127 Hours (2010)
James as Aron Ralston Status: Pre-Production
Director: Danny Boyle
Official - Photos - IMDB Eat, Pray, Love (2010)
James as David Status: Post-Production
Director: Ryan Murphy
Official - Photos - IMDB In Praise of Shadows (2011)
James as William Vincent Status: Post-Production
Director: Jay Anania
Official - Photos - IMDB Your Highness (2010)
James as Fabious Status: Pre-Production
Director: David Gordon Green
Official - Photos - IMDB Date Night (2010)
James as Chase Myers Status: Completed
Director: Shawn Levy
Official - Photos - IMDB Howl (2010)
James as Allen Ginsberg Status: Completed
Director: Rob Epstein
Official - Photos - IMDB
James wrote this article for the Wall Street Journal about his stint on General Hospital. Check it out!
A Star, a Soap and the Meaning of Art Why an appearance on ‘General Hospital’ qualifies as performance art
I was recently treated to an early prototype of a dessert that Marina Abramovi?, the “grandmother of performance art,” created with the pastry chef Dominique Ansel. It’s a cylindrical pastry with a lychee center sprinkled over with chili powder and raw gold. I was instructed to kiss a napkin that had been printed with a square of gold powder that would transfer to my face before eating the dessert. This way the dessert would pass through a golden gateway before it was ingested. I did as told, then suggested to the chef that it needed more chili. Was this art?
I have been obsessed with performance art for over a decade—ever since the Mexican performance artist Guillermo Gómez-Peña came to visit my class at Cal Arts summer school. I finally took the plunge and experimented with the form myself when I signed on to appear on 20 episodes of “General Hospital” as the bad-boy artist “Franco, just Franco.” I disrupted the audience’s suspension of disbelief, because no matter how far I got into the character, I was going to be perceived as something that doesn’t belong to the incredibly stylized world of soap operas. Everyone watching would see an actor they recognized, a real person in a made-up world. In performance art, the outcome is uncertain—and this was no exception. My hope was for people to ask themselves if soap operas are really that far from entertainment that is considered critically legitimate. Whether they did was out of my hands.
As Ms. Abramovi? told me over our dessert tasting, performance art is all about context. “If you bake some bread in a museum space it becomes art, but if you do it at home you’re a baker.” Likewise, when I wear green makeup and fly across a rooftop in “Spider-Man 3,” I’m working as an actor, but were I to do the same thing on the subway platform, a host of possibilities would open up. Playing the Green Goblin in the subway would no longer be about creating the illusion that I am flying. It would be about inserting myself in a familiar space in such a way that it becomes stranger than fiction, along the lines of what I’m doing on “General Hospital.”
December 22nd, 2009 at 5:32 am
ewww i bet that was nasty. did you see how he kinda laughed after saying “fantastic” at the end after taking a bite.