Beatles Stories,
now available on DVD, was a labor of love undertaken by director Seth
Swirsky some eight years ago. Swirsky began interviewing individuals who
had experienced personal encounters with The Beatles. Many of the
interview subjects were famous (Jon Voight, Ben Kingsley, Henry Winkler,
to name a few), some were not (Beatle fan and former “Apple Scruff”
Cathy Sarver). All the stories—whether funny, touching,
thought-provoking, or all of the above—have one thing in common. They’re
all interesting.
Swirsky found success as a songwriter in the 1980s, writing hit songs
for Taylor Dayne (including “Tell It to My Heart” and “Prove Your
Love”). As a recording artist, Swirsky has released award-winning albums
of original material. In the ‘90s, he added “author” to his resume with
the best-selling Baseball Letters, a collection of his correspondence with MLB players that spawned two additional books.
I spoke with Swirsky about how he tackled the realm of documentary filmmaking with Beatles Stories.
You taped interviews with a lot of people for this film. How did you manage to pare it down to what we see in the final cut?
I had so much material to work with. To be honest, the Beatles are so
sacred—not just to me, but to the world. I felt like I had to be very
careful about how I presented it. I felt like the best thing to do was
to try and create the feeling of reading a book. There’s a chapter
title, yet I didn’t want each chapter to go by in one minute’s time.
That would be too fast. Two minutes, three minutes, that might be too
long. But it’s not like I had a rule. It was important to me that the
stories were told, especially through the photographs.
READ MORE... HERE.
No comments:
Post a Comment