Henry

Ferrini

Independent filmmaker Henry Ferrini works out of the port city of Gloucester, Massachusetts. Over the last 25 years, much of his work has focused on what Jack Kerouac called, "the great continent of New England." He is a co-founder of the Gloucester Writers Center a non-profit organization on the North Shore. His interest in cultural geography has taken him to working-class communities throughout the industrial Northeast unearthing material most would overlook.

Ferrini's current project called President of Beauty, focuses on the great saxophonist Lester Willis Young. Little-known outside jazz circles, Mr. Young's life could be considered an ugly beauty, a story of exquisite grace set within a time of loathsome racism.

“As a filmmaker I work more like a documentary photographer. I once heard someone refer to the hunting of an image as ‘shooting quail’. You have to be ready and open to capture the experience and you only have the moment to bag it. Similarly I find myself waiting for that moment to happen. The Hollywood paradigm is anathema to my process. I go out into the field alone maybe with an assistant or sound person looking for those moments that resonate for me vis-à-vis my subject. My films are constructions of a million moments. Check out the Junior Mance interview (blog post March 15, 2010). His remembrance of Lester’s funeral is nothing that could be set up, like an unplanned improvisation it happens.”

Ferrini's films do not follow the conventional patterns of a biographical documentary. He employs a lyrical, impressionist approach that allows for greater exploration of the subject's philosophies, thoughts and ideas. He calls his work "film poems." This style is manifest in his most recent release, Polis is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place an hour long journey through the poet and filmmaker's hometown guided by a Who's Who in American poetry: Amiri Baraka, Robert Creeley, Anne Waldman, Vincent Ferrini, John Sinclair, Ed Sanders and John Malkovich.

Previous to Polis is This , Henry created a film focusing on Jack Kerouac featuring Johnny Depp called Lowell Blues. Lowell Blues interprets how place activates Kerouac's imagination, and how the writer's art reshapes his city with reverence and respect.

The film explores his origins - education, the Catholic church, birth and death. Kerouac's text speaks to the 1930s in which he grew up. By using both archival and contemporary footage, Lowell Blues melds modern experiences together with Kerouac's childhood to create a timeless sense of place.

INDEPENDENT.

BUT NOT ALONE.