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Little Richard: I Am Everything Poster

Little Richard: I Am Everything

2023 | 98m | English

(1847 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 1.0 (history)

Director: Lisa Cortés
Writer:
Staring:
Details

The story of the Black queer origins of rock n' roll. It explodes the whitewashed canon of American pop music to reveal the innovator – the originator – Richard Penniman. Through a wealth of archive and performance that brings us into Richard's complicated inner world, the film unspools the icon's life story with all its switchbacks and contradictions.
Release Date: Apr 11, 2023
Director: Lisa Cortés
Writer:
Genres: Music, Documentary
Keywords artists' life, biography, rhythm and blues (r&b), black singer, eccentric artist, gospel singer, portrait of an artist, r&b artist, artistic revolution, male pianist, egocentric artists, gay artist, life and career, homosexual, revolutionary singer
Production Companies CNN Films, Bungalow Media + Entertainment, Rolling Stone Films
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Little Richard Self (archive footage)
John Waters Self
Mick Jagger Self
Billy Porter Self
Tom Jones Self
Paul McCartney Self (archive footage)
Nona Hendryx Self
Valerie June Self
Nile Rodgers Self
Fredara Hadley Self
Alan Freed Self (archive footage)
Elvis Presley Self (archive footage)
Pat Boone Self (archive footage)
John Lennon Self (archive voice)
Keith Winslow Self
Name Job
Keith Walker Director of Photography
Graham Willoughby Director of Photography
Lisa Cortés Director
Hunter Hanson Music Editor
Tamar-kali Original Music Composer
Jonathan Finegold Music Supervisor
Nyneve Laura Minnear Editor
Jake Hostetter Editor
Name Title
Robert Friedman Producer
Liz Yale Marsh Producer
Caryn Capotosto Producer
Mike Powers Executive Producer
Amy Entelis Executive Producer
Courtney Sexton Executive Producer
Gus Wenner Executive Producer
Jason Fine Executive Producer
Anita May Rosenstein Executive Producer
Lisa Cortés Producer
Dee Rees Executive Producer
Jarobi Moorhead Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 8 13 5
2024 5 8 15 4
2024 6 6 12 3
2024 7 19 44 5
2024 8 14 22 8
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2024 11 10 30 3
2024 12 6 11 2
2025 1 5 10 3
2025 2 4 6 1
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2025 8 0 1 0

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

I admit to not really knowing so much about this enigmatic and flamboyant man, and I found this effort from Lisa Cortes to be quite an engaging and enlightening introduction. Using a mix of actuality and some soundbites, we are presented with an observational documentary of an outwardly gay man who ... can truly claim to have "invented" rock 'n roll - with over a dozen, instantly recognisable, toe-tappers to his name. As ever, we have the usual music industry shenanigans, his flirtations with sex, drugs, booze and ultimately, his rediscovery of religion as possibly his only lifeline. It's a well paced analysis but I could have been doing with more of his actual performances - especially as his songs tended to be so very short. It's still quite astonishing that so much footage does still exist and the use of the early material really does work well to illustrate not just how captivating he was as an entertainer, but also how effective he - and his music - was at offering some (limited) conduits for racial and sexual integration at a time when segregation was still rife and homosexuality still very much illegal. A fascinating insight not just into this man, but into the times in which he flourished; of the influential role his music played around the USA at the time, and well worth a watch.

May 06, 2023
Brent_Marchant
9.0

Sometimes it takes a movie to help set the record straight. And, when it comes to designating who truly is the king of rock ’roll, this documentary from director Lisa Cortes does just that. Richard Wayne Penniman – professionally known as Little Richard (1932-2020) – burst onto the pop music scene i ... n the mid-1950s with a singular, unrestrained, high-energy style that set him apart from other aspiring performers at the time, achieving tremendous success with hits like “Tutti Fruitti” and “Long Tall Sally,” among others. However, even though he developed a strong following and a reputation for chart-busting releases, he never quite attained the widespread notoriety of others, like Elvis Presley and Pat Boone, particularly when they covered his hits. He also didn’t achieve the financial success that he deserved, thanks to record labels that gave him raw deals. What’s more, as a flamboyant, openly gay Black musician at a time when those qualities were far from well tolerated, he became a target for ostracism and scorn from conservative circles, whose leaders spouted inflammatory claims that he was undermining the moral fabric of traditional American culture with his “decadent” music and “perverted” lifestyle. Yet his blend of colorful performances, mixed with outlandish costumes, pancake makeup and frenetic stage antics and backed by tunes that fused boogie woogie, rhythm & blues and gospel, made him a standout, a style that countless artists drew from – and openly acknowledged his influence – when they emerged in their own right, many of whom are interviewed in the film in archive footage or recent conversations. The result here is a revelatory examination of someone who set a standard but who never received the degree of recognition he merited until many years after his debut on the music scene. “Little Richard: I Am Everything” features a wealth of historical footage, including many interviews with the artist himself, along with observations from the likes of Mick Jagger, Billy Porter, Paul McCartney, Tom Jones, Nona Hendryx and superfan filmmaker John Watters, as well as an array of music industry, African-American and gay community historians. Viewers are likely to come away from this offering knowing a lot about Little Richard that they hadn’t known previously, enabling them to gain a new appreciation for the rock icon and learning much about the many triumphs and challenges he faced during his colorfully enigmatic life. Audiences are sure to come away from this one proclaiming “Long live rock – and the king who finally gets to wear his much-deserved crown.”

Dec 05, 2023