Stacey Farrar, the marketing director of Maysles Films, his production company, said the filmmaker died at his home in New York yesterday.
Maysles was best known for a handful of documentary classics he made with his brother, David, in the 1960s and 1970s. The Maysles Brothers as many referred to them chose subjects as ordinary as the struggles of Bible salesmen and as glamorous as Marlon Brando, Orson Welles and the Beatles, whom the pair followed in 1964 during their first trip to the United States.
Maysles was active right up to this death. His documentary of the fashion icon Iris Apfel, "Iris," is to be released in April. Earlier this week, the Tribeca Film Festival announced that "In Transit," a documentary he co-directed about the longest train route in the US, will premiere at this year's festival.
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Born in Boston to Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe, Maysles served in the US Army from 1944 to 1946, studied at Syracuse and Boston University and taught psychology for three years before turning to film.
His first foray into motion pictures was a 16-mm documentary he made in 1955 while visiting mental hospitals in the Soviet Union.
Maysles started out as an assistant to Robert Drew, a pioneer of cinema verite, and his peers included such acclaimed documentary makers as DA Pennebaker and Frederick Wiseman.