
From a teen tormented by a Christmas obsession for coveted cha‑cha heels, Dawn Davenport’s relentless pursuit of fame turns her into a monstrous, egomaniacal celebrity. Her unchecked ambition drives a series of outrageous actions that ultimately culminate in a shocking execution on the electric chair.
Does Female Trouble have end credit scenes?
No!
Female Trouble does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of Female Trouble, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Divine
Dawn Davenport / Earl Peterson

John Waters

Mink Stole
Taffy Davenport

Channing Wilroy
Prosecutor

Cookie Mueller
Concetta

David Lochary
Donald Dasher

Edith Massey
Ida Nelson

Mary Vivian Pearce
Donna Dasher

Paul Swift
Butterfly

Susan Walsh
Chicklette

Michael Potter
Gater

Susan Lowe
Vikki

Ed Peranio
Wink

George Figgs
Dribbles

George Hulse
Mr. Weinberger

Elizabeth Coffey
Earnestine

Anne Figgs
Gater's Girlfriend
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Challenge your knowledge of Female Trouble with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
What is the name of the troubled high‑school student whose life spirals into crime and glamour?
Dawn Davenport
Concetta
Chicklette
Ida Nelson
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of Female Trouble, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
In Baltimore in 1960, a troubled high-school student Dawn Davenport Earl Peterson grows increasingly ungrateful when her parents refuse to buy the cha-cha heels she longs for at Christmas. In a furious outburst, she smashes the presents, topples the family tree, and storms out of the house, nearly naked as she hitchhikes a ride with a lecherous man. That encounter leads to an unwanted pregnancy, and she eventually gives birth to a daughter who will grow up in a world shadowed by neglect and fear.
The young mother drifts through a string of dead-end jobs—a diner waitress, a stripper—and slides into petty crime, engaging in burglary and street prostitution with two old high-school friends, Concetta and Chicklette. Dawn remains tethered to a life shaped by impulse and vanity, a trajectory that seems to promise little happiness but plenty of drama.
At the Lipstick Beauty Salon, where appearances are everything, Dawn marries her hair stylist and next-door neighbor, Gater Nelson. The shop’s owners, Donald Dasher and Donna Dasher, recruit Dawn into an artistic experiment they claim will prove that “crime and beauty are the same”—and they photograph her crimes to feed her craving for fame. The experiment uses Dawn as a living canvas, transforming her home into a showroom of glamour and danger, while she is pressured to perform more reckless acts.
Aunt Ida Nelson, Gater’s aunt, is embittered by the marriage she hoped would bring him to men, not women, and she blames Dawn for the upheaval in their family. When the union collapses, Dawn convinces the Dashers to fire Gater, who then relocates to Detroit to pursue factory work. Ida, driven by revenge, darkens Dawn’s life with a vicious acid attack that leaves her disfigured. The Dashers counsel Dawn to reject corrective surgery, instead capitalizing on the altered look as part of a grotesque, staged beauty. They also kidnap Ida and imprison her in a birdcage, presenting Dawn with an axe as a cruel token of retribution.
As Dawn’s daughter grows up, she becomes increasingly aware of her mother’s crimes and the lifestyle that surrounds them. The teenager—distressed by the chaos and Dawn’s insistence that she is intellectually disabled—traces her father’s identity, only to find him living a life of squalor. When he attempts to molest her, she defends herself with a knife and ends up killing him. Dawn, meanwhile, insists on keeping Taffy close, and the girl retreats into a religious turn, announcing she is joining the Hare Krishna movement.
Dawn’s career as a nightclub performer takes center stage, with ever-more outlandish outfits and performances. Behind the scenes, Taffy appears in religious attire, and Dawn fulfills her threat by strangling her. The performance escalates into chaos: Dawn bounces on a trampoline, tears a phone directory to shreds, and cavorts in a crib full of dead fish. She even dresses a gun onstage and opens fire on the audience, wounding and killing several people. The police arrive to quell the crowd, but agents themselves shoot some of the audience while allowing the Dashers to escape, claiming they are upright citizens.
Dawn runs into the forest but is soon captured and brought to trial for murder. At the hearing, the Dashers secure immunity from prosecution for their testimony against her and manipulate Ida into giving false testimony to secure Dawn’s conviction. Dawn’s defense attorney seeks a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity, but the jury convicts her and sentences her to die in the electric chair. In prison, she says goodbye to a fellow inmate and her lesbian partner, Earnestine. Dawn is eventually escorted to the chair, where she delivers a final, staged speech to an imaginary audience as if accepting an award, and she is executed. Her life, marked by a relentless blend of crime, glamour, and personal betrayal, meets a stark, televised end.
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