who contributed to the soundtrack—will either not wish to participate or won’t be available to do so to the extent that I hoped. For that reason, I occasionally use quotes from interviews published or broadcast by other media outlets. Those have been appropriately footnoted and sourced within the text. Some quotes, from both my interviews and elsewhere, have been condensed in order to allow the narrative to flow more seamlessly. This has always been done in a way that keeps the meaning of the source’s words intact.
One final thought (for now) on what makes Clueless so special: as I spoke to various people about the film and rewatched it—both in pieces and in its entirety, repeatedly—while working on this book, I was struck by how much it exists within the context of its era as well as outside of it. As many Tumblrs, tweets, and online comments can attest, Clueless is one of those movies that really gets nineties nostalgia motors revving. Which makes total sense. But, at the risk of sounding, like, way philosophical, one of the more remarkable things about Clueless is that it seems to exist almost across time.
This is a movie that uses a story first published in 1815 as its narrative blueprint. Yet it’s also a movie that’s steeped in the music and pop culture references of the 1990s, the time of Marky Mark pants-dropping and catchy Mentos ads. And somehow, it’s also a movie that, through a combination of Heckerling genius and glorious accident, managed to predict how we live now. In 1995, the idea that two friends would stand right beside each other while talking on their cell phones was a hilarious joke. Now it’s a snapshot of our daily existence, although now we speak less and text more. When Amy Heckerling decided that Cher should activate a snazzy computer program that allows her to dress herself like a virtual paper doll, do you know what Amy Heckerling did? She invented the freakin’ fashion app.
Young women certainly asserted their opinions with Cher’s brash confidence before Clueless, and, culturally speaking, were doing so pretty actively around the time the movie was released. But on the Internet, an even broader swath of female voices can be heard, in outlets like Jezebel, the Hairpin, Rookie magazine, and Slate, as well as on various social media platforms. Often, the women sharing the most compelling and well-reasoned points are women who grew up on Clueless, which suggests that even if Cher doesn’t know how to say Spartacus, she may have, in some small way, shown young ladies how to stand up and speak for themselves.
Clueless, then, is something that’s simultaneously past and present and future. Watching it may sometimes make us ache for a “back then,” when we had just graduated from college, or were in high school, or watched it during our first middle school sleepover. But the reason it’s so good, as good as only a handful of teen movies can legitimately claim to be, is because every time you turn it on, it also feels very right now.