Inside Georgina Spelvin -1973- Page
The script is open on the table: The Devil in Miss Jones . On paper, it’s just a series of scenes, a blunt allegory about a woman who suicides into damnation only to find her idea of hell is a perverse form of earthly freedom. But Georgina, born Shelley to a Boston family that spoke in hushed, tight-lipped tones, understands the subtext. She has always understood the secret rooms inside people.
At the studio—a converted warehouse on West 54th Street—the crew is all business. This is not the swinging sixties anymore. The velvet-hung, candlelit soft-core era is dead. 1973 is raw, grainy, and confrontational. The camera is a hungry, unblinking eye. There is no music. Just the hum of the Klieg lights and the shuffle of crew boots. Inside Georgina Spelvin -1973-
She lets the camera see the moment Miss Jones realizes she has won the battle and lost the war. She has all the sensation she craved, but no soul left to feel it. In those eyes is the horror of absolute, sterile freedom. The script is open on the table: The Devil in Miss Jones