(Credits: Far Out / Columbia Pictures / Universal Pictures)
Thu 21 August 2025 22:30, UK
It’s one thing to star in your own biopic, but it’s another to take on the rather arduous task of directing it, too.
Biopics are one of the most popular genres these days, although many of us love to moan about them as much as we actually sit down to watch them. They’re easy Oscar fodder, practically begging for a nomination based on how well the actor embodies the subject. From Elton John and Freddie Mercury to Robbie Williams and ‘Weird Al’ Yankovic, these days no one is off-limits for a one I’m still waiting for the rumoured Susan Boyle biopic featuring Meryl Streep as the singer to come to fruition.
While some biopics are certainly better than others, it’s rare that you get to see a celebrity play themselves in a movie about their own life. It’s a bold move to step up to the post and take on the role of yourself, but at the end of the day, no one knows you better than yourself.
It could easily come across as self-indulgent and self-absorbed to willingly play yourself in a dazzling tale about the hardships you’ve had to overcome to rise to success. This has certainly been the case, like when the boxer Muhammad Ali decided that only he could take the role of himself in the 1977 film The Greatest. The critical reception wasn’t great because Ali isn’t an actor by any means, but the movie did perform surprisingly well at the box office.
That’s the thing with biopics—take a popular figure and their fans will flood to watch their story onscreen. This has seemed to captivate people for decades, like when Audie Murphy played himself as the ultimate war hero in 1955’s To Hell and Back. But the more interesting query is, has anyone ever directed themselves in a movie about their own life?
So, has anyone ever made their own biopic?
While this hasn’t been a very common cinematic occurrence, we can follow a string behind the phenomenon back to Richard Pryor. The comedian wasn’t going to let anyone mess with his visions of a biopic about himself, so when he made Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling, he not only co-wrote the screenplay, but he also directed, produced, and starred in the film. While Pyror technically plays a character named Jo Jo Dancer, the events of the movie closely mirror his own life as a stand-up comedian, including the unfortunate cocaine freebasing incident that left his body covered in significant burns.
It might not have been a masterpiece, but it was certainly a bold step to make a film taking raw moments from his life while also starring in and directing it for accuracy with an iron fist. The responsibility of taking on so many important behind-the-scenes and in-front-of-the-camera roles, paired with the fact that the comedian had never directed a movie before, inevitably affected the outcome of the film.
The ambitious project was the only feature Pryor would direct in his career, but it proved to be the only film he ever really needed to make. For what it’s worth, he was able to process the trauma of a drug-fueled time in his life through comedy and serious self-reflection by making this musing tale. Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling is a peculiar oddity of a film, made endlessly fascinating by the blurred lines between fact and fiction from the hands of the lived life.
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