Albert Maysles Keeps Watchful Eye On Life

http://www.ny1.com/content/features/103439/-i-one-on-1---i--albert-maysles-keeps-watchful-eye-on-life/Default.aspx

By: Budd Mishkin
08/03/2009

Filmmaker Albert Maysles has won Emmy and Sundance Festival awards, 
and has received several lifetime achievement honors. At age 82, he's 
still going, with more than a few new projects in the works. NY1's 
Budd Mishkin filed the following "One On 1" report.
--

When you've been making documentaries for more than 50 years, chance 
encounters are really moments that can provide new inspiration.

"This guy comes toward me walking like this (impersonates a man with 
hands raised and outstretched) and uh suddenly I realized what he was 
doing. He was chasing a butterfly. That's something to film," says Maysles.

Albert Maysles has found "something to film" all over the globe, 
documenting the lives of patients in psychiatric hospitals in Russia, 
poor families in the south and Cuba, but also luminaries like Truman 
Capote, The Rolling Stones and The Beatles.

Maysles is credited with pioneering the "direct cinema" style in 
America. Just video and audio -- no narration. He says he long ago 
ditched the tripod and predisposed point of view.

"Other people are out to get somebody, to prove their point and so 
they end up with something that falls short of informing the viewer 
as to what is really going on," says Maysles.

He cites the scene from his film about four bible salesmen, a film 
cited for its cultural significance in the Library of Congress.

"You've already been feeling what he's been going through and now you 
feel all the more what it is to be him," says Maysles. "And uh, the 
narration would have done no good but only bad."

Maysles' most recent film with a New York angle was "The Gates", 
Christo and Jean Claude's long saga to build a project for the city.

But the Maysles film which has had the greatest afterlife is Grey 
Gardens, the unvarnished story of a reclusive socialite mother and 
daughter living in squalor in an East Hampton mansion known to many 
as Jacqueline Kennedy's aunt and cousin "Big Edie" and "Little Edie" 
Bouvier Beale.

"The film had the advantage of tapping into the most profound human 
relationship, one neglected by so many other filmmakers, namely the 
mother-daughter relationship," says Maysles.

Since its release in 1975, there have been books, a Broadway musical, 
this year's made for TV movie and gatherings of fans like one at 
Maysles offices. The film resonated for "Big Edie" and "Little Edie," too.

"Her mother was dying. One of those last moments she turned to her 
mother and asked if there was something more she wanted to say, and 
the mother responded by saying 'There's nothing more to say, it's all 
in the film,'" says Maysles.

Many of Maysles subjects were not well known. Others became known all 
over the world.

"February 1964 got a telephone call from Grenada Television, 'The 
Beatles are arriving in two hours would you like to make a film on 
them?' Put my hand over the phone and said to my brother, 'Who are 
The Beatles? Are they any good?' He said, 'Oh they're great,'" says Maysles.

Five years later, Maysles traveled with the Rolling Stones. "Gimme 
Shelter" documented a concert tour which ended in tragedy at the 
Altamont Speedway in California, when a young man was killed by a 
member of the Hell's Angels. Maysles caught the killing on camera.

Budd Mishkin: Obviously it's a tragic situation, but on some level as 
a filmmaker that night when you know you have this moment on film, is 
there some sense of exhilaration?

Albert Maysles: Oh yeah. I mean you are so pleased that, in fact, we 
were so interested and hopeful that we got it we weren't absolutely 
sure we got it right until a couple days later.

One thing you notice immediately about Albert Maysles is his 
calmness. But that quiet speaking voice describes growing up in 
Boston in the 1930s as anything but calm.

"The Irish kids were fairly pugilistic," says Maysles. "So they were 
all too eager to get into fights with Jewish kids so I was fighting 
all the time in self-defense."

Years later, Maysles made a film about and befriended four Irish 
bible salesmen from his hometown.

"It wasn't trying to get back at them at all. Quite the opposite," 
says Maysles. "It was to understand them, to like them, and to make a 
lifelong connection which I could never have done as a kid."

Maysles says he grew up in a loving home. Among the memories that 
still inspire him is, ironically, the one time he says his father hit 
him with a strap for misbehaving.

"I looked back and there he was with his head against the wall 
crying," says Maysles. "And I stood there in utter amazement. He 
could have told me how much he loved me 1,000 times but not as 
strongly as just that time where I could see that he was so sorry for 
possibly hurting me."

Maysles says that moment, a human moment, that moment of intimacy is 
what he's looking for in his films.

He got a masters and then taught psychology at Boston University in 
the mid 1950s, but felt he could achieve more with a camera than in 
the classroom.

"I had this notion that being a psychologist and having worked in 
mental hospitals, going to Russia, I'd be able to, if I could get in, 
I could do something interesting in mental hospitals," says Maysles.

So began a lifetime of befriending strangers and journeys around the 
globe, with his brother David on audio. David Maysles was only 54 
when he died in 1987.

"Work was helpful in getting away from the pain of realizing that my 
brother was gone," says Maysles.

The Maysles became synonymous with the genre of "direct cinema." They 
had many admirers and many critics too who accused them of "exploitation."

"They're not used to seeing films that get that close to the heart 
and soul of a person and that kind of scares many a critic," says Maysles.

Maysles says he lived at The Dakota when, in his words, "the people 
were more interesting than just being rich."

A few years back, he and his wife moved to Harlem, to live close to 
their four grown children. He also bought a nearby building which 
houses plenty of office space, and a small theater for screenings.

Maysles created a non profit organization that provides training and 
apprenticeships to youngsters in Harlem.

He's hardly slowing down, with documentaries planned on subjects 
ranging from New York's subway system, the conversations of four to 
six year olds and Muhammad Ali. But he says the job of the person 
behind the camera has always remained the same.

"By exposing the true nature of the person, getting really a heart to 
heart kind of exposition, that that's the healthiest thing that the 
person can do in being filmed," says Maysles. "To open their heart 
and mind to the viewer, and the best that a camera person can do."

.


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to