Variety
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Bette Gordon
Sandy Mcleod
Luis Guzman
Will Patton
Nan Goldin
Richard Davidson
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Director
Bette Gordon
Cast
Sandy Mcleod
Luis Guzman
Will Patton
Nan Goldin
Richard Davidson
Lee Tucker
Peter Rizzo
Mark Boone
April Andres
Suzanne Fletcher
Petyon Green
Cookie Mueller
Norma Rodriguez
Sally Rodwell
Scotty Snider
Spalding Gray
Dr. Usharbudh Arya
Crew
Kathy Acker
Ayesha Adbul
Tim Burns
Tim Burns
Michael Carton
Elyse Dayton
Jerry Delameter
Tom Dicillo
John R Foster
Elyse Goldberg
Bette Gordon
Bette Gordon
Howard Greenfield
Michael Humold
Pat Irwin
Helene Kaplan
Peter Koper
Jay Krieger
John Lurie
Jim Mayman
Eddie Palmieri
Julie Pelavin
Nancy Reilly
Nancy Reilly
Cindy Schneidau
Neil Sedaka
Renee Shafransky
Renee Shafransky
David Spitzer
Louis Tancredi
Christine Vachon
Ila Von Hasperg
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Articles
Spalding Gray (1941-2004)
Gray was born in Barrington, Rhode Island on June 5, 1941, one of three sons born to Rockwell and Elizabeth Gray. He began pursuing an acting career at Emerson College in Boston. After graduation, he relocated to New York, where he acted in several plays in the late '60s and early '70s. He scored a breakthrough when he landed the lead role of Hoss in Sam Shepard's Off-Broadway hit Tooth of Crime in its 1973 New York premiere. Three years later he co-founded the avant-garde theatrical troupe, The Wooster Group with Willem Dafoe.
It was this period in the late '70s, when he was performing in Manhattan's underground theater circles, did Gray carve out his niche as a skilled monologist. His first formal monologue was about his childhood Sex and Death to the Age 14, performed at the Performing Garage in Manhattan in 1979; next came his adventures as a young university student Booze, Cars and College Girls in 1980; and the following year, he dealt with his chronicles as a struggling actor, A Personal History of the American Theater. These productions were all critical successes, and Gray soon became the darling of a small cult as his harrowing but funny takes on revealing the emotional and psychological cracks in his life brought some fresh air to the genre of performance art.
Although acting in small parts in film since the '70s, it wasn't until he garnered a role in The Killing Fields (1984), that he began to gain more prominent exposure. His experiences making The Killing Fields formed the basis of his one-man stage show Swimming to Cambodia which premiered on Off-Broadway in 1985. Both haunting and humorous, the plainsong sincerity of his performance exuded a raw immediacy and fragile power. Gray managed to relate his personal turmoil to larger issues of morality throughout the play, including absurdities in filmmaking, prostitution in Bangkok (where the movie was shot), and the genocidal reign of the Pol Pot. Gray won an Obie Award - the Off-Broadway's equivalent to the Tony Award - for his performance and two years later, his play was adapted by Jonathan Demme onto film, further broadening his acceptance as a unique and vital artistic talent.
After the success of Swimming to Cambodia, Gray found some work in the mainstream: Bette Midler's fiance in Beaches (1988), a regular part for one season as Fran Drescher's therapist in the CBS sitcom The Nanny (1989-90), a sardonic editor in Ron Howard's underrated comedy The Paper (1994), and a recent appearance as a doctor in Meg Ryan's romantic farce Kate & Leopold (2001). He also had two more of his monologues adapted to film: Monster in a Box (1992) and Gray's Anatomy (1996). Both films were further meditations on life and death done with the kind of biting personal wit that was the charming trademark of Gray.
His life took a sudden downturn when he suffered a frightening head-on car crash during a 2001 vacation in Ireland to celebrate his 60th birthday. He suffered a cracked skull, a broken hip and nerve damage to one foot and although he recovered physically, the incident left him traumatized. He tried jumping from a bridge near his Long Island home in October 2002. Family members, fearing for his safety, and well aware of his family history of mental illness (his mother committed suicide in 1967) convinced him to seek treatment in a Connecticut psychiatric hospital the following month.
Sadly, despite his release, Gary's mental outlook did not improve. He was last seen leaving his Manhattan apartment on January 10, and witnesses had reported a man fitting Gray's description look despondent and upset on the Staten Island Ferry that evening. He is survived by his spouse Kathleen Russo; two sons, Forrest and Theo; Russo's daughter from a previous relationship, Marissa; and two brothers, Rockwell and Channing.
by Michael T. Toole
Spalding Gray (1941-2004)
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Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1997
Released in United States July 1984
Released in United States Winter January 1, 1985
Released in United States 1997 (Shown in New York City (Whitney Museum of American Art) as part of program "No Wave Cinema 1978-87" October 3 1996 - January 5, 1997.)
Released in United States Winter January 1, 1985
Released in United States July 1984 (Shown at FILMEX: Los Angeles International Film Exposition (American Independents) July 5-20, 1984.)