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Jason and Shirley

Country: USA, Language: English, 77 mins

  • Director: Stephen Winter
  • Writer: Sarah Schulman; Jack Waters
  • Producer: Bizzy Barefoot; Molly Epstein

CGiii Comment

It's fair to say...if you can, watch Portrait of Jason first...it will help [and bore] you, enormously.

Jason & Shirley is a fictional account about what happened between takes, in the outtakes, behind the scenes...thankfully, histrionics aside, this is infused with an explosive energy which the parent film lacked.

As absurd as the idea is...re-enacting and inventing at the same time. Or, de-authenticating authenticity...this is a rollercoaster ride of [rich] words and [high] emotion. Sometimes, it's necessary to remind yourself that this is fiction... since Jack Waters' performance defies disbelief!

Fans of the Portrait - no doubt - will despise it...screaming sacrilege until their tummies churn. Those a little less sycophantic of the 60s New York underground film scene will take it as it is...a blisteringly entertaining imagining of a man who never really made it to where he wanted to be...done with more baggage than the Vuitton warehouse accompanied by a tongue thrust squarely and precisely in the cheek. Such fun!


Trailer...

JASON and SHIRLEY (2015) teaser from Jason and Shirley on Vimeo.

The(ir) Blurb...

What Interior. Leather Bar. (Frameline37) did for Cruising (or, perhaps more accurately, what Drew Barrymore and Jessica Lange’s version of Grey Gardens did for the original documentary by the Maysles brothers), Jason and Shirley does for Oscar-winner Shirley Clarke’s seminal, controversial Portrait of Jason. Director Stephen Winter (Chocolate Babies, Frameline21) presents a fictitious account of the making of Portrait of Jason, a groundbreaking example of confessional biography, famously shot in one grueling 12-hour session in Clarke’s apartment in Manhattan’s Chelsea Hotel. For his reimagined scenario, Winter, brilliantly borrowing the look and feel of 1960s cinéma vérité, depicts the behind-the-scenes power struggle between the white Jewish director and her eccentric gay African American star, Jason Holliday, a pill-popping, boozy hustler with dreams of becoming a cabaret superstar (just one of the many similarities Jason has to Little Edie). Upon Portrait of Jason’s release in 1967, critics were divided between condemning it as exploitation and hailing it as a masterpiece; famed director Ingmar Bergman called it “the most extraordinary film I’ve ever seen in my life.” Did Shirley bait Jason into unraveling on camera, or was this Jason’s plan all along? And just what was the nature of Jason’s relationship with Shirley’s husband, the devastatingly handsome actor Carl Lee? Mixing fantasy and reality with enthralling performances from Bryan Webster and Sarah Schulman in the title roles, Jason and Shirley is a fascinating exploration of art, race, privilege, sex, and—most provocatively—the fine art of manipulation.

— Joe Bowman

Cast & Characters

Tony Torn as Saul;
Justin Sayre as Marvelous Neighbor;
Bryan Webster as Candy Man;
Eamon Fahey as Nico;
Craig Cady as Deli Boy;
Orran Farmer as Carl Lee;
Nicholas Gorham as Ommmmmm;
Lucas Carey as Guitar Singer;
Jack Waters as Jason;
Devon Gallegos as Easy Read