Jeff Baena, indie filmmaker and Aubrey Plaza's husband, dies at 47

The director, who also co-wrote "I Heart Huckabees," collaborated with the actress on the movies "The Little Hours" and "Life After Beth."

Michael Tran/FilmMagic Aubrey Plaza and Jeff Baena

Michael Tran/FilmMagic

Aubrey Plaza and Jeff Baena

Jeff Baena, the independent filmmaker who collaborated with his wife, Aubrey Plaza, on the projects The Little Hours and Life After Beth, has died at 47.

The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner's Office and a representative for Baena confirmed the news to Entertainment Weekly on Saturday. Baena's death was ruled a suicide by hanging, according to medical examiner records reviewed by EW.

Plaza and the Baena-Stern family said in a statement provided to EW, "This is an unimaginable tragedy. We are deeply grateful to everyone who has offered support. Please respect our privacy during this time."

Born in Miami in 1977, Baena studied film at New York University and began his Hollywood career as a production assistant on Robert Zemeckis' 2000 movies, Cast Away and What Lies Beneath. He made his screenwriting debut with 2004's I Heart Huckabees, a collaboration with director David O. Russell that starred Dustin Hoffman, Lily Tomlin, Jude Law, Jason Schwartzman, Mark Wahlberg, and Naomi Watts.

 Anna Pocaro/IndieWire/Penske Media/Getty Jeff Baena

Anna Pocaro/IndieWire/Penske Media/Getty

Jeff Baena

Baena began dating Plaza in 2011, and the couple played versions of themselves in Mark Webber's 2012 film, The End of Love, alongside actors like Alia Shawkat, Michael Cera, and Amanda Seyfried. He made his directorial debut with 2014's Life After Beth, a comedy he wrote that followed a young man (Dane DeHaan) who must contend with his late girlfriend (Plaza) returning to his life as a zombie. The movie also starred John C. Reilly, Molly Shannon, Anna Kendrick, Matthew Gray Gubler, Paul Reiser, and Adam Pally.

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After playing a minor role in Joe Swanberg's Digging for Fire opposite Jake Johnson in 2015, Baena released 2016's Joshy, a dark comedy that centered on a protagonist (Thomas Middleditch) whose friends (played by Pally, Alex Ross Perry, and Nick Kroll) attempt to cheer him up following the death of his fiancée (Alison Brie). Plaza, Lauren Graham, Jenny Slate, Reiser, Johnson, and Swanberg appeared in supporting roles.

The filmmaker released his third directorial feature, The Little Hours, in 2017. The medieval comedy starred a number of Baena's previous collaborators, including Plaza, Brie, Reilly, Shannon, Reiser, and Pally, as well as Dave Franco, Kate Micucci, and Fred Armisen.

George Pimentel/Getty Aubrey Plaza and Jeff Baena

George Pimentel/Getty

Aubrey Plaza and Jeff Baena

Related: The 15 best Aubrey Plaza movie and TV roles, ranked

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In 2020, Baena wrote, directed, and produced Horse Girl, an offbeat psychological drama starring Brie as an odd introvert who experiences a series of inexplicable phenomena. Reiser, Shannon, and Gubler were again part of the supporting cast, along with Debby Ryan, Jay Duplass, and John Ortiz.

Related: Horse Girl star Alison Brie knows which of her past roles has horse girl energy

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Baena's next project was 2021's Cinema Toast, an experimental dramedy series he created for Showtime that featured directorial work from Plaza, Perry, Duplass, and Baena and appearances from Christina Ricci, Colman Domingo, Chloe Fineman, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Gillian Jacobs, Dan Stevens, Christopher Meloni, Alessandro Nivola, and Griffin Newman, as well as previous collaborators like Plaza, Brie, Armisen, Duplass, Shawkat, Micucci, and Offerman.

The filmmaker's final project was 2022's Spin Me Round, a dark comedy he wrote with Brie, who also starred in the film. The movie reunited Baena with Plaza, Shannon, Ryan, Armisen, and Nivola.

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Baena is survived by Plaza; his mother, Barbara Stern; his stepfather, Roger Stern; his father, Scott Baena; his stepmother, Michele Baena; his brother, Brad Baena; his stepsister, Gabay Fluxman; and his stepbrother, Jed Fluxman.

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