Sunday, January 1, 2012
Original script by Yoko Ono

 

My ultimate goal in film-making is to make a film which includes a smiling face snap of every single human being in the world. Of course, I cannot go around the whole world and take the shots myself. I need cooperation from something like the post offices of the world. If everybody would drop a snapshot of themselves and their families to the post office of their town, or allow themselves to be photographed by the nearest photographic studio, this would be soon accomplished.

Of course, the film would need constant adding of footage. Probably no-one would like to see the whole film at once, so you can keep it in a library or something, and when you want to see some particular town’s people’s smiling faces you can go and check that section of the film. We can also arrange it with a television network so that whenever you want to see faces of a particular location in the world, all you have to do is to press a button and there it is. This way, if Johnson wants to see what sort of people he killed in Vietnam that day, he only has to turn the channel. Before this you were just part of a figure in the newspapers, but after this you become a smiling face. And when you are born, you will know that if you wanted to, you will have in your lifetime to communicate with the whole world. That is more than most of us could ask for. Very soon, the age may come where we would not need photographs to communicate, like ESP, etc. It will happen soon, but that will be “After The Film Age”.

Yoko Ono,
London ‘67
(excerpt from ‘Grapefruit’ by Yoko Ono)

Sunday, March 13, 2011
SMILE PIECE by Yoko Ono

 

SMILE PIECE

Send a smile to your friend so he/she can smile, too.

Think of a way to do it.

You could send a photo that says ‘smile’,
or a picture, a story, or a piece of pie,
but specify that it’s a smile you’re passing on.

Ask him/her to do the same:
to pass on the ‘smile’ in his/her own way.

Love,

Yoko Ono

 

Monday, August 23, 2010
Film No. 5 (1968) by Yoko Ono

Above: Still from Film No. 5 by Yoko Ono, 'SMILE' starring John Lennon

Starring John Lennon
Camera: William Wareing
Sound: John Lennon
Light: Garden
Music by John Lennon
Instruction: bring your own instrument.

In August 1968, Yoko Ono directed two films, shot in the same afternoon in the garden of John Lennon’s house ‘Kenwood’ in Weybridge. The first film was called Number 5, but it has also been known as SMILE.

A special high-speed camera was used to film John’s facial expressions as he stuck out his tongue, wiggled his eyebrows and gave fleeting smiles over 3 minutes. The camera was able to take 20,000 frames per minute, which enabled the film to last 52 minutes. Yoko initially considered making Number 5 four hours long, but this was considered impractical and the finished movie ran for 52 minutes. It premiered at the Chicago Film Festival in 1968.

Friday, August 13, 2010
Interview with John & Yoko, Rolling Stone

Rolling Stone: Do you think Yoko’s film of you smiling would work of it were just anyone smiling?

John: Yes, it works with somebody else smiling, but she went through all this. It originally started out that she wanted a million people all over the world to send in a snapshot of themselves smiling, and then it got down to lots of people smiling, and then maybe one or two and then me smiling as a symbol of today smiling-and that’s what I am, whatever that means. And so it’s me smiling, and that’s the hang-up, of course, because it’s me again. But they’ve got to see it someday-it’s only me. I don’t mind if people go to the film to see me smiling because it doesn’t matter, it’s not harmful. The idea of the film won’t really be dug for another fifty or a hundred years probably. That’s what it’s all about. I just happen to be that face.

Yoko: The films SMILE and TWO VIRGINS were done in a spirit of home movies. In both films, we were mainly concerned about the vibrations the films send out-the kind that was between us. Imagine a painting that smiles just once in a billion years. John’s ghostly smile in Film No. 5 might just communicate in a hundred years’ time, or maybe, the way things are rolling, it may communicate much earlier than that. I think all the doors are just ready to open now.

 23 Nov 1968

Thursday, August 12, 2010
SMILE & Instant Karma

 

11 February 1970

Having recently cut off their hair for Peace and sporting armbands saying ‘PEOPLE FOR PEACE’, John & Yoko visit the BBC to film two takes of the song INSTANT KARMA for the TV show ‘Top Of The Pops’.

John & Yoko (as Plastic Ono Band) are accompanied by Klaus Voormann, Alan White & BP Fallon.

For one of the takes, Yoko as an artistic statement wears a sanitary towel as blindfold and holds up cards marked BREATHE, SMILE, PEACE, LOVE and HOPE.

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