Documentary film producer and director Gary Keys started his media career in the advertising industry directing television commercials. This day-job gave him the skills that, subsequently, were the tools for his creations. style="mso-spacerun: yes"> Always a major jazz buff, Gary has surrounded himself with musicians, or perhaps one can say that they have surrounded him, drawn to his fire, his love for jazz. He was the creator of the Jazz Unlimited Concerts produced at the Original Birdland. These concerts led to many others, including producing The Supremes at the Philharmonic Hall at Lincoln Center, Count Basie and Stan Getz at Carnegie Hall, Dionne Warwick at Lincoln Center, Judy Garland at Lincoln Center, and Stevie Wonder with Hugh Masekela at Lincoln Center.
He began filming these events, starting with Duke Ellington during the 1968 Olympic games in Mexico. "At these games", he said, "they decided to present cultural events which had been a part of the original Grecian form of the games". He produced the Ellington segment, and made a film about the event called "Memories of Duke". The Museum of Modern Art will host a retrospective of Keys work when they reopen in 2005. The series will include "Memories of Duke", "Good Time Sunday" (based upon an interracial gospel choir with the power to heal called "Salt and Pepper"), and "Give Peace a Chance".
Gary Keys, has been an adjunct professor of film at both Columbia University Graduate School of the Arts and Yale University. The academic and the musical experience blending harmoniously in his most recent work, the free-spirited, occasionally hand-held vision of today’s Cuba, "Cuba: Island of Music". Here, Gary explores the origins of the Cuban sound in detail, down to the specific beats found in Salsa, Bolero, Mambo, and Cha-cha. He reflects briefly on the tobacco and car industry, and the visual presence of Castro and Che Guevara in the culture. He visits the University of the Arts in Havana for clues on how Cubans produce such passionate music in the midst of oppression. Really, the clues are in the daily snippets of abundant life, sound-tracked by the heartbeat. The clues are in the children having a great time sliding in puddles. The clues are in the musicians and the dancers, hints and clues indescribably delicious, as impossible to define as taste or smell, presenting the audience with a glorious peek. "Cuba: Island of Music" will open at the Quad Cinema in New York in January 2004 (www.quadcinema.com).
In a recent interview Keys discusses his love of documentary film, and the filmmaking process, revealing some of the secrets to his longevity as an independent artist.
NYARTS: Where has your latest film "Cuba: Island of Music" been screened?
KEYS: It has screened at the New York Film Festival, the Denver Film Festival and at the Museum of Modern Art.
NY ARTS: Your films have all been documentary. What drives your enthusiasm for this format?
KEYS: Reality…even though I have written fictional pieces none of them has been produced. I’m working on a play now about Duke Ellington and Eleanor Roosevelt, her code name was "The Duchess" so the name of the piece is "The Duke and The Duchess". It’s about his first concert at Carnegie Hall which was done for Russian war relief. There was a bomb scare but nothing really happened; I took the liberty to write a fiction piece about something happening.
NY ARTS: Some of your work has made you the darling of MOMA. How did that happen?
KEYS: They saw "Memories of Duke" and thought it was exceptional and every time I do something they show it. I also started a series at MOMA called "Jazz in the Garden" in the 60’s; that was first thing I did there.
NY ARTS: Financial challenges are always faced by independent filmmakers, what are some of the other challenges that you’ve faced?
KEYS: Working in film is one of the hardest things to do because of all of the things that you need to do it…the people in front of the camera and the people in back of the camera, so there are challenges all along the way.
NY ARTS: How many technical and administrative positions in film did you find yourself having to learn yourself?
KEYS: All of them. As an independent producer especially and then director also you have to know how to go get the coffee, how to load the camera, how to focus the camera, how to get the sound and what you want; every aspect of it you have to know.
NY ARTS: Did you edit your films and if so on what systems did you use?
KEYS: Yes, I edit, having worked on 16mm and 35mm. I have a Steenbeck (film editing system) downstairs and I have a Media 100 down there too.
NY ARTS: How do you feel about the concept that you almost have to become friends with your subject?
KEYS: "Friends", I think that is a funny term. I think you almost have to become your subject and it’s more than friends. You have to take the identity of whatever you do whether it is music or dance or whatever. It has to become a part of you.
NY ARTS: So your perspective is that of an empathetic filmmaker?
KEYS: Yes! Empathy is a very important aspect of documentary filmmaking as well as almost any kind of filmmaking. You have to really take on the characters that you’re trying to portray. |