Normal Love

Last updated
Normal Love
Directed by Jack Smith
Starring
Running time
120 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Normal Love is an experimental film project by American director Jack Smith. It shows the adventures of an ensemble of glamorously dressed monsters. Smith filmed the project in 1963 and began screening the work in pieces in 1964.

Contents

Although Normal Love was never completed, works by Ron Rice, Andy Warhol, and Tony Conrad grew out of it. After Smith's death, the project was released as a two-hour presentation of his footage.

Plot

Mario Montez was cast as a mermaid in the film. Mario Montez.jpg
Mario Montez was cast as a mermaid in the film.

Smith broke the film into six sequences. They follow a very loose plot without a clear narrative progression.

The red scene shows the Mermaid languishing indoors. In the swing scene, the Watermelon Man pursues a girl through foliage. When he catches up to her, he pushes her on a swing and they play with a sparkler. In the swamp scene, the girl is pursued by Uncle Pasty, whom she fends off by slamming a pie in his face. The Werewolf rises from the water and traps the Mermaid. After failing to carry her away, he instead offers her a soda. [1] [2]

In the green scene, a group of characters relax on a dock, and the Mongolian Child strokes a skull. A violinist performs as the Cobra Woman dances with her cobra. In the party scene, the characters move to a cow pasture and the Mermaid enjoys a milk bath. In the cake scene, a group of people dance on top of a large cake from which the Pink Faery emerges. The Mummy appears and attacks the dancers until the Mongolian Child shoots the other characters and climbs to the top of the cake. [1] [3]

Production

Filming

A shrine to Smith's muse Maria Montez appears in the film. Maria Montez Argentinean Magazine AD cropped.jpg
A shrine to Smith's muse Maria Montez appears in the film.

After the scandal produced by his previous film Flaming Creatures , Jack Smith sought to make a more approachable follow-up. He began shooting under the working title The Great Pasty Triumph. [4] Smith wrote out a detailed plan for shooting the film but kept it hidden from cast and crew members during production. Jonas Mekas supplied him with color film and funded the film processing. [1] Smith held shoots over the course of a year. He would often spend hours on makeup and costumes for the cast, slowly immersing them in the reality of the film. [5]

Smith was well known as a devotee of Hollywood studio actress Maria Montez. He told of an account that she had kept a statue of her patron saint in a private chapel and spoke to it daily, demanding that it bring her fortune and admiration. Smith emulated this and built an altar to Montez, where he prayed to her daily, in an apartment on 14th Street, Manhattan. This shrine became the set for the interior scenes of Normal Love, featuring drag queen Mario Montez. [6] [7]

The film's cake sequence was shot in August 1963 at Eleanor Ward's summer home in Old Lyme, Connecticut. Sculptor Claes Oldenburg designed a large wooden cake on which the actors could dance. [8] Additional filming happened at socialite Isabel Eberstadt's home in Cherry Grove. [1]

Cinematography

Teddy Howard (left) and Diana Baccus (right) in the second section of Normal Love. Their figures are obscured by branches, pink-and-green patterned fabric, and smoke from a sparkler. Normal Love.jpg
Teddy Howard (left) and Diana Baccus (right) in the second section of Normal Love. Their figures are obscured by branches, pink-and-green patterned fabric, and smoke from a sparkler.

Smith used a pink and green color scheme for Normal Love, giving the film a pastoral quality. [4] He was particularly interested in how Baroque painters like Jean-Antoine Watteau used color. [9] Smith would sometimes paint the animals or foliage where he was filming. [10] He created dense compositions using smoke, vegetation, or fabric that allow the actors to blend into the set design. [4] Much of the film's aesthetic is influenced by White Savage , a 1943 adventure film starring Maria Montez. [6]

Soundtrack

Tony Conrad worked on the film's unfinished soundtrack. Tony Conrad 2 - DMS35th.jpg
Tony Conrad worked on the film's unfinished soundtrack.

Smith did not record sync sound for Normal Love and enlisted Tony Conrad to produce the soundtrack. Conrad had made the soundtrack for Flaming Creatures and appears in Normal Love as the mummy. Smith's cue sheet for Conrad specifies African drums and joyful classical music in the swing scene, as well as the sound of insects, birds, and frogs for the swamp and party scenes. Smith also planned to incorporate popular music into the soundtrack; his notes specify Hoagy Carmichael's "The Monkey Song" and Patsy Cline's "Walkin' After Midnight", and Amália Rodrigues. In October 1963, he posted a notice in The Village Voice announcing a competition. He called for contestants to submit recordings in the style of Maria Montez saying, "Every time I look into the mirror I could scream because I am so beautiful." [11]

On set, Conrad met actress Beverly Grant, who played the Cobra Woman. The two entered a relationship, which Smith regarded as a betrayal against him. Smith and Conrad fell out, and the soundtrack was not created. Angus MacLise and Walter De Maria have performed live accompaniment when sequences from the film were screened. [12] [13]

Release

Smith was worried that his work would be reproduced or co-opted, so he left Normal Love as a work in progress. While the film was still in production, Smith arranged screenings of the rushes. From 1963 to 1965, he unveiled rushes and rough cuts at the Film-Makers' Cinematheque and at Ron Rice's loft. [14] [15] He would often edit the film from the projection booth at screenings. [16] [17] By removing the projector's takeup reel, he could use tape to re-splice the footage while the projector was running. This technique allowed Smith to extend the duration of the screenings, which could run as long as four hours. [13] [18] He also experimented with flipping the filmstrip so that repeated images would appear reversed from left to right. When the light from the projector hit the film base before the emulsion, it produced images with dimmer, murkier colors. [8]

Restoration

After Smith's death, filmmaker Jerry Tartaglia worked on the preservation and restoration of Normal Love. Because Smith had integrated material from Normal Love into other films and performance pieces, it was scattered across many reels. Tartaglia used written notes and verbal accounts of the film to identify the images. Smith's continual re-editing physically damaged much of the film. [13]

To reassemble the footage, Tartaglia worked off of a copy of Smith's outline that Conrad had made along with a cue sheet that Conrad had prepared for the soundtrack. The soundtrack consists of records that Smith owned, many of which Smith played when presenting the sequences. [1] [13]

Jack Smith

Yellow Sequence is a 15-minute addendum to Normal Love, taking its name from notes by Smith. It stars Francis Francine, Tiny Tim, and David Sachs. In the sequence, Francine dies in a field of golden flowers as Tiny Tim plays a plastic ukelele while perched on top of an abandoned car. [19] Francine's scenes were shot first, and the additional scenes were added after the film reels went missing. [20] Because Yellow Sequence does not appear in Smith's chronology notes, Tartaglia decided to keep it separate from the rest of the Normal Love sequences, and many screenings include it as an epilogue. Smith also added unused footage from Normal Love to his 1966 short film Respectable Creatures. [21]

During the late 1960s, Smith began using footage shot for Normal Love as part of theater and performance works. Performance reels for both Exotic Landlordism and Cement Lagoon include images ostensibly not intended for inclusion in Normal Love. [13]

Other filmmakers

One of Andy Warhol's earliest films was Andy Warhol Films Jack Smith Filming "Normal Love", a four-minute silent newsreel showing the production of Normal Love. The film screened with Smith's Flaming Creatures at the New Bowery Theater. During the program's third screening on March 3, 1964, the New York City Police Department seized both films, charging the theater staff with showing an obscene film. The convictions were overturned on appeal, but police did not return the only print of Warhol's film, and it is now considered lost. [8]

Filmmaker Ron Rice often accompanied Smith to the shoots for Normal Love. Smith and the cast members sometimes congregated at Rice's loft after shooting was complete, still in their costumes from the film. Rice documented these visits in his 1963 film Chumlum . [22]

In March 1963, Smith, Conrad, and Montez experimented with projecting film at a reduced frame rate to produce a flicker effect. Impressed by the results, Smith planned on incorporating this technique into Normal Love. After Conrad and Smith fell out, the flicker effects that Conrad had devised eventually led to his abstract film The Flicker . [23]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Leaver-Yap, Isla (2015). "What Is Normal Love?". Walker Art Center . Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  2. Hoberman 2001, p. 91.
  3. Hoberman 2001, pp. 92–93.
  4. 1 2 3 Hoberman 2001, p. 90.
  5. Jordan, Mary (Director) (2007). Jack Smith and the Destruction of Atlantis (DVD). Arts Alliance America.
  6. 1 2 Tavel 1997, p. 96.
  7. Hoberman 1997, p. 17.
  8. 1 2 3 Angell, Callie (2014). "Batman and Dracula: The Collaborations of Jack Smith and Andy Warhol". Criticism. Wayne State University Press. 56 (2): 161–186.
  9. Markopoulos, Gregory (1964). "Innocent Revels". Film Culture . No. 32. p. 44.
  10. Watson 2003, p. 102.
  11. Hoberman 2001, p. 95.
  12. Joseph 2008, pp. 272–274.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 Tartaglia, Jerry (1997). "Restoration and Slavery". Jack Smith and His Secret Flix. Museum of the Moving Image. pp. 68–70.
  14. Sitney 1974, p. 337.
  15. Hoberman 2001, p. 96.
  16. Wallenberg, Christopher (April 13, 2007). "Flaming Creature". The New York Blade . Vol. 11, no. 15.
  17. Sitney, P. Adams (October 1997). "Factory inspected". Artforum . Vol. 36, no. 2.
  18. Ricard, Rene (October 1997). "No dice". Artforum . Vol. 36, no. 2.
  19. Hoberman 2001, p. 94.
  20. Adler 1975, p. 12.
  21. Nordeen, Bradford (November 22, 2011). "Forever Flaming: Jack Smith at MoMA". L Magazine . Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  22. Hoberman 2001, p. 98.
  23. Joseph 2008, p. 271.

Related Research Articles

<i>Batman Dracula</i> 1964 film

Batman Dracula is a 1964 black and white American superhero fan film produced and directed by Andy Warhol without the permission of DC Comics, who owns the character Batman.

An underground film is a film that is out of the mainstream either in its style, genre, or financing.

Ludlow Street (Manhattan) Street in Manhattan, New York

Ludlow Street runs between Houston and Division Streets on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in New York City. Vehicular traffic runs south on this one-way street.

No wave cinema was an underground filmmaking movement that flourished on the Lower East Side of New York City from about 1976 to 1985. Sponsored by the artists group Collaborative Projects, no wave cinema was a stripped-down style of guerrilla filmmaking that emphasized dark edgy mood and unrehearsed immediacy above many other artistic concerns – similar to the parallel no wave music movement in its raw and rapid style.

Anthology Film Archives

Anthology Film Archives is an international center for the preservation, study, and exhibition of film and video, with a particular focus on independent, experimental, and avant-garde cinema. The film archive and theater is located at 32 Second Avenue on the southeast corner of East 2nd Street, in a New York City historic district in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan.

Jack Smith (film director)

Jack Smith was an American filmmaker, actor, and pioneer of underground cinema. He is generally acclaimed as a founding father of American performance art, and has been critically recognized as a master photographer, though his photographic works are rare and remain largely unknown.

<i>Chelsea Girls</i> 1965 film by Paul Morrissey, Andy Warhol

Chelsea Girls is a 1966 American experimental underground film directed by Andy Warhol and Paul Morrissey. The film was Warhol's first major commercial success after a long line of avant-garde art films. It was shot at the Hotel Chelsea and other locations in New York City, and follows the lives of several of the young women living there, and stars many of Warhol's superstars. The film is presented in a split screen, accompanied by alternating soundtracks attached to each scene and an alternation between black-and-white and color photography. The original cut runs at just over three hours long.

Mario Montez Puerto Rican actor

René Rivera,, known professionally as Mario Montez, was one of the Warhol superstars, appearing in thirteen of Andy Warhol's underground films from 1964 to 1966. He took his name as a male homage to the actress Maria Montez, an important gay icon in the 1950s and 1960s. Before appearing in Warhol's films, he appeared in Jack Smith's important underground films Flaming Creatures and Normal Love. Montez also stars in the Ron Rice film Chumlum, made in 1964. Mario Montez, was "a staple in the New York underground scene of the 1960s and '70s."

J. Hoberman American film critic

James Lewis Hoberman is an American film critic, journalist, author and academic. He began working at The Village Voice in the 1970s, became a full-time staff writer in 1983, and was the newspaper's senior film critic from 1988 to 2012.

<i>Flaming Creatures</i> 1963 American experimental film directed by Jack Smith

Flaming Creatures is a 1963 American experimental film directed by Jack Smith. The film shows performers dressed in elaborate drag for several disconnected scenes, including a lipstick commercial, an orgy, and an earthquake. It premiered April 29, 1963 at the Bleecker Street Cinema in New York City.

Sleep is a 1964 American avant-garde film by Andy Warhol. Lasting five hours and 20 minutes, it consists of looped footage of John Giorno, Warhol's lover at the time, sleeping.

<i>Jack Smith and the Destruction of Atlantis</i> 2006 American film

Jack Smith and the Destruction of Atlantis is a documentary film that premiered in the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival. It is a collection of interviews and clips by and about the revolutionary artist Jack Smith. It was directed by Mary Jordan and produced by Tongue Press Productions.

The Flicker is a 1966 American experimental film by Tony Conrad. The film consists of only 5 different frames: a warning frame, two title frames, a black frame, and a white frame. It changes the rate at which it switches between black and white frames to produce stroboscopic effects.

Ron Rice American filmmaker

Ron Rice was an American experimental filmmaker, whose free-form style influenced experimental filmmakers in New York and California during the early 1960s.

The Millennium Film Workshop is a non-profit media arts center located in New York City. It is dedicated to the exhibition, study, and practice of avant-garde and experimental cinema. It was also where the St. Mark's Poetry Project began. Ken Jacobs stated in 2013 that he chose the name Millennium "...because it would have to be that to actually give out equipment, education, space to work in, etc. for free. Dictionary definition: 'A hoped for period of joy, serenity, prosperity and justice.' "

Beverly Grant was an actress and filmmaker who appeared in films by Andy Warhol, Jack Smith, Gregory Markopoulos, Ira Cohen, Ron Rice, and Stephen Dwoskin, on the off-off Broadway stage in works by Ronald Tavel and LeRoi Jones, as well as collaborated with her one-time husband, experimental filmmaker and musician, Tony Conrad. Smith, the avant-garde filmmaker of Flaming Creatures and Normal Love, in which Grant appeared, called her "the queen of the underground – both undergrounds."

Barbara Rubin American filmmaker

Barbara Rubin (1945–1980) was an American filmmaker and performance artist. She is best known for her landmark 1963 underground film Christmas on Earth.

Jerry Jofen American painter (1925–1993)

Jerry Jofen (1925–1993) was an American painter, collagist, and experimental filmmaker.

Chumlum is a 1963 American experimental short film directed by Ron Rice.

Anticipation of the Night is a 1958 American avant-garde film directed by Stan Brakhage. It was a breakthrough in the development of the lyrical style Brakhage used in his later films.

References