Shaye Saint John

Shaye Saint John

Shaye Saint John is a fictional character and art project who appears in a series of surrealist, campy short films. Saint John, created by Eric Fournier,[1] was described with a backstory claiming she was a supermodel disfigured in a car crash, who rebuilt her body with a collection of mannequin parts.[2] Her website was taken down in 2017 but exists in archives.
Shaye Saint John
The character of Shaye Saint John is described as a "model", and is shown in videos wearing a plastic mask, a series of wigs and dresses, and manipulating wooden hands on sticks. She is described as having been hit by a train which resulted in the loss of her arms and legs.[3] Instead of using prosthetics, she added mannequin parts to her face and added wooden hands so no one could see her badly deformed hands. Saint John wears a series of masks throughout her videos, supposedly because she doesn't want anyone to see what she really looks like. Creator Eric Fournier has said "It's really bad, that's why she wears the mask".[2]
In 2003, the character started a blog at LiveJournal. A YouTube channel named Elastic Spastic Plastic Fantastic was created on 30th August 2006 and uploaded all 56 of the 'Shaye' videos in 2006-2007. The official channel was discontinued and cancelled on December 22, 2017.
Eric Fournier
Eric Fournier was born in Bloomington, Indiana in 1968. In the 1990s, Fournier was a member of punk bands The Blood Farmers and Skelegore when he began working on the first Shaye Saint John film, "Stumpwater Salad". In 2006, he packaged 30 of the videos together on a DVD[3] titled "The Triggers Compilation" on which he was credited as the director, writer, editor and producer.
On February 25 2010, Fournier died, aged 42, at a Palm Springs hospital from alcoholism-induced internal bleeding.
Eric and Shaye
Documentary director Larry Wessel started a Kickstarter campaign for a documentary film about Shaye Saint John and the personal life of the character's creator Eric Fournier, titled Eric and Shaye. The documentary premiered in October 2016.[3]