Peter Friedl
King Kong is one of the best-known characters ever produced by the Hollywood cinema. Since his first appearance in the 1933 film, (directed by Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack who made their reputations in 1920s colonialist ethnographic cinema), King Kong represents a cross penetration of Western notions of exoticism and monstrosity. Although reductive and stereotyped, the King Kong story "stands as an important popularized account of transcultural contact" (Cynthia Erb).The film´s call to identify with the tormented outsider has historically been answered by spectators outside the mainstream, including international, gay, black, and feminist artists and audiences. King Kong has also become a hero of contemporary cultural studies.
For his new project, Berlin-based artist Peter Friedl chooses two specific versions of the King Kong theme for investigating the relationship between adequate and inadequate artistic representation. The first reference is a song entitled "King Kong," written by US musician Daniel Johnston in 1983, recorded same year on "Yip/Jump Music." The song (only vocal) is the laconic and fatalistic retelling of the King Kong story.
As a second reference, Peter Friedl remembers an important and controversial moment in South African history and culture. The 1959 jazz opera, "King Kong" was critically esteemed as an interracial collaboration of black and white artists, which gained international prominence as an early expression of the horrors of apartheid (in 1960, the production travelled to London). In reality, "King Kong" was for the most part a white liberal production (with a book by Harry Bloom, and lyrics by Pat Williams), with only music (by composer and "Drum" writer Todd Matshikiza) and performances by black South Africans (among them, Miriam Makeba). "King Kong" remained primarily a blockbuster for white audiences. Based on the tragic life of the heavyweight boxing champ, Ezekiel "King Kong" Dhlamini, the story is located in Sophiatown, a Johannesburg suburb.
Sophiatown, once a multiethnic center of music, literature, speakeasies, and gangsters, was the "Little Harlem" of Johannesburg, "perhaps the most perfect experiment in non-racial community living" (Bloke Modisane). In the late 50s it was gradually bulldozed by the apartheid government. After 1960, a white suburb was raised up and called Triomf (Afrikaans for "triumph"). The "ethnical cleaning" and destruction of Sophiatown remains the country´s most symbolically charged memory of forced removal and urban segregation.
Shot entirely in Johannesburg, Peter Friedl´s film uses and reflects upon the genre of a music video featuring Daniel Johnston in order to weave together diverse histories and affinities. Johnston performs (for the first time "in public") his old King Kong song at a public park in today´s Sophiatown/Triomf. The two cameras document his exposure and fatigues, but, at the same time, include panoramic views of the location as well as of the production set and shooting situation itself. The viewpoints and relationships get reversed. History serves as the starting point not of another narrative but of other strategies of coherence.