Los Angeles Times

In the ‘ Pink’ at last

First- time director Kelly Oxford faces anxiety with an open heart

- By Amy Kaufman

The cashier was ringing up her yerba mate when she felt it starting to happen. The hot surge of adrenaline. Her breath speeding up inside of her mask, causing her glasses to fog. A sudden inability to move.

Kelly Oxford was having a panic attack. Not her first, but her first in years — and in the middle of a Canadian gas station. She squatted, trying to steady her breathing. After a few moments she felt calmer, and stood up to retrieve her receipt. The cashier acted like nothing had happened.

Hours later, Oxford posted about the experience on Instagram, accompanyi­ng the story with a blurry selfie she’d accidental­ly snapped in the midst of the anxiety. Since 2012 — when her droll, confession­al tweets literally made her famous — she has been unf linchingly transparen­t with her followers. She tells them how much trouble she’s having quitting smoking her Juul; that she got drunk and purchased miniature furniture on EBay; how she had to inform her horrified 7- year- old daughter that, yes, women get their periods on the weekend too.

Two decades ago, when Oxford had her f irst ever panic attack, she was too scared to even tell her parents about it. She was 19, living at home in Edmonton, Alberta, after dropping out of college. Her boyfriend, in the midst of pursuing his PhD, had just broken up with her because he found her listlessne­ss unattracti­ve. And she just started freaking out — pacing around her house, unable to enter her own bedroom without vomiting.

“I had stolen this CK One poster from a bus shelter, and it was on my wall,” Oxford, now 42, recalled. “And I’d throw up every time I saw it, because I f— stole it from a bus shelter, and I’m a terrible person, and Kate Moss was staring at me. I was living in my childhood bedroom and I had a physical reaction, like, ‘ I shouldn’t be here.’ ”

Eventually, when her parents got home from work, they tended to her. But the attack lasted 10 days, ending only when she f inally visited a doctor who prescribed her Ativan. The whole scene is painstakin­gly depicted in Oxford’s new movie, “Pink Skies Ahead,” which marks her

directoria­l debut.

The movie, which will premiere at the all- virtual AFI Fest on Sunday, was supposed to launch at SXSW in March. Days before the film was scheduled to bow in Austin, Texas, COVID- 19 still seemed like a distant threat. There were rumblings that the festival might be canceled, but organizers kept vowing to forge ahead until the government shut them down. At an initial lunchtime interview, she talked about the outfits she planned to wear and played a voicemail from her film’s star, Jessica Barden, who said she’d heard there was no way the event wouldn’t move forward.

But then SXSW did get scrapped, and the world shut down. Oxford was upset, and she didn’t hide it. From her home in Studio City she posted moody selfies, lounging around in the clothes she had planned to wear in Texas.

“Covid ruined the release of my movie,” she posted in May. “I have no idea when it will be released and that’s a major frustratio­n. Major. There’s literally nothing I can do, I’m sorry.”

2020 was supposed to be her year — the payoff for the grind she’d lived since moving to Los Angeles eight years ago. “Pink Skies Ahead” would come out, she’d begin writing her third book and start production on her second feature film. She felt she’d gotten a late start on her career. Her 20s had been devoted to her husband, an environmen­tal engineer, and her three children. But when she started tweeting in 2009, her voice resonated.

Jhoni Marchinko, then best known as a writer and producer from shows such as “Murphy Brown” and “Will & Grace,” reached out to Oxford and offered to mentor her. A screenplay she’d written under Marchinko’s tutelage gave her an in with William Morris Endeavor, which started representi­ng her. Jessica Alba, who said she connected with Oxford as a fellow mom, signed up to executive produce one of her pilots. Jimmy Kimmel, a fan of her one- liners, suggested Oxford should write for his late- night show. And when Warner Bros. bought one of her scripts, she decided to move her family to L. A. and give it her best shot.

On social media, it all seemed like a Hollywood dream. Suddenly, this ultrabeaut­iful former stay- athome mom from the outskirts of Canada was palling around with celebritie­s. Her youngest daughter, then 3, became best friends with one of Busy Phillips’ kids, and the two adults became BFFs themselves. She and her family went on vacation with David Copperfiel­d at his private island in the Bahamas. In a 2017 paparazzi shot, Anne Hathaway used Oxford’s second book of essays — a New York Times bestseller — to hide her face.

“Kelly has this star quality that people gravitate toward,” said Barden. “But this was a person who 10 years ago was living in the middle of nowhere in Canada and had three kids by the time she was 30. She worked really hard to get here.”

Indeed, while her social media feed depicted casual glamour, privately, Oxford was struggling. In 2016 — on the evening Donald Trump was elected president — her marriage officially fell apart. She’d already been the breadwinne­r, but she said after she got divorced her husband did not pay spousal support. Suddenly, she was raising three teenagers on her income alone.

“They’re not in private schools or anything — I can’t afford that — but they wanted to buy cars and do things with their friends,” she said this week during a Zoom catch- up. “Emotionall­y, I just felt so upset that I could be successful and make a good amount of money, but because I don’t have a dual income from another parent, I was really struggling.”

Her panic disorder started to rear its head again. She confided in a girlfriend that she was considerin­g moving back to Canada. “Just write about how you’re feeling,” her friend advised.

So she did. Over the course of five days, barely sleeping at all, she wrote “Pink Skies Ahead.” It was a largely autobiogra­phical

story: A college dropout moves back in with her parents, where she wrestles with both what career she wants to pursue and burgeoning anxiety issues.

“It’s about the uncertaint­y of being in a transition­ary period in one’s life, and as that feeling happened to me again, I tapped back into it,” she said. “I felt a lot better when it was done, because I’d made it all into something. A weight had been lifted.”

“Pink Skies Ahead” wasn’t a big production: It cost just $ 2 million to make and was filmed in 19 days in L. A.

Barden, the lead actress, isn’t a household name — though she does have 2.1 million Instagram followers, largely a result of her role on the U. K. dark comedy series “The End of the F— ing World,” which streams on Netflix. Barden had followed Oxford on Instagram for years before meeting her after one of her friends “told me I had to follow her because we had the same exact sense of humor.” Then two years ago Barden got a direct message from Oxford, asking if she’d be interested in reading “Pink Skies Ahead.” She was in a taxi, stuck in traffic, and pored over the entire script while still in the car.

She signed onto the project and she and Oxford became fast friends, with Barden becoming a staple on the filmmaker’s Instagram stories. Their relationsh­ip — and work on the film — helped the actress come to grips with her own anxiety issues.

“At the time we filmed, I’d been working constantly for two years and I didn’t have a therapist. I definitely knew something was wrong with me, but I didn’t really understand what was going on,” said Barden, 28. “But through making the movie and being able to process things with Kelly, by the end I was like, ‘ OK, cool. I’m going to get a therapist.’ ”

On set, Oxford actually found herself eerily calm — a result, she surmised, of dealing with the chaos of raising three kids. ( Sal, 19, is now in college in Santa Barbara, while Henry, 16, and Bea, 12, live at home.) Greg Silverman, whose production company Stampede Ventures financed the movie, admitted he wasn’t sure how nervous Oxford would be during the shoot.

“It’s a movie about someone who is overwhelme­d, and then you put them in a super stressful situation directing a low- budget movie? You assume you’re going to have to be there for emotional support,” said Silverman, the executive who bought Oxford’s first script when he was Warner Bros.’ production head back in 2012. “But it was the opposite. She was much calmer than I thought she would be. She was so clearly in her element.”

Silverman has already signed on to produce Oxford’s next film, “Son of a Bitch” — the same project he tried to make at Warner Bros. years ago. The movie, which HBO Max bought in July, is another spin on Oxford’s own life, this time tackling her adjustment from wild child to young motherhood at 23.

The project is in the casting stage, but she’s reluctant to get excited about it yet in the era of COVID- 19. “I’m thinking about my family and if somebody is gonna get sick and if I’m going to be able to even stay in this country after the election,” she said.

Quarantine has been difficult for her, like it has been for most of us.

She spent a couple of months in Canada with her parents, which is when she had that panic attack in April. Back in L. A., she’s had a couple of coronaviru­s scares, and she tries to make sure her kids are staying in their friend pods. She’s constantly making them food; Henry is partial to scrambled eggs with maple syrup. At night, when she’s sure she doesn’t have to drive her children anywhere else, she tries to quell her nervousnes­s by smoking marijuana. ( She also takes anti- anxiety medication.)

Her boyfriend, Adrian Galvin — a musician who goes by the moniker Yoke Lore — lives five minutes away. She met him after sliding into his DMs and suggesting they should hang out when he had a tour stop in L. A. He’s 30, which she jokes makes her a cougar. “He doesn’t want kids, so that doesn’t matter,” she said. “And if he changes his mind, he’ll have to break up with me. But whatever.”

Making a living, she said, is still at the forefront of her mind. In May, Publisher’s Weekly reported that she had sold two young adult novels for “midsix figures” to Delacorte. She’s already completed the first book, and a quick scan of her office from her laptop shows a Post- it grid outline for the second one.

“I’ve gotta hustle,” said Oxford. “I’m not just supporting myself. I need to pay for a house and three kids. I feel like I have a lot of ambition and drive and I’m a very capable person, but also, I’m so chill.

“Just being personally fulfilled is enough for me in life, really. I like doing my job, for sure. But if somebody said, ‘ I’m taking it all away from you tomorrow’? I’ll still emotionall­y be on the same level. I think that’s part of my anxiety. I’m always ready for everything to go away.”

 ?? AUTHOR Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? Kelly Oxford’s “Pink Skies Ahead,” her largely autobiogra­phical directoria­l debut, premieres Sunday at the AFI Fest.
AUTHOR Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times Kelly Oxford’s “Pink Skies Ahead,” her largely autobiogra­phical directoria­l debut, premieres Sunday at the AFI Fest.
 ?? AFI Fest ?? A YOUNG woman wrestles with adulthood in “Pink Skies Ahead,” the f irst f ilm by author Kelly Oxford.
AFI Fest A YOUNG woman wrestles with adulthood in “Pink Skies Ahead,” the f irst f ilm by author Kelly Oxford.

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