TIME movies

Remembering Albert Maysles, A Filmmaker Unafraid to Probe Darkness

"Made In NY" Awards Ceremony
John Lamparski—WireImage/Getty Images Albert Maysles attends the "Made In NY" Awards Ceremony at Weylin B. Seymour's on Nov. 10, 2014 in Brooklyn, New York.

The late filmmaker was best-known for Grey Gardens

Albert Maysles, one-half of the filmmaking team known as the Maysles brothers, has died at the age of 88. With his brother David, Maysles became particularly well-known for directing Grey Gardens, a 1976 documentary about the lives of two of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis’s relatives, living in a squalid mansion.

Grey Gardens has become a camp classic for “Little Edie,” Onassis’s first cousin, and her idiosyncratic speech patterns and fashions. But the film is, perhaps like all great camp, touched by real darkness; there’s a sense of palpable terror in the socialites’ withdrawal from the world. Before Gardens was Gimme Shelter, the 1970 concert documentary (directed with Charlotte Zwerin) that went far beyond valorizing the Rolling Stones. It, more than perhaps any other document, conveyed the apocalyptic mood of the early 1970s through its footage of the Altamont disaster. Salesman, the duo’s look at the lives of traveling Bible vendors, pursued an interest in the lives of these men to a painful place as raw, in its way, as Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman.

In recent years, after David Maysles’s 1987 death, Albert had stayed productive; his latest documentary, Iris, about the nonagenarian style icon Iris Apfel, played at the New York Film Festival last fall. He will be remembered for his willingness to take subjects farther than was comfortable, to, through sheer observation with no fripperies, deliver discomfiting, frank dispatches from various corners of the American experience.

Tap to read full story

Your browser is out of date. Please update your browser at http://update.microsoft.com


YOU BROKE TIME.COM!

Dear TIME Reader,

As a regular visitor to TIME.com, we are sure you enjoy all the great journalism created by our editors and reporters. Great journalism has great value, and it costs money to make it. One of the main ways we cover our costs is through advertising.

The use of software that blocks ads limits our ability to provide you with the journalism you enjoy. Consider turning your Ad Blocker off so that we can continue to provide the world class journalism you have become accustomed to.

The TIME Team