Cleopatra Jones
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Jack Starrett
Tamara Dobson
Bernie Casey
Brenda Sykes
Hedley Mattingly
Theodore Wilson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Long-legged, kung fu-kicking temptress, Special Agent Cleopatra Jones, is out to rid the ghetto of the dope-dealing queenpin "Mommy."
Director
Jack Starrett
Cast
Tamara Dobson
Bernie Casey
Brenda Sykes
Hedley Mattingly
Theodore Wilson
Antonio Fargas
Keith Hamilton
George Reynolds
Bill Mckinney
Paul Koslo
Caro Kenyatta
John Alderman
Joseph A Tornatore
Angela Gibbs
John Garwood
Michael Warren
Albert Popwell
Shelley Winters
Dan Frazer
Stafford Morgan
Esther Rolle
Christopher Joy
Crew
Howard Bud Alpert
Carl Brandt
Bong Soo Han
Allan Jacobs
J J Johnson
Max Julien
Max Julien
Cheryal Kearney
Ernest Robinson
Jack Roe
Brad Shapiro
Joe Simon
William Tennant
David M. Walsh
Peter Wooley
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Hosted Intro
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Cleopatra Jones -
The film was co-written and co-produced by Max Julien, a classically-trained actor who starred in the blaxploitation classic The Mack (1973) and was looking to expand his horizons. "Max was a very insightful man," observed actor Glynn Turman, who starred opposite Julien in Thomasine and Bushrod (1974), in an interview years later. "Very business savvy and very courageous." Julien wrote the part for his girlfriend at the time, actress Vonetta McGee, but she lost out to Tamara Dobson, a tall, statuesque fashion model featured in such magazine as Vogue, Essence, Mademoiselle, and Ebony.
The film opens on special agent Cleopatra Jones (Dobson), clad in layers of runway chic fashions in bright rainbow colors, strolling up a sand dune in a faraway locale to order airstrikes on a Turkish poppy field. That means war, as far as a Los Angeles drug lord named "Mommy" (Shelley Winters hamming it up under garish wigs) is concerned, and she lures Cleopatra back to L.A. by shutting down the rehab clinic run by Cleo's lover (Bernie Casey, a role model of dignity and action as a neighborhood activist). It's a mix of James Bond glamour and urban action, with the sleek Dobson as a tough, martial-arts-trained heroine taking on an exaggerated cartoon of a villain.
According to the film's press release, Tamara Dobson was chosen from 2,500 contenders tested in a "nation-wide talent search." She had appeared in numerous TV commercials and had minor roles in Come Back, Charleston Blue (1972) and Fuzz (1972) but Cleopatra Jones was her first leading role in a film. The Guinness Book of World Records lists the 6'2" actress as the tallest leading lady ever in a Hollywood and film director Jack Starrett makes the most of her physical presence. Dobson wears a stylish new high-fashion outfit for every scene--furs, pant-suits, ponchos, turbans--and a perfectly-coiffed afro that makes her look even taller. Her sleek black-and-silver Corvette has a personalized license plate that reads "CLEO" and a T-bar above the driver's seat that automatically opens with door to accommodate her afro.
Antonio Fargas, who trained at the Negro Ensemble Company in New York, co-stars as Doodlebug, Mommy's garishly overdressed pusher, a role he later parodied in the Keenan Ivory Wayans's 1988 spoof of the blaxploitation genre, I'm Gonna Git You Sucka. He made his film debut at 14 in The Cool World (1963) and appeared in Putney Swope (1969) and Shaft, but to a certain generation he's known for playing Huggy Bear, the streetwise informant on the hit TV cop show Starsky and Hutch.
Cleopatra Jones was a hit and Dobson returned for a sequel, Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold (1975), but by then the genre was oversaturated and running out of energy. Dobson only made a few more films and TV appearances (including a role in Jason of Star Command, a low-budget Saturday morning cult sci-fi series that has since earned a small cult following) before returning to modeling full time. She was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2000 and died in 2006 from pneumonia.
By Sean Axmaker
Sources:
Blaxploitation Films, Mikel J. Kloven. Oldcastle Books, 2010.
Women of Blaxploitation: How the Black Action Film Heroine Changed American Culture, Yvonne D. Sims. McFarland & Company, Inc., 2006.
Reflections on Blaxploitation, David Walker, Andrew J. Rausch, Chris Watson. Scarecrow Press, 2009.
AFI Catalog of Feature Films
IMDb
Cleopatra Jones -
Quotes
See you around, Super Honkie!- Doodlebug
Hair's like a woman. You treat it good and it treats you good. Ain't that right honey? You hear what I'm saying? Yeah, you got to hold it, caress it, and love it. And if your hair gets out of line you take a scissor and say, "Hair I'm going to cut you."- Doodlebug
Shit! What's wrong with you woman? Why can't you just open a door like a normal person?- Snake
Trivia
Cleo's ride in the film is a customized black and silver 1973 Corvette Stingray. When she opens the door to get out, the T-bar panel in the roof above the driver's seat automatically opens as well so she can get out without squashing her afro.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1995
Released in United States 1998
Released in United States Winter January 1, 1973
Shown at Brisbane International Film Festival July 30 - August 9, 1998.
Released in United States 1995 (Shown in New York City (Film Forum) as part of program "Blaxploitation, Baby!" June 23 - August 10, 1995.)
Released in United States Winter January 1, 1973
Released in United States 1998 (Shown at Brisbane International Film Festival July 30 - August 9, 1998.)