Film fest brings Kentucky movie star Sean Young home to remember Harry Dean Stanton
Sean Young is quick to remind you that she started her movie career in the late, late 1970s, before you could have almost instant access to information about your co-stars before filming began.
Her third movie, the soap opera spoof âYoung Doctors in Love,â placed her in several key scenes with fellow native Kentuckian Harry Dean Stanton, but âit wasnât like I walked into âYoung Doctors in Loveâ terribly aware of Harry. But heâs impossible to miss once you meet him.â
Young, whose resume includes signature roles in âBlade Runnerâ (1982) and âNo Way Outâ (1987) will be in Lexington Saturday night at the 11th Harry Dean Stanton Fest to share her memories of working with Stanton.
The weekend long festival will include a screening of Stantonâs final film, âLuckyâ (2017), at his final resting place in Bluegrass Memorial Gardens off Harrodsburg Road. Stanton, who died in 2017, is buried next to an open field in the cemetery where the film will be screened. People who come to the event are welcome to bring folding chairs, blankets and picnics.
It will also include a tribute to another native Kentuckian, Warren Oates, a native of Depoy, who was in several films with Stanton, a West Irvine native who graduated from Lafayette High School and the University of Kentucky. Oatesâ âTwo-Lane Blacktopâ (1971) and â92 in the Shadeâ (1975), both featuring Stanton, will be screened at the downtown Central Libraryâs Farish Theatre, and Susan Compo, author of âWarren Oates: A Wild Lifeâ will participate in a question-and-answer session between the movies.
âFrom the beginning, a surprising amount of synchronicity has played into programming the festival,â festival founder and director Lucy Jones says. âI continue to attribute that to the magic of Harry Dean Stanton. We didnât consciously set out to honor three different Kentucky-born actors who all worked together at different points in their careers yet, delightfully, thatâs how it came together this year!â
The third is Young, who was born in Louisville, though her parents moved away when she was 2, and she was raised in Cleveland, feeding a young obsession with MGM movies at a theater at Case Western Reserve University. She did frequently visit family in Kentucky and her burgeoning movie career brought her back to the Bluegrass State with her second film, âStripesâ (1981), which was filmed at Fort Knox, âwhere my dad ran away to join the Army at age 14 and lied about his age.â
When she was back in Kentucky to film, Young frequently visited her grandparents, but that wasnât the surreal part.
âHaving a part in a big Hollywood movie â that was surreal,â says Young, who turned 20 the first day of filming. âI was really happy that I had my own hotel room and was being paid.â
Not much later she went to work on âYoung Doctors,â a film which has an eye-popping cast today, though like Young, many were just getting started in the early 1980s, including Michael Richards, Ted McGinley, Hector Elizondo, and Youngâs co-star Michael McKean. It was the first feature film for director Garry Marshall who went on to features such as âPretty Womanâ (1990) and âA League of Their Ownâ (1992).
Stanton was one of the veterans in the cast.
âI remember being a newbie ... so I observed a lot,â Young remembers. âAnd Harry was one of the people that we definitely wanted to observe.â
She recalls that working with comedians on âStripesâ and âYoung Doctorsâ a lot of what ended up in the film was not in the script, but the result of a lot of improvisation. While she felt like she was just trying to keep up, including in a famous petri dish scene, she got a zinger off on Stanton that she says may have been improvised â we canât say much more about that scene in a family newspaper.
Young says a lot of that observation and on-set training paid off a decade later when she was the femme fatale in âFatal Instinct,â a send-up of late 20th century noir flicks. For people wanting to catch up on more Young films, she also points to âThe Amati Girls,â a 2000 drama with Cloris Leachman and Mercedes Ruehl.
Revisiting âYoung Doctorsâ does take Young back to a heady time in her career. She recalls a 1982 Kodachrome photo of herself in Times Square with the âBlade Runnerâ and âYoung Doctorsâ billboards behind her.
Young says, âI canât even believe that much time has passed.â This weekend will be a time to remember when these native Kentuckians met for a moment on film.
Harry Dean Stanton Festival
When: July 14-16
Where: Several locations in Lexington
Online: harrydeanstantonfest.org
Schedule:
âȘ Dusk July 14: Screening of âLuckyâ at Bluegrass Memorial Gardens
âȘ Noon July 15: Warren Oates double feature of âTwo Lane Blacktopâ and â92 in the Shadeâ (3 p.m.) along with a discussion of âWarren Oates: A Wild Lifeâ with author Susan Compo (2 p.m.) Farish Theatre, Central Library
âȘ 7 p.m. July 15: âYoung Doctors in Loveâ followed by a Q&A with star Sean Young. Kentucky Theatre
âȘ 10 p.m. July 15: VHS screening of âDream a Little Dream.â Green Lantern Bar.
âȘ 1 p.m. July 16: âThe Fourth Warâ Farish Theatre
âȘ 3 p.m. July 16: âOne from the Heartâ Farish Theatre