The official World Premiere was at the Woodstock Film Festival, on 3 October 2010 in the Bearsville Theater; the first broadcast was on 20 October 2010 on the BIO Channel. The trailer can be watched here.
The quality of the documentary is disappointing. The story line has nothing new or surprising, the interviewees have nothing memorable to add to it (WTF are Waits and Drescher doing here?!), and the video and picture research hasn't lead to anything really new.
My conjecture is that this production is largely based on a shelved project from 1999; it was probably revived after Joe Adams stepped back from the daily management of the Ray Charles Foundation*.
Michael Lydon in his extended Ray Charles biography (Ray Charles: Man And Music, Updated Commemorative Edition; Routledge, 2004) revealed that in early 1999 cable network Arts and Entertainment had decided to produce a biography on Ray Charles, to be edited by Morgan Neville. Several interviews were filmed at RPM, and Neville found "rare photos and footage", and traveled to Greenfield and St. Augustine for fresh footage on Ray's childhood. But when Joe Adams returned from hospital after a heart surgery, he shut down everything he hadn't improved. A & E shelved the film, "although a final cut was edited for a legally allowed onetime broadcast as Ray's obituary."
The ingredients are about the same, BIO Channel is an A & E company, and the new documentary was produced by... Morgan Neville.
* Adams is currently back on the board (Aug. 2014).
Do you mean this documentary?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o_5ln2_uW_U&feature=relmfu
If yes, have you got it in full?
Please make yourself known.
ReplyDeleteSorry, but I think it is absolutely unnecessary that I identify. I only wanted to provide information that probably you missed or did not know.
ReplyDeleteI do not understand why you asked that I identify. I just wanted you answer a question I had, just that.
Also, I read some other comments on other pages on this blog and you have not asked anyone to identify, to my knowledge.
By the way, how many instruments played Ray Charles? I have photographic material showing Mr. Charles playing the clarinet and trumpet. Do you want it?
Ray was recorded playing piano, el. piano, organ, celeste and alto saxophone. He has often stated that he also learned clarinet, but I don't know of any photos of him playing that instrument. The Genius playing the trumpet would be an entirely new note to his biography, and a photo of that would be a rightout sensation. So yes, please send these pictures to bob@result.com.
ReplyDelete(Oddly, people who insist to stay anonymous NEVER seem to deliver).
ReplyDelete