Valerie Perrine, the Las Vegas showgirl turned Oscar-nominated actor best known for playing Lenny Bruceโs wayward wife Honey Harlow in โLennyโ and Lex Luthorโs secretary Eve Teschmacher in the 1978 and 1980 โSupermanโ films, died Monday morning. She was 82.
Perrineโs death was confirmed by Stacey Souther, her close friend and the director of the 2019 documentary โValerie,โ which followed the starโs debilitating battle with Parkinsonโs disease.
โIt is with deep sadness that I share the heartbreaking news that Valerie has passed away,โ Souther announced on social media. โShe faced Parkinsonโs disease with incredible courage and compassion, never once complaining. She was a true inspiration who lived life to the fullest โ and what a magnificent life it was. The world feels less beautiful without her in it.
โI love you, Valerie. Iโll see you on the other side.โ
Souther also shared a GoFundMe link and a note that Perrineโs final wish was to be laid to rest at the Hollywood Hills Forest Lawn Cemetery. โAfter more than 15 years of fighting Parkinsonโs, her finances are exhausted.โ
Perrine was born Sept. 3, 1943, in Galveston, Texas, to parents Renee and Kenneth, a dancer and a U.S. Army lieutenant colonel. A military brat growing up, Perrine moved frequently and spent time in Japan, Paris and Scottsdale, Ariz.
She attended the University of Arizona, but her academic aspirations were short-lived. She skipped town, trading her textbooks for a feather headdress and G-string in Las Vegas. Soon she was a lead dancer in the star-spangled Lido de Paris show at the Stardust Hotel. She told the New York Times in 1974 that she spent some of her $800 weekly paycheck on experimenting with drugs: acid, mescaline, peyote, cocaine โ you name it, she tried it.
Eight years after her foray into Vegas showbiz, her movie career kicked off unexpectedly during a visit to Hollywood. An agent at a friendโs dinner party took a liking to her, she told the Los Angeles Times in 2013. He asked if she had any publicity photos. The only one she had was in her topless Lido costume.
The sexy picture made its way to the desk of Monique James, the head of new talent at Universal. โShe called me in and asked if I had ever acted before and I said โno,โโ Perrine said. โShe arranged a screen test.โ
Paul Monash, the producer of โSlaughterhouse-Five,โ which was based on Kurt Vonnegutโs acclaimed novel about World War II and time travel, directed the screen test. โThey told me to wear a bikini because they wanted to see what my body looked like. I didnโt have a bikini. I wore my G-string and that was it.โ
โI had been working in Vegas all the time and had been on the beach in St. Tropez, so being [naked] didnโt mean anything to me,โ she told The Times. โIt was my attitude that sparked his interest and the way I read the line, โOh, youโre a moon child.โ He hired me.โ
Soon after, she portrayed the love interest of NASCAR driver Junior Johnson opposite Jeff Bridges in the 1973 sports drama โThe Last American Hero.โ Perrine and Bridges dated briefly while working on the film. The same year she became the first woman to bare her breasts on television in the PBS telefilm โSteambath.โ
Bridges described Perrine in the 2019 documentary โValerieโ as having a โreal sense of fun and play.โ
โShe was excited about life and excited where she was and itโs a contagious feeling,โ he said. โGrowing up in a military family and traveling all over the world made her a really interesting person and as an actress, she had the ability to bring all of that into her performances.โ
In 1974, she tapped into her showgirl background to portray the drug-addled stripper Honey Harlow opposite Dustin Hoffman as Lenny Bruce in the biopic โLenny.โ Her performance garnered rave reviews. She nabbed the lead actress award at the Cannes Film Festival, BAFTA named her most promising newcomer and she was nominated for an Oscar.
Perrine was perhaps best known for her portrayal of Eve Teschmacher, Lex Luthorโs secretary and love interest in the 1978 โSupermanโ starring Christopher Reeve, Gene Hackman and Marlon Brando. She played the role again in 1980โs โSuperman II.โ
She also starred in the 1980 disco flick โCanโt Stop the Musicโ alongside the Village People and Caitlyn Jenner. The movie flopped and Perrine was so mortified by the filmโs poor reception that she moved to Europe. She didnโt officially retire from acting until around 2010, and by 2015 she had gone public with her Parkinsonโs disease diagnosis.
The 2019 documentary short โValerie,โ directed by Souther, dropped the veil on Perrineโs battle with the illness, with her loss of bodily autonomy captured in the film. She said โthe shakesโ caused her to struggle and the level of care she required made her feel like a baby.
Still intact, though, were her sharp wit and self-deprecating sense of humor. In the film a doctor explains that there are times when physicians arenโt able to pin down a diagnosis or there are multiple diagnoses.
โThe doctors donโt know whatโs going on with me,โ Perrine says. โThey canโt figure it out.โ
โWhat do you think it is?โ the doctor asks Perrine.
โKarma,โ she quips.