San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

‘Eyes of Tammy Faye’ adds humanity behind caricature

- By Adelle M. Banks

Jessica Chastain remembers the “media sensationa­lism” that surrounded the larger-thanlife image of the woman she portrays in “The Eyes of Tammy Faye.” But years before deciding to produce and star in the biopic, the actress realized she never came close to knowing who the person long known as Tammy Faye Bakker was at heart.

“The reality that I discovered is she was such a compassion­ate person, filled with love and empathy for others,” Chastain told Religion News Service in a recent interview.

“It was important for me to tell that true story of her, not just for her legacy, and for her children, but also for the LGBTQ community that she supported when others in the conservati­ve evangelica­l community were turning their backs on them.”

“The Eyes of Tammy Faye,” available in theaters and streaming platforms, is based on the 2000 documentar­y of the same name. Chastain, who portrays Bakker and is an executive producer of the new film, purchased the rights to the documentar­y to tell a fuller story.

Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, whose “Praise the Lord” or PTL show was a fixture on television for much of the 1970s and 1980s, became examples of the dangers of success and of leveraging faith to make enormous sums. At the height of their popularity, the PTL empire suddenly foundered on financial scandals, rumors of Tammy Faye’s drug addiction and accusation­s of sexual abuse against

Jim Bakker by a New York church secretary named Jessica Hahn.

Both Chastain and Andrew Garfield, who plays Jim, said their research led them to a deeper understand­ing of the couple.

Unlike Chastain, the British-American Garfield knew little at first about the person he would portray.

“I came kind of fresh, without any preconceiv­ed ideas or judgments,” he told RNS in a separate interview. “So I was able to really just dive into researchin­g him and his life and watching footage and meeting and talking to people that have known him and gathering my own instincts.”

As they became more familiar with the religion and the roles each of the Bakkers played in their rise and fall, the actors said they sought to humanize two people who had been caricature­s, filling print and broadcast media with headlines about sex and money scandals.

The movie highlights both the trademarks and the traditions of the Bakkers, opening with the long-term emphasis on Tammy Faye’s heavy makeup. In one of her first lines, Chastain declares her exceptiona­lly long eyelashes “my trademark.”

Later there are scenes where she stands by her husband as he urges increased pledges to keep their failing ministry in operation.

The movie shows a young Tammy Faye being moved by the Holy Spirit when she ventures into the Pentecosta­l church her mother, who considered Tammy Faye a shameful reminder of her past divorce, had forbidden her to attend.

In the early 1960s, Tammy Faye met Jim at North Central Bible College in

Minneapoli­s and they soon married. Their work as traveling evangelist­s, with handmade puppets crafted by Tammy Faye, was a simpler version of the ministry they would eventually build into the Heritage USA headquarte­rs including the PTL TV studio, a fancy Christian hotel and an amusement park near the border between North and South Carolina.

“We don’t deserve it, but yet we are blessed,” Tammy Faye sings in the mid-1970s.

“God loves you, he really does!” is the couple’s on-air refrain.

In 1989, Jim was sentenced to prison for bilking PTL supporters out of $158 million. Tammy Faye later divorced her imprisoned husband and returned to her singing career.

Tammy Faye, who later married her husband’s former business partner Roe Messner and took his last name, died in 2007. “The Jim Bakker Show” debuted on the 16th anniversar­y of the date he made his last PTL appearance, and Jim — who was released from prison in 1994 — co-hosts it to this day with his second wife, Lori.

Director Michael Showalter viewed the Bakkers as a couple who had different approaches to their faith commitment.

“She had a strong connection to the gospel and the literature, and she wanted to convey that,” he told RNS. “Whereas for Jim, it seemed like there was more ambition to kind of build a promised land for everybody to go to.”

Garfield said he was not able to contact Jim Bakker for advice about his portrayal of a man whose perspectiv­e on faith seems vastly different from his own.

“I’m not involved in any organized religion,” Garfield said in the interview, describing his spirituali­ty as one of “constant exploratio­n” where “doubt is just as vital as faith.”

“I think, there’s a surrender that has to happen to things that are bigger than us,” he continued. “Maybe part of Jim’s downfall was that he was trying to control something that was uncontroll­able and trying to be bigger than the angel he was wrestling with.”

The Bakkers’ two adult children were involved in the production.

“Tammy Sue actually recorded a version of one of her mother’s songs, which is a beautiful version,” Showalter said of the tune that was included at the end of the movie. “And she came and visited the set.”

The couple’s son, Jay Bakker, has spent much of his adult life creating churches designed “for people who have given up on church” — a marked shift from his parents’ methods. Now a minister of Revolution Church in Minneapoli­s, he attended the movie premiere in New York. This summer, he tweeted : “They humanized my parents for once, and it’s nice to have their humanity recognized.”

Chastain, who was never baptized but considers herself “a very faith-based person,” said she found Tammy Faye’s message of acceptance to be inspiring as she researched and portrayed her.

“The whole thing of Jesus loves you, just the way you are, Jesus loves the way you love, was something that really opened my eyes to what Christiani­ty could be,” the actress said, “that everyone is deserving of God’s love and grace.”

 ?? Searchligh­t Pictures / Associated Press ?? Andrew Garfield and Jessica Chastain portray Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker in a scene from “The Eyes of Tammy Faye.”
Searchligh­t Pictures / Associated Press Andrew Garfield and Jessica Chastain portray Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker in a scene from “The Eyes of Tammy Faye.”

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