Documentary Filmmaker Albert Maysles Dies At 88

By Krishnadev Calamur NPR

Albert Maysles, the father of the contemporary American documentary film who was behind such classics as 1970’s Gimme Shelter, has died. He was 88.

Maysles, an Oscar-nominated director, died Thursday in New York, Erica Dilday at the Maysles Documentary Center confirmed.

NPR’s Neda Ulaby is reporting on his death for our Newscast unit. She says:

“Albert Maysles with his brother David turned an unflinching cinematic eye on everything from door to door Bible salesmen to the most eccentric members of the East Coast elite. …

The Maysles made over 30 films, including Gimme Shelter, about the Rolling Stones tour that culminated in the disastrous Altamont Concert. Maysles and his brother pioneered what they called direct cinema — stories without narrators that pulled audiences into unexpected worlds and made ordinary people mythic figures.”

Neda notes that Maysles’ most famous film was arguably Grey Gardens, a profile of Big Edie and Little Edie Bouvier, cousins of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

His brother David Maysles died in 1987.

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