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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

‘Godmother of Horror,’ Shaye faces demons

Lin Shaye arrives at the Los Angeles premiere of “Insidious: Chapter 3” held at TCL Chinese Theatre on June 4 in Los Angeles. (Associated Press)
Roger Moore Tribune News Service

They call Lin Shaye “The Godmother of Horror.” Read her listed credits on the Internet Movie Database and you see why.

“It reads like Al Capone’s rap sheet!” cracks writer/director Leigh Whannell. Some 179 acting credits, roles ranging from “The Long Riders” to “There’s Something About Mary,” comedies and dramas, Westerns – and most especially, scary movies.

“She has so many connections to horror, going all the way back to her brother, Robert, who shepherded the ‘Nightmare on Elm Street’ films into theaters,” says Whannell, who directed Shaye in the new film “Insidious: Chapter 3.” Robert Shaye was head of New Line Cinema when that studio launched the “Elm Street” series in 1984, with a nice small role for his sister Lin included.

Shaye, 71, turns up in so many horror films it’s as if the filmmakers, knowing her pedigree, are looking for a good luck charm.

“She’s the calm in the middle of the storm,” says Timothy Anderson, a horror filmmaker and reviewer for the horror website Bloodydisgusting.com. “If Lin Shaye is there to save the day, it seems like everything might just turn out fine. Of course that’s rarely the case.”

And so it is with “Insidious: Chapter 3,” which opened Friday. Actor and screenwriter Leigh Whannell launched his career with “Saw” and scripted the original “Insidious.” To make his directing debut with “Chapter 3,” he wanted “a friendly face,” Shaye, back on set. “The only problem with that? I killed her character (Elise, a demon-chasing psychic) off in the first film!”

A back-engineered prequel was born, and with it, a rare leading role for Shaye.

Doing horror conventions puts Shaye in direct touch with the fans of the genre, “and from them, I learn what really scares people.”

What about her? An in-demand actress and admitted animal fanatic who shares her life with cats and a dog, she doesn’t worry about becoming a shut-in, “a cat lady.” But even though she’s “never aware of my actual age … I’m having too much fun to think about that,” Shaye has her fears. And they have to do with mortality.

“I hate the idea of losing my independence, having my health turn bad. When you feel bad, that puts an edge on everything you do.”

She’s a true believer in “the good you put out there coming back, and the bad – all those things these movies have in them.”

“So my advice? Even when life is long, it’s a short little millisecond that we’re on this planet. Be in the moment. Pet your dog.”