Inside Georgina Spelvin -1973- Now

She is not faking pleasure. She is faking the memory of pleasure, a memory her character, Miss Jones, can no longer genuinely access because she is already dead. It is a performance about the ghost inside the body.

The scene is brutal in its simplicity. Miss Jones, having arrived in Hell, is presented with a body. A living, breathing instrument of her own will. Georgina strips not like a stripper, but like a woman unwrapping a bandage. There is no smile. There is a grim, tragic curiosity. Inside Georgina Spelvin -1973-

The script is open on the table: The Devil in Miss Jones . On paper, it’s just a series of scenes, a blunt allegory about a woman who suicides into damnation only to find her idea of hell is a perverse form of earthly freedom. But Georgina, born Shelley to a Boston family that spoke in hushed, tight-lipped tones, understands the subtext. She has always understood the secret rooms inside people. She is not faking pleasure

Georgina stands up, stretches her dancer's legs, and lights another cigarette. The spell breaks. She becomes the woman who will cash a small check tomorrow, who will navigate the double-edged sword of being an "adult film actress" in an era that despises and devours her in equal measure. The scene is brutal in its simplicity