Slaves of New York
Slaves of New York | |
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Poster for Slaves of New York | |
Directed by | James Ivory |
Produced by |
Ismail Merchant Gary Hendler Fred Hughes (associate) Vincent Fremont (associate) |
Written by | Tama Janowitz based on her stories |
Starring | |
Music by |
Richard Robbins (score) Boy George (theme song: Girlfriend) Michael Butler & Johann Carlo Neneh Cherry Les Rita Mitsouko Joe Leeway Ambitious Lovers Inner City Iggy Pop Maxi Priest |
Cinematography | Tony Pierce-Roberts |
Edited by | Katherine Wenning |
Distributed by | TriStar Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 124 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $463,972 |
Slaves of New York is a 1989 comedy-drama Merchant Ivory Productions film. It was directed by James Ivory, produced by Ismail Merchant, and starred Bernadette Peters, Adam Coleman Howard, Chris Sarandon, Mary Beth Hurt, Mercedes Ruehl, Madeleine Potter, and Steve Buscemi.
Based on the stories Slaves of New York by Tama Janowitz, the film follows the lives of struggling artists in New York City during the mid-1980s.
Plot
The story follows Eleanor, an aspiring hat designer, and a group of artists and models in the "downtown" New York City art world. Eleanor lives with her younger boyfriend Stash, an unknown artist, who is unfaithful and treats Eleanor with careless indifference. Eleanor expresses her feelings for Stash when she tells him that she was once attracted to him because he was dangerous. She stays with him despite the crumbling relationship because she has nowhere else to live—she is, in effect, a "slave."
When a clothing designer, Wilfredo (Steve Buscemi), discovers her hat designs and offers to use them in a fashion show, Eleanor gains the self-respect—and money—to leave Stash. There is an elaborate fashion show sequence.
While buying food for a celebratory party, she meets Jan and invites him to the party. After the party, Eleanor and her new friend talk, and then ride off into the morning sunrise.
Production
Tama Janowitz had written a script for Andy Warhol, based on the Eleanor and Stash stories in her 1986 collection of short stories, Slaves of New York. When Warhol died, Merchant-Ivory bought that script.[1] The real graffiti artist from New York City named STASH, who is a friend of Janowitz, was the influence for the name of her lead character and can be seen as an extra in many of the party scenes.
The fashion show in the movie had costumes by designer Stephen Sprouse.[2]
In discussing casting the role of Eleanor, James Ivory commented: "...but out of 100 girls, there was not a single one with Miss Peters's originality. We wanted someone unusual and different but also ingenuous and not too knowing."[2]
Slaves of New York was shot on location in New York City, in the Lower East Side, a downtown gallery and a club. Shooting started on April 4, 1988, with a 10-week shooting schedule. There was a "modest" budget—$5 million—that meant there were no lengthy rehearsals. There was one read-through before shooting began.[1]
There are several cameos in this film: for example, Producer Ismail Merchant, lyricist Betty Comden and Adam Green, son of her writing partner, Adolph Green, and Tony-Award winning actress Tammy Grimes appear in party scenes.
Cast
Starring
- Bernadette Peters as Eleanor
- Chris Sarandon as Victor Okrent
- Mary Beth Hurt as Ginger Booth
- Madeleine Potter as Daria
- Adam Coleman Howard as Stash
- Nick Corri as Marley
- Charles McCaughan as Sherman
- John Harkins as Chuck Dade Dolger
- Mercedes Ruehl as Samantha
- Joe Leeway as Jonny Jalouse
- Anna Katarina as Mooshka
- Bruce Peter Young as Mikell
- Michael Schoeffling as Jan
- Steve Buscemi as Wilfredo
Co-starring
- Michael Butler as Performance Artist
- Johann Carlo as Performance Artist
- Richy Canatta as Saxophonist
- Betty Comden as Mrs. Wheeler
- Anthony Crivello as Hairdresser
- Christine Dunford as "B"
- Adam Green (son of Adolph Green) as Max
- Tammy Grimes as Georgette
- George Harris as Super
- Paul Jabara as Derelict
- Sakina Jaffrey as Wilfredo's Receptionist
- Tama Janowitz as Abby
- Freddy Korner as Party Guest
- Anthony La Paglia as Henry
- Philip Lenkowsky as Fritz
- Maura Moynihan as Mona
- Richard Steinmetz as Party Guest
- Stanley Tucci as Darryl
- STASH ( graffiti artist ) as Party Guest
Reception
Slaves of New York received mostly unfavorable reviews at the time of its release. Janet Maslin wrote that the film "...simply drifts from situation to situation" and is "never terribly involving".[3] Roger Ebert, who gave the movie a half-star rating, opened his review with the statement "I detest Slaves of New York so much that I distrust my own opinion."[4]
Domestic gross was $463,972, according to boxofficemojo.[5]
Slaves of New York became a cult classic amongst the gay communities in the United States. It is notorious for a scene that features a very convincing drag act performing "Love Is Like an Itching In My Heart" by The Supremes while making their way down a street in full evening gowns.
Music List
Performed on screen
- Mother Dearest
Written and performed on scrren by Joe Leeway - Say Hi to Your Guy
Written and performed on scrren by Johann Carlo and Michael Butler
Soundtrack Album Selections
- Some Guys Have All the Luck
Written by Jeff Fortgang
Produced by Willie Lindo, Sly Dumbar and Robbie Shakespeare
Performed by Maxi Priest
Courtesy of 10 Records, Ltd. - Tumblin' Down
Written by Ziggy Marley and Tyrone Downie
Produced by Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth
Performed by Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers
Courtesy of Virgin Records America, Inc. - Admit It
Love Overlap
Written by Arto Lindsay and Peter Scherer
Produced by Peter Scherer
Performed by Ambitious Lovers
Courtesy of Virgin Records America, Inc. - Buffalo Stance
Written by Neneh Cherry, Cameron McVey, Phillip Ramacon and Jamie Morgan
Produced by Tim Simenon and Mark Saunders
Performed by Neneh Cherry
Courtesy of Circa Records, Ltd. - Girlfriend
Written by George O'Dowd, Vlad Naslas
Produced by Vlad Naslas
Performed by Boy George
Courtesy of Virgin Records, Ltd. - Change Your Mind
Written by Camper Van Beethoven
Produced by Dennis Herring
Performed by Camper Van Beethoven
Courtesy of Virgin Records America, Inc. - Good Life
Written by Kevin Saunderson, Paris Grey and Ray Holman
Produced by Kevin Saunderson
Performed by Inner City
Courtesy of 10 Records, Ltd. - Fall in Love with Me
Written by Iggy Pop, David Bowie, Hunt B. Sales and Tony Sales
Produced by Bewlay Bros.
Performed by Iggy Pop - Tongue Dance
Written by Catherine Ringer and Frederic Chichin
Produced by Tony Visconti and Rita Les Mitsouko
Performed by Rita Les Mitsouko
Courtesy of Virgin France
Additional Music
- Warrior
Written by Allan Dias, Lu Edmonds, John Lydon, John McGeoch and Bruce Smith
Produced by Steven Hague
Performed by Public Image, Ltd.
Courtesy of Virgin Recordsm Ltd. - Am I Blue?
Written by Grant Clarke and Harry Akst
Performed by Billie Holiday
Courtesy of CBS Records - Dad, I’m In Jail
Written by David Was and Don Was
Performed by Was (Not Was)
Courtesy of Chrysalis Records, Inc. - Grand Tour
Written by Carmol Taylor, George Richey and Norris Wilson
Performed by George Jones
Courtesy of CBS Records - Glück, das mir Verblieb
From Die tote Stadt by Erich Korngold
Performed by Carol Neblett
Courtesy of RCA Victor Red Seal, A Division of BMG Classics - Love is Like an Itching in My Heart
Written by Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier and Edward Holland
Performed by Diana Ross and The Supremes
Courtesy of Motown Record Corporation - I Need a Man
Written by Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart
Performed by The Eurythmics
Courtesy of RCA Records - O ruddier than the cherry
From Acis and Galatea by G.F. Haendel
Performed by John Ostendorf
Uncredited
- Prélude from Carmen by Georges Bizet
- Kuroda-bushi 黒田節
References
- 1 2 James, Caryn."In a Change-of-Pace Production, Merchant and Ivory Film on Mott St."New York Times, April 5, 1988
- 1 2 Abeel, Erica."Merchant and Ivory Traffic in 'Slaves of New York'"New York Times, March 12, 1989
- ↑ Maslin, Janet."James Ivory's Version Of Janowitz's 'Slaves'"New York Times, March 17, 1989.
- ↑ Ebert, Roger."Review, 'Slaves of New York'"Sun Times, March 24, 1989
- ↑ Boxofficemojo ""Slaves on New York' domestic gross boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved March 20, 2010.
External links
- Merchant Ivory Production
- Slaves of New York at Rotten Tomatoes
- Slaves of New York at the Internet Movie Database
- Slaves of New York at AllMovie
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