GREY GARDENS (David Maysles, Albert Maysles, Ellen Hovde & Muffie Meyer, 1976)
Maysles Institute
343 Malcolm X Blvd. between 127th & 128th Sts.
June 8-10, suggested donation $10, 7:30
212-582-6050
www.mayslesinstitute.org
One of the most influential documentaries ever made, Grey Gardens looks at the bizarre lives of Edith Bouvier Beale and her daughter, Edie, in their dilapidated home in East Hampton. The elder Edie was the sister of Jackie Onassis’s father, so it was hard for the American public to believe that in the mid-1970s, relatives of Jackie O’s were living in such squalor. Little Edie bandies about in odd clothing, singing and dancing, believing that she can still resurrect her once-promising career as an entertainer. Meanwhile, her elderly mother cracks wise at her daughter while also remembering her own long-gone days as a singer. The women seem to be caught up in a world all their own, far from reality, but filmmakers Albert Maysles, David Maysles, Muffie Meyer, and Ellen Hovde don’t judge them in any way; they just let them be as the women greet guests and grumble about whatever they can. Selected for the New York and Cannes Film Festivals, Grey Gardens, which has also been turned into a fiction film and a Broadway musical, will be screening June 9 at 7:30 at the Maysles Institute as part of STAUNCH! A Grey Gardens Celebration IV, which runs June 8-10 and focuses this year on Jerry Torre, the Marble Faun from the original film. The weekend festival includes the world-premiere screening of Steve Pelizza and Jason Hay’s new documentary, The Marble Faun of Grey Gardens, on Friday at 7:30, followed by Q&A and reception with Torre, Albert Maysles, Pelizza, and Hay. The Maysles brothers’ 2006 sequel, The Beales of Grey Gardens, will be shown on Sunday at 7:30.