Jaine Green

Jaine Green
Born London, United Kingdom
Occupation Documentary film maker, stand-up comedian, film producer

Jaine Green, known as Jaine Harmston-Green, is a UK documentary maker and former Stand-up comedian. She was the first person to show a clitoris on UK national television. She has made more than 50 diverse films and commercials. Green has also directed theatre. Her West End debut was a production of Lip Service, a dark comedy about three women taking calls for a sex line. She won the Best Docu-Soap award at the National TV Awards and her short film, Cherry Cake, was an official selection at the 34th Vancouver International Film Festival; a finalist for the Best Narrative Short award at the 24th St Louis Film Festival;[1] nominated for Best International Short Film at the 25th International Flickerfest Festival.[2] and a Jury Selection at the 27th Palm Springs Film Festival.[3]

Personal life

She was born in London, studied in Chichester and currently lives in Hastings on the south coast of England. Her background is unconventional for a film director as she worked as a hairdresser and stand-up comedian,[4] before winning a place on ITV’s Metroland, a series for first time directors, with I have the gift, a documentary film about Leon, a postman in Brixton who claims to have abilities of psychic gifts and provides both physical and spiritual support.[5] Green is the mother of spoken word artist and author Laura Dockrill.[6]

Career

Green has been making controversial films since 1996, when one of her first documentaries I'm Your Number One Fan (C4) split the critics. Victor Lewis-Smith stated that it "transcended the documentary format" due to its opening sequence shot on Super 8 film [7] and was "a true work of art that deserves to win every award it's entered for",[8] but Jim Shelley thought it was exploitative.[9] The film followed three stalkers quietly going about their daily business as they harassed the likes of Princess Diana. German doctor Klaus Wagner believed Princes Diana was at the centre of a hate campaign by the Queen.[10] Blue Tulip Rose Read is seen crowing like a cockerel as she pursues DJ Mike Read.[11]

The film attracted a cult following. The Evening Standard began selling 'Mrs Read teeshirts', and comedy series The League of Gentlemen used direct quotes from the film in newspaper signs, seen around Royston Vasey in various episodes of the first series.[12] The writing on these signs include "Ed Stewart's breath stinks", "Mike Read's breath is beautiful" and "Mike Read made me better".[13]

Green's films often deal with difficult moral issues. She was the first person to show a clitoris on UK national television in Channel 4's The clitoris uncovered, and in Killing in Common one of her contributors, GP Michael Irwin, openly admitted to killing 'literally hundreds' of his patients using the double effect method (knowingly giving enough drugs to kill both the pain and the patient). Cultural norms equating slimness with success and beauty and their impact on female body image were examined in Skinny Women which featured Sophie Dickson who, suffering from an extreme form of anorexia, was described by a journalist as "four stone of nicotine-fuelled venom". Sophie died from starvation shortly after filming.[14]

The social roles of women and their experiences within society are themes in a number of Green's other documentaries. In 2008, Female Hoarders examined the psychology behind compulsive hoarding by women. An earlier film Sleeping with the Enemy, distributed by the BBC, examined the impact of religious differences on families and included a Jewish woman born in a Nazi hospital in World War II, a Muslim woman forcibly separated from her Christian husband in Sarayevo by the Yugoslavian conflicts of the early 1990s and a committed Hindu married to a Church of England vicar.[15]

As filmmaker

As well as documentaries exploring ethical dilemmas and female social roles, Green has made a number of films about celebrities and their need to keep aspects of their lives hidden from their fans. In Jennifer Lopez - Behind the Behind, a number of previously secret aspects of Lopez's life were revealed including that her ex-teacher who was nearly twice her age became her live-in lover and that she was privately educated and from an affluent neighbourhood rather than having the poor background that she claimed.[16] The documentary The Truth About Take That explored the compromises that the boy band had to make when famous. The film examined the reasons why sexuality matters to fans and how it can affect sales in the music industry.[17]

Green made a Party Political Broadcast for the breakaway Pro-Euro Conservative Party which was declared as controversial by both The Guardian and The Independent. It was said that it would lead to a change in future campaigns where a more US-style 'gloves off approach' would likely be adopted. The broadcast contained a portrayal of William Hague as a tramp.

A more mainstream production was Simon Rattle - Moving On a year-long production for the BBC which followed Rattle, who was at the time Britain's best known conductor in his final year at the CBSO. In the film, Rattle criticised the Labour Government for their policy towards arts funding and announced plans to leave the UK.[18] He subsequently moved to Germany to conduct the Berlin Philharmonic.

In recent years, documentaries have included The Real Witch Project, Middle Aged Mummy’s Boys, and Tourette’s on the Job (finalist for BAFTA/MHMA).[19] All of these documentaries have as a common theme the sympathetic portrayal of people who are for various reasons struggling with the behaviours exhibited by mainstream society. For example, Tourette's on the Job features Brad Cohen, who was branded a troublemaker in school and punished by his teachers for the tics and barking noises that were caused by his Tourette's.

In 2014 Green wrote, directed and produced a short, independently funded drama, Cherry Cake, which has actors Matthew Kelly and Eve Pearce. The film is set in rural England and challenges the audiences expectations of what it is to be elderly with the character of 86-year old Ingrid. In 2015 Green used Kickstarter to raise money for this project.[20]

As producer

In 2009, Green was executive producer on Channel 4's My Monkey Baby, about people who treat monkeys as children who don't grow up which provoked a debate about the ethics of keeping monkeys as pets.[21] Lori and Jim Johnson, interviewed in the documentary, consider Jessy, a Capuchin monkey, to be their child to such a degree that Jim states that, 'If I hear anyone call her a monkey I throw a fit. She's my daughter, 100%'.[22] The film reveals the family traumas that underpin this behaviour as Lori hadn't had contact with any of her six children for five years and another participant, Mary-Lynn, had had to have a hysterectomy at a young age.[23]

Another example of a film that Green produced that looks at 'outsiders' is Love in Rimini which features the love lives of straight Italian men in relationships with transsexuals. It explores how men justify their attraction to a transsexual and how this fits into straight sexual identity, particularly in the context of machismo in Italian society.

Green echoed her earlier interest in the paranormal as series producer in 2009 for Psychic Academy, where Tony Stockwell, who claims to have demonstrated psychic abilities as a child,[24] attempts to identify members of the public who have the ability to perceive information hidden from the normal senses through extrasensory perception (ESP) or have the necessary intuitive processes to produce the appearance of such abilities.

In 2012, she was series producer for Secret Millionaire in the UK [25] which won Best Docu-Soap at the National Reality TV Awards 2012 by The National Reality TV Academy.[26]

From 2015-2016, Jaine Green was the global Show Runner for UnderCover Angel, a ten part series for National Geographic Channel.[27]

Awards

References

  1. http://www.cinemastlouis.org/about-festival
  2. http://flickerfest.com.au/programme/best-of-international-4-2016/
  3. https://www.psfilmfest.org/2016-shortfest/short-films/cherry-cake/
  4. GreenFingerFilms, September 2016
  5. Metroland: I have the Gift, British Film Institute, 1995
  6. Ian Burrell, Laura Dockrill - a poet for the ipod generation, The Independent, July, 2009
  7. I'm Your Number One Fan, Discover Film, September 2016
  8. Victor Lewis-Smith, "I'm Your Number One Fan", Evening Standard, 5 October 1996
  9. Jim Shelley, Jim Shelley Knows the Pressures of Fame, The Guardian, October 1996
  10. Jane Thynne, TV gives soapbox to man who haunts Princess of Wales, The Daily Telegraph, 19 September 1996
  11. I'm Your Number One Fan, Prolific Films, 1996
  12. A controversial documentary from 1996, Discover Film, 2015
  13. The League of Gentleman,Series 1, episodes 2,3,4 and 6, The BBC, January 1999
  14. Liz Stone,Sophie was three stone but wanted to live, Evening Standard, December 2001
  15. A Family affair: uniting our faiths with love, The Independent, December 1998
  16. Glamour, Jens Not Really From the Block,Glamour Magazine, 28 April 2003
  17. Nicole Lambert,Robbie I'm Not Gay, Daily Mail, December 2005
  18. Jane Hughes, Rattle to quit Labour's musical desert, The Independent, December 1998
  19. 14th Annual Awards, Shortlist announced for Mental Health Media Awards 2007, MHMA, 2007
  20. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/cherrycake/cherry-cake-an-english-short-film-with-a-surprsing
  21. People who treat monkeys as babies, The Sun, June 2009
  22. Sam Wollaston, Last night's TV: My Monkey Baby, Nature's Fury and Meet the British, The Guardian, June 2009
  23. Kathryn Flett,I hear the pitter-patter of tiny paws, The Observer, June 2009
  24. Jenna Sloan, Can you learn to be psychic?, The Sun (United Kingdom), January 2011
  25. The Secret Millionaire Series 10, The Radio Times, January 2012
  26. National Reality TV awards 2012 winners announced, National Television Awards, August 2012
  27. GreenFingerFilms, National Geographic Channel, September 2016

External links

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