Swimming to Cambodia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Swimming to Cambodia | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jonathan Demme |
Produced by | Renee Shafransky |
Written by | Spalding Gray |
Starring | Spalding Gray |
Music by | Laurie Anderson |
Cinematography | John Bailey |
Editing by | Carol Littleton |
Distributed by | Cinecom Pictures |
Release date(s) | 1987 |
Running time | 85 min. |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Spalding Gray's Swimming to Cambodia is a 1987 Jonathan Demme-directed performance film. The film is a performance of Spalding Gray's monologue which centered around such themes as his trip to Southeast Asia to create the role of the U.S. Ambassadors aide in The Killing Fields directed by Roland Joffé, the Cold War, Cambodia Year Zero and his search for his "perfect moment". The film grossed slightly over a million dollars.
[edit] Performances
Swimming to Cambodia was originally a theatre piece on which Gray spent two years working. The original running time of the performance was two and a half hours. Swimming to Cambodia won Gray an Obie award.
In 2001, Gray took Swimming to Cambodia back to the stage in Los Angeles, Chicago and Albany, New York.
[edit] Film
The opening shots of the film depict Gray walking toward The Performing Garage in New York. He goes in and after walking in past the audience, he takes his seat behind a table. On the table is a glass of water, a microphone and a notebook which Gray brought with him. Behind him are two pulldown maps. One is a map of Southeast Asia and the other is a diagram of the bombing of Cambodia, which Gray tells the viewers/audience was called Operation Menu. There is also back-lit projection screen which has projected on it a picture of a beach.
The soundtrack for this film was composed and performed by Laurie Anderson, who would also score Gray's follow-up film, Monster in a Box. Gray returned the favor by providing the voice of a TV interviewer for her 1986 short film, What You Mean We?. No soundtrack album was released; Anderson later reused music from the film for a series of "Personal Service Announcements" she produced in 1989 to promote her album, Strange Angels.
While Sam Waterston and Ira Wheeler are credited as additional cast in this film, they are only shown in clips from the film The Killing Fields.
The monologue was first published in book form two years before the release of the film.
[edit] External links
- Swimming to Cambodia at the Internet Movie Database
- Review of Swimming to Cambodia in 2001
- 'Swimming to Cambodia' - a song about Spalding Gray's death
|
This 1980s drama film-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |