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Jason Holliday

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Jason Holliday


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Jason Holliday Sophomore Highlights


Jason Holliday (June 8, 1924 – June 15, 1998) (birth name: Aaron Payne) was a black, gay hustler and aspiring nightclub performer. He is the star of Shirley Clarke's 1967 documentary Portrait of Jason.

Contents

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Life

Jason Holliday Peeling Away The Layers In A Portrait Of Jason NPR

The facts surrounding Aaron Payne's life are unresolved. In Holliday's own words:

Jason Holliday Jason Holliday Wikipedia

Began career at five years old as errand boy for prostitutes, pimps, bootleggers, schoolteachers, doctors, lawyers, etc. — and anyone else I could get a buck out of. Lonely old men and hot old maids.

Jason Holliday Jason Holliday and Shirley Clarke Revisited Art Thought Culture

Payne said, "Jason Holliday was created in San Francisco, and San Francisco is a place to be created."

Jason Holliday Gay City News Tag Archive Jason Holliday

He was born in either Montgomery, Alabama or Trenton, New Jersey. His parents, Fannie and Eugene, owned Payne's Restaurant in Trenton, but were from the south. Payne attended Rider Business College for one year before moving on to the Actors Workshop in Hollywood, where he studied with Charles Laughton. He then studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York, along with Carl Lee, the man who introduced Payne to Shirley Clarke.

Jason Holliday Amy Taubin on the preservation of Shirley Clarkes Portrait of Jason

The details get even less clear after Portrait of Jason. Holliday recorded an LP of a comedy act which eventually came out in 2007.

Jason Holliday In 1967 documentary Portrait of Jason a campy queen and natural

Aaron Payne's obituary appeared in The Trentonian on July 31, 1998. He died in Flushing and was survived by two sisters, six nieces and two nephews, and was cremated at Oxford Hills Crematory in Chester, New York.

Portrait of Jason

A month before shooting, Holliday met Andy Warhol at a bar through Paul Morrissey. Warhol attempted to make a film starring Holliday and Edie Sedgwick, but it never materialized. Shirley Clarke went on to make Portrait of Jason.

In an interview with Jonas Mekas for his Village Voice column in 1967, Holliday said:

I know I am a great actor and I got a chance to prove it . . . I wondered if people would think I was a homosexual, bisexual or heterosexual. I wondered if I was great enough to convince them I was all three … I was aware filmwise of what I was doing. I never got too far beyond my image. But what is my image? Other than a well-dressed, well-liked swinging cat? I also play many roles in life. I was also hip enough to do it on the screen – dig it?

Richard Brody wrote of Holliday's performance:

"Jason Holliday," the character in the film, is the performance of the frustrated performer who performs everywhere but where he wants to (on stage), the mask for a man who lives with masks, whose very persona is that of the mask and whose most scathingly self-revealing stories concern his ruses, his evasions, his deceptions...

The film critic Vito Russo wrote: “two hours with Jason Holliday is like a month in another country.”

References

Jason Holliday Wikipedia