| November 4, 2009 |
Created and Maintained by: The Photoimaging Information Council |
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A funny thing happened to Joel Grey on his way to a legendary career in show-business. The celebrated actor, best know for his Tony- and Oscar-winning turn as the sinister Master of Ceremonies in Cabaret, pulled some old photos out of a shoebox and launched a second career as a fine-art photographer. ![]() Brioni, © 2004 Joel Grey
As Joel recalled the incident, two artist friends were visiting his home around the time his daughter (actress Jennifer Grey) was about to have her own first child. Joel took out shoeboxes of old photos to show them Jennifer’s baby pictures. The shoeboxes also held photographs Joel had been taking for the last 35 years. ‘What are you doing with these?’ the artists asked. ‘Nothing,’ Joel told them. ‘I went, I saw, I showed them to my family. I had the experience.’ ‘No, you have to do more,’ said the artists. ‘You have to take these images to a printer and see what more there is on the negative.’ ![]() Cuixmala, © 2004 Joel Grey
Before that encounter, Joel had been in the habit of taking his photos to Walgreen’s, where they received the usual cookie-cutter cropping, and a time-stamp on the image for good measure. Since he was shooting film, he never really knew the power of his own images until they got the benefit of professional printing and big beautiful enlargements. ‘It was fun to finally see them blown up to large sizes,’ he says. ‘The color was what I remembered, sometimes better, even magical. I'm a sucker for magic. I got very excited about seeing what was on the original negative.’ Joel happened to have a bunch of large prints lying around on the dining room table when another talented friend, eminent book designer Sam Shahid, paid him a visit. Drawn to the prints, Shahid asked to see more. Joel once again brought out his shoeboxes, which Shahid gathered up and carted away. ‘About six weeks later, he called me into his office to show me a mockup of what was to become my first book,’ Joel recalls. ![]() Girl in Blue Dress, © 2003 Joel Grey
Beginning to demand equal time ![]() Kristens Billboard / Berlin, © 2003 Joel Grey
Publication led to one-man shows at top galleries in New York and Berlin, and a second book, Looking Hard at Unexamined Things, by Steidl, one of the world’s most prestigious publishers of fine-art photography. Joel’s work is now in the permanent collection of the Whitney Museum of Art. His third monograph is due out soon, and he has come around to a new view of his own camera work. ‘I could never have imagined any of this,’ he says. ‘I'm an actor. But I have to start coming to grips with the fact that I’m also a photographer, which is beginning to demand equal time.’ ![]() Links, © 2002 Joel Grey
Late bloomer, early bloomer ![]() Lost and Found, © 2003 Joel Grey
Joel was performing on stage in a professional theater company in Cleveland before he hit double digits. ‘I started right out getting leading roles-- very lucky,’ he says. ‘Playing Pud in On Borrowed Time is about as good a part as a nine-year-old boy can get.’ Discovering that he had the power to move an audience to tears, laugher and applause, Joel knew there was nothing else in this life he wanted to do more. ![]() Mask, © 2003 Joel Grey
‘Cabaret was like one’s first kiss, one’s first love,’ he says. ‘It was an international success, a very powerful experience both on stage and in film. On a more intimate scale, The Normal Heart, the famous AIDS play by Larry Kramer, was also very powerful because we were doing it at the time that people were dying. It was like being in an emergency ward every night. And playing the 75-year-old Korean martial arts master in Remo Williams was amazing. I insisted that the film company do a makeup test. Not for me to get the part, but for me to believe that I could play it, that it could have reality, and one wouldn’t look at the make-up. I think I’m the first actor to ever insist on a make-up test before taking the part. The exterior allowed me to look inside the character. It usually comes the other way around.’ ![]() Memorial, © 2003 Joel Grey
A lot in common with the rest of us ![]() Night Sky, © 2003 Joel Grey
The motivation for Joel’s travel photos also has a familiar ring. ‘I very often went on film shoots by myself when the kids were small and my wife was home taking care of them. I knew I was having an experience that they couldn’t share. I wanted to impart some of the excitement of seeing exotic locales and meeting interesting people when I got home. I never thought the photos would be anything but things to share with family and friends.’ ![]() Remains of the Day, © 2005 Joel Grey
Joel’s bought his first quality camera in 1972. It was a Nikkormat, a ground-breaking SLR that helped many serious amateurs improve their photography. ‘I just played with it, and I'm still very unschooled on the technical stuff,’ he admits. ‘When I find myself drawn to an image, I somehow make the camera see what I’m seeing. One could call it pure instinct.’ ![]() Self-Portrait / Berlin, © 2003 Joel Grey
Educated eye ![]() Throne, © 2003 Joel Grey
Joel’s first book also included a group of photos that broke the travel mode. They were more abstract, compositions of form and color inspired by modern artists he admired such as Rauschenberg and Rothko. ‘So the next book became more about asking myself, what am I looking at and why am I looking at it? How did it get like that? What creates the magic here?’ ![]() Wall Painting with Newsprint, © 2003 Joel Grey
In Looking Hard at Unexamined Things, Joel is often drawn to details that other people might not notice. ‘Just walking down the street, I'll be drawn to a corner of something,’ he says. ‘I get as close as the Nikkormat allows. I shoot, and the often next time I pass that location the image is gone. Mystery, magic and permanence are big themes in my second book.’ ![]() West Side Highway, © 2002 Joel Grey
Joel promises that has third book, due out soon from powerHouse, will once again break the mold. ‘It will be completely different from the first two,’ he says. ‘But I’m not going to say anymore than that.’ ![]() West Side Highway II, © 2003 Joel Grey
All about dreaming and imagining ![]() X2, © 2003 Joel Grey
![]() Yakima, © 2005 Joel Grey
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