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‘Pretty Baby’ shines a spotlight on Brooke Shields’ controversial years as a child star

There are many examples of young girls being sexualized by media, but Brooke Shields became a poster child for the practice, literally and figuratively, while inviting questions about stage mothers.

“Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields” pulls back the curtain on that period, in a two-part Hulu documentary that perhaps inevitably frontloads most of its juiciest and most disturbing material.

The title comes from the movie that capsulized Shields’ upbringing, “Pretty Baby,” a provocative 1978 film by director Louis Malle that cast Shields as the child of a New Orleans prostitute and, among other things, featured the brothel auctioning off her virginity.

Putting her in such sexualized scenes was controversial at the time, and the documentary’s director, Lana Wilson, presents talk-show footage of Shields’ mother and manager, Teri, defending those decisions, saying of her photogenic daughter, “I just knew she’d be a star.”

The idea of stardom coming at a price is almost a cliché, but in Shields’ case, the path to becoming “the most-photographed woman in the world,” as she’s later described, was accompanied by a childhood spent posing for extreme closeups of her face at modeling shoots and on movie sets. As longtime friend Laura Linney recalls, “She was a young girl in an all-adult world,” serving as the principal breadwinner in her home and frequently having to be responsible for her alcoholic mother.

Shields’ story can’t and shouldn’t be viewed in a vacuum, and there are echoes of child actors like Evan Rachel Woods and Soleil Moon Frye’s experiences as presented in their recent documentary memoirs “Phoenix Rising” and “Kid 90,” respectively.

A shot of Brooke Shields as a child in "Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields."
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