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"Soul is a way
of life, but it is always the hard way."
-Ray Charles
If
a life is merely the sum of its parts, then the story of Ray Charles might
read as a tale of personal highs and lows behind a lengthy, award-winning
career in the music business.
But for a man who synthesized his struggles, pain and personal darkness
as effectively as he incorporated a myriad of musical styles-Jazz, Rhythm
& Blues, Rock and Roll, Gospel, Country & Western-into his art, the story
reads much differently, transformed from a sequence of events and accomplishments
into a compelling and ultimately inspiring journey of a one-of-a-kind
genius with a distinct vision…who, along the way, gave the world a new
way to hear.
Ray is the never-before-told, musical biographical drama of American legend
Ray Charles, brought to the big screen following a 15-year journey by
award-winning filmmaker TAYLOR HACKFORD and featuring a remarkable performance
from the multifaceted JAMIE FOXX.
Director Hackford (The Devil's Advocate, Dolores Claiborne, An Officer
and a Gentleman)-who, along with producing partner STUART BENJAMIN (La
Bamba, The Long Walk Home, Everybody's All-American), spent the last 15
years developing this story with Ray Charles-presents a well defined portrait
of an artist who turned his personal encounters with darkness into a burning
light. The story of Ray - that of an impoverished, blind child of the
segregated South who went on to break down social and artistic barriers
and change the history of American music - is the quintessentially American
story of a man's fight to control his own destiny.
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With Foxx assuming the title role in a performance of
intensity, breadth and truth, Ray follows the most volatile period of
Charles' career, which starts the moment this young, black, blind teenager
courageously boards a Florida bus all alone and heads across the United
States to hone his art in the happening Seattle jazz scene. From Ray's
early struggles to be treated fairly and find his own path, to his discovery
by Atlantic Records and subsequent meteoric rise to global fame, to his
battles with addiction and his torrid love affairs, the journey of Ray
leads not only forward but back to Ray's youth. For, even as he becomes
one of his generation's greatest musical heroes, Ray must come to terms
with the fifth year in his life when his brother George died and he began
to lose his vision-a time that had an indelible effect on Ray's drive,
emotions and immortal music.
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