Just as her career began to take off, iconic soul diva Sharon Jones faced her greatest challenge: a life-threatening battle with cancer.
But not only has Jones remained on stage with her legendary band, the Dap-Kings, her battles have been chronicled in a new documentary thatโs receiving rave reviews.
In โMiss Sharon Jones!โ director Barbara Kopple covers a difficult episode in Jonesโ life, utilizing that vulnerability to create moments that are breathtaking, even inspirational, noted one riveting review.
The film briefly covers Jonesโ youth in South Carolina, when she knew from the first time she sang in her churchโs Christmas play that she would be a musician.
โI was, like, maybe 8, 9 years old โฆ and I got to sing โSilent Night,’โ she said in an interview this year with NPR.
Jones remembered audience members taking note of her performance.
โRight then and there, I knew that I was going to be a singer,โ she said. โGod had blessed me with a gift.โ
Before rising to her current level of globe-touring prominence, she performed in a wedding band while working odd jobs, including a stint as a prison guard.
Her big break came after meeting Gabriel Roth, bandleader of the Dap-Kings and co-founder of Daptone Records.
With her high-power vocals growling over the Dap-Kingsโ caffeinated soul, Jones channels the power of James Brown in his prime, the New York Times raved.
After a string of successful albums and tours, Jones received the disastrous news that she had been diagnosed with bile duct cancer and would need surgery.
Koppleโs film focuses on the period of Jonesโ convalescence as the singer divides her time between upstate New York and Georgia, undergoing chemotherapy and trying to regain her strength.
The film traces her life from a terrifying diagnosis of Stage 2 pancreatic cancer in 2013 through her triumphant return to the stage in 2015.
The celebratory tone from Jones at the end of the movie contrasts with the more muted one she sometimes strikes today, the review notes.
The early part of the film casts back to her childhood, which was rife with racial indignities. During her birth in Augusta, Georgia, her mother needed a cesarean operation, but since the hospital didnโt allow African-Americans in their main units, the procedure took place in an unsanitary storage room.
In the film, Jones returns to a local store she patronized as a child, where she said the owner had trained his parrot to recite a racial epithet whenever a black person entered.
โIt had a lot of effect on us as children,โ Jones said. โYouโd be afraid when you saw white people.โ
Kopple said Jones has โa tough attitude.โ
While major labels repeatedly shunned the singer as over the hill and โtoo dark,โ she finally found a perfect partner, and a breakthrough, via the fledgling indie Daptone Records, which specializes in reanimating the vintage sounds of soul, funk and Latin music.
The prolific Dap-Kings have put out seven albums with Jones and backed Amy Winehouse on her album โBack to Black,โ while Jones herself has been a popular choice for cameos on recordings and live shows for artists such as Michael Bublรฉ, Rufus Wainwright, David Byrne and Phish.
Central parts of the film show the financial hardships both Jones and her band underwent when they werenโt able to work during her illness.
The film balances that with scenes of the star being nursed back to health in upstate New York by an acquaintance, Megan Holken, whom Jones had only connected with a few times over the years.
At a news conference for the filmโs first showing at the Toronto Film Festival last year, Jones announced her cancerโs initial return.
At that time, doctors found a spot on her liver, later treated with radiation.
โI didnโt want people to come up and congratulate me on beating cancer when itโs back,โ she said.
Similarly, the singer lets her audience at shows this year know some of what sheโs going through with the cancerโs latest reemergence. โThereโs pain in my hips, and my legs feel like tons,โ she said. โGetting out on that stage, thatโs my therapy. You have to look at life the way it is. No one knows how long I have. But I have the strength now and I want to continue.โ
โMiss Sharon Jonesโ is now playing in select theaters.

