John Cassavetes--celebrated as the father of American independent filmmaking--managed to frustrate biographers with wildly conflicting "facts" about himself, making it impossible to form an
accurate picture of the man and the artist. In this extraordinary book, Ray Carney assembles the filmmaker's statements and writings to present Cassavetes's life and work in his own words,
vividly revealing the personal and cultural forces that shaped his career as a writer-director of fiercely independent films--from Shadows, Faces, and Husbands in the late 1950s
and 1960s to Minnie and Moskowitz, A Woman under the Influence, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, Opening Night, Gloria, and Love Streams in the decades that followed. Framed by
Carney's comprehensive introduction and bolstered by an invaluable timeline of major developments, including his marriage to actress Gena Rowlands, John Cassavetes in Person offers a
biographical overview unlike any other. Situating the filmmaker in his films, this book reaches beyond the press releases to reveal the man behind the masks, the mortal at the center of the
myths, and the artistic hero without the hero worship.