I Called Him Morgan
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Reverential
Retrospective Revisits Abbreviated Life of Legendary Jazz Great
Legendary
jazz great Lee Morgan (1938-1972) was born and raised in Philadelphia
where he received his first trumpet as a gift from his sister on his
13th birthday. He soon became a protege of Clifford Brown who would
die in a car accident at the tender age of 25.
Lee
passed away prematurely, too, though he was murdered by his
common-law wife, Helen, in a fit of jealous rage. She blew him away
in between sets at a Greenwich Village cabaret because not only was
he cheating on her but had the temerity to bring his mistress with
him to the club that night.
Written
and directed by Kasper Collin, I Called Him Morgan is a warts-and-all
retrospective chronicling the highs and lows of Lee's checkered
career. He enjoyed a meteoric rise as a member of Dizzy Gillespie's
big band while still in his teens, only to eventually become broke
because of a heroin habit that made him so unreliable that nobody in
the music industry would hire him anymore.
Upon
bottoming out, Lee was lucky to meet Helen, a woman 14 years his
senior who put him in rehab and let him move into her Manhattan
apartment after he got cleaned up. She subsequently became both his
lover and his business manager, negotiating deals and escorting him
to gigs.
Initially
very grateful, Lee proceeded to make the most of the shot at
redemption she afforded him. He resumed performing and churning out
albums, and became a very productive and respected member of the jazz
community again.
Unfortunately,
the accolades and attention accompanying success apparently went
straight to his head, and he started taking Helen for granted. Lee
had an eyes for the ladies and, when he stopped coming home at night,
Helen issued him a warning that she couldn't handle such insulting
mistreatment.
Their
turbulent relationship came to a head on the night of February 19,
1972 after a heated exchange at Slug's Saloon . First, Lee's new
girlfriend confronted Helen. Helen then slapped Lee. Lee tossed Helen
out of the bar and into a blizzard without a coat. Helen came back
with the gun Lee had given her for protection and shot her
philandering man once in the chest. Since it took an ambulance over
an hour to arrive due to the heavy snowfall, Lee bled out.
What
makes this film so fascinating is that much of it is narrated by
Helen herself, albeit posthumously. For, just one month before she
died in March of 1996, she sat down to talk with a music professor
who recorded her life story for posterity. Besides that audiotape,
the documentary features file concert footage, plus the reflections
of many of Lee's contemporaries: Ben Maupin, Wayne Shorter, Benny
Maupin, Billy Harper and more.
To
paraphrase an age-old maxim, Hell hath no fury like a Helen scorned!
Excellent
(4 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 92
minutes
Production Studio:
Kasper Collin Produktion
Distributor: Submarine
Deluxe
To
see a trailer for I Called Him Morgan, visit:
https://vimeo.com/181151415
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