t - East Village Eye
Transcription
t - East Village Eye
., ... . ., , , , PYRAMID84 101 AVE A 420-1590 \ . ", , TEN EAST EIGHTH STREn NEW YORR CITY 10003 SEE THEM AT THE RITZ MAY 26, SATURDAY NIGHT , WHY SUBSCRIBE TO THE EYE? LISTEN! THAT'S what you'll be doing soon if you subscribe to the Eye now. Through the courtesy of ROIR cassettes, we'll send you your choice of Glenn Branca's critically acclaimed Sym. phany No.1, that masterpiece of monotonal music, or Singles, an excellent sampler of now-defunct New York bands including Patti Smith , Richard Hell, Television and a host of other underground favorites. Subscribe for two years and alsoget the att r act ive commemorat ive Sing les poster, These ROIR cassette-only albums normally sell for $8.00; th e poster is only available through this special offer. But hurry-only the first 200 subscribers are eligible! ---------------------------o I 1 year (11 issues) plus 0 Sy mphony No. 1 or 0 Singles (check one) for $12.00 ($I J.OO plus $ J.OO postage & handling). I o 2 years (22 iss ues) plus 0 Sympho ny No.1 or 0 Singles (check one) for I $2J.OO ($20.00 plus $J.OO postage & handling), plus the commemorat ive I Singles poster. I I Please allow 10 doys for deli very I I Nam e ' I Address !City i ' State Zip ElUll Village Eye, 611 Broadway, rm 214 New Yor k, NY 10012 I I II ~--------~-----~-----------~ ABOUT THIS ISSUE ... "ow., . I. •• ttiee of IIris I .. 14" ---.,MeI tIte •,e IMI........ t•f ::':::.no.s the re,.urrecf the • IW ··~~~GE lYE, of ,~on ,,.It. So .. co-.., .lfn. .-ti...... . . 10 _.., MI. .. writen. x. ~'" wloIcIo .. -"_ .lIf .t ....::te,... ,.,. . ..... rtI.. ~ -::.. tile _ (, 79 & m_':::'......, ... -"::11 "E ..... ..... _ ..... _. ...._. II ... ~of e.tut• • • 1110_ ...... wlt... _ I I . ciMIt ..... .:= m_-:........... ""'"' to It II ... th· lAST 'ILUG( MIpe4 ., ......... . .,........ I --' 1. . ,M4y YllUG( m ..... IAST _ ... bewI =.';' d.. rwM ... fw effertl ... .... of It ._ .__ . ....... fer ....tI .... IC8I'Ct etcrM"n" _tIu..... m ,= " .........-:..'t:' -..,.'.... "... ~ t ' ..... s' ••••••_.......... La: . r.." . .. .....1.... m:;n.:.............. • MAY 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 5 • TELLUS The Audio Cassette Magazine TELLUS, The Audio Cassette Magazine is a subscription only bi-monthly publication of audio art, new music, poetry and drama. Its aim is to disseminate global timely audio information. The name TELLUS comes from the Roman Goddess, the great mother who connects all psychic events to material events. .- All submissions must be accompanied by a stamped self-addressed envelope. ~ '1: Editors/Publishers Claudia Gould Joseph Nechvatal Carol Parkinson TELLUS#2 l'ELLUS III Side A Side A II Jody Hanl. Mr. Control II J• .,., U"".", The Indian Elephant ./ _Ie T...lfl SCream (Recorded Live. Rolle Swilzerland 6/83) ' ) ...""" Hulc",n.... Wordplay Un Skull Corpse ' ) T_ l _ . /ZIS 30 Second Telephone Te" or 1) Bloodshot ' ) ....."., fro. The Atom & Eve of Destruction II lItvc. T•••,., Re-Gender (Excerpt) " I Grolch.n l .....h.ld 666 5) /1"'-"'-/1"'-/1 'r04ueH.... Side B tbenre _II IJ MHdt c....r Reaganomics /lnfinitessimus I) .......ro f .. (rrtth 81rr) You Who Know No Pain ') J•••,.,. Hech_' Ego Masher ".,,01 Come Sit ' ) V.... 51 T_ V... Hol/yweo</ (rrtth R.n, J,nt Shirr() After Shakespeare •/ D<Jvld UnfOIl Shattering Glass II lIltp CII<J"'- (",,,h GIInn Brlnu. lIiM Cln'f, Wh,rI.. TiffS) Guitar Trio (1977) (Recorded Live. 5/79 NYC) II KId 5mIllI: life Wants to Live, Exce<pt from life Wants to Live, a sound inslallalion at the Kitchen ~ Decembof1983. 2) ...... _ : Rock Steady. Wofds lWld Music by 1963" _ Vocals: lJa'Ie santaniello, lJnms: Robert """ales. 31 _ _: Private PtIc8s. M excerpIlran an "'lallation lor The 5econd Coming, a show by Carnival Knowfodge at Frarldin Fumace. " TIlo _ _ II _ : Buooed, _ Qt. _Iran Jeff McGcM!m, Chris Nelson, Philip 1X"ay and llicl< Clmlp. 5) Tony Popo: water _ . (theme) Part of a series of 10 theme soogs available Iran the artist I) c._ III _ : lit1Ie Rabbit, by Kiki Strith, 7) _ _1lII : Electro-pop Iran Noo-Mud in Chicago. ')CIwlIoIb,. ._Old ..... Buver's Digitized 8Iessinq. Text lWld voice: Jerome RoIhenberg, concept peIformlrlce lWld """'9: C. MomJw, Christie Wells: Synclavier II. • 1983 0!heImedia N.Y. (ASCAP). I) _ Nojoo: Becaus8 Q1e is AIov8ys I'<>yotren. (excerpI) Text by carolyn Rlrshe Iran the book The CoIIItryis AIov8ys I'<>yotren Voice: Eileen Hawes. 10} _ _: AWA - lJIn:e. Po<cussion, synthesizer lWld _ . 11) : Flowers. (excerpl lran llepaJ1u'e). Pren'ier per10Imence at St Peter's Church with the ExperinenIat Chorus lWld Orchestra 1982. JoIvl_ SIde B Stale Make checks or rooney orders payable 10 TELLUS 143 Ludlow SI. #14 New York, NY 10002 , , EAST VILLAGE EYE MAT 198. - CHANGING SQUARES ·".ke ·pe"'..f.d d.... l.rry li.. •• • " ""II." ••d ... 'hil......, .ff/..' ..f .f lIt.i, P"..i ""nlly •• U.i.."ily Pia.. ... rl....ng Uol•• 5 Appe"nlly i. fI..di.g "f .11 • ..IIIi• • d.lla, blaze ;" lit. Si hoe 1/ .. Io....dg"ning •• lit. 9"•• d fI.... . ple,ely tit, premi •••• f 123 U.i""ity Plo g AIo' wi/h lit. ......" •••f Uol•• $q.... P." '.d lit. d·".'ili•••f lit. S. kl.i. building. f. lit. foo t, lit. ' nli.. IIti,tice. QI"h presently flo. tire flv. 100.. of Beirut dUring an .r. All .f lIti. will 'hong•• l.rry inf.....d at hi. f'''p,,,,, .f. AI 0.. Unio. $q "ffy " " " f hi• • Id '''nd. "" .. d " ..d th. Si Shoe 1/ ••• 0I1v.. ho, th•• Id Ba do p i... i. lItl. building. lite f U.Io. $quo,. pe"..wlllt 110 d.pe doo/·,, ·.." ...... d. ia w''' .. ill w"Y. 'nd' hope •• "'pe.lIte Gall." by lite FoI'" l.rry li.. I. "" .. th. 011.1.." ......ilt.. do'iding lit. fUlu...f U.I.. $q..... Thl. I roging "w'• •1... lorry'.r long hod•• 1..... 1/ I. lit f Ia",••peees, I•• Powerful·· , for,... JNJWic "'tere.t. r be "ke. "" "'''''''011•• • ~ f.,. T. ,.11 bed< lite .." ..... "'f. be .d.i..d "'" l.rry lite 'lvnnlng W.rld·. F.I" ..hilliflo. at lit••Id H'''Ing d H.". fon/ I. C',";"bu. C",," ..... , _ ""'. 01 il Iv '0' w. w b.th I· ..,.ud ;" lite A" Doe. 'how hold ;" Roll'" Cily Mooi, SUPPlied lit. W.rld·. F.I, tri.1a ••d th pt, • nd 'SUPPlied. 1937 Follow Cob.nd. beige IU6 H.d Supe, R ""'...1.. whi,h W'" pe"ud I. "'" lfteoi..... "",,,". lite 'nly ..........f " " " " belng·....h.d I. lit. MUll< H.,I. I, Woo • ..""', giggl Iv.. R.dl. Cily I.... ,1a..1< ,.. "'''ing The, .I "" 1y d • nuMho, .f 10 iii... lite, hod lit ; lite lei f ..Ing 'hi lit " f" .. .., ".. wreehrs lolly d.._ ibly 1 I ing il from 1Nt"•,. w., , H.".H. READ YOURSELF ~W ,.._... -==..........._.:-._, ..... filly 7."', U.S ..... IlId1lh...,.t U WII ....." •••••II:I f 4 Jtf It ::.....-'.11••"" _.. of _ .....•,....... IUIN'........ .."....,....... ..... "'" "" ,..CI!AI!" _ - ,•_.. of " I~ MI..... - - - JVSTMI GIIPt; AIT"'" C'IlltWfeM.,. CIRIt : GAIl 'AMTII', " weft . . . MIUIU., It ~ ........ " " " , " If( w::-:: u.::.... _. _ _'":.':'::..-c':::.~ I _ _ of "':..."':.. _f .,.,.,.,. k _t _ . . of "'"'..... ... ...... ::;... ....ti' 'n ~ I*'t fW It lit , __ .... $5.00(......... hr• • NY 10013. _ _ of... write .." f ~~ I.,. pia," "PO" " w..1d b• • 1.. ,. lito, lorry'.......i"...... lite lui.. .. Iv.. Union $quo....... Iafo, do, X_•. bu, "'" .., . let flo.UIWould ""'i.1y bring • laugh in ••, M.nhotIo. kind " ••. pro,. W. . .. .... "':"~ 0..)." ,.. - I okrt _ •. \ MAGIC GEMS m'k ;ng; , : y The M Sisters. are 'c inh erent Lyn , nd K'i:::e of jewel')' on the m: g'uite ,mu lm produ".ng, bois ,nd srones .. . b ut more ~~ ~~de~:;~r;;:nm,nd not ye;;lgs~ t;t :o~;rrors ,n~r J'k bod y costu mes .. . g I 'boons and pearls. N " n m,ndcrym n E hp;mof smoke . OWdoesn't cheap'klac For details call expenSive. . h look . I am es Wit a little boo el. . )ewe: ry c . 925-3604 Island MagiC to&loy s MAT 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 7 •"' u "A s far as the Je sse Jackson campaign , we see tWO thin gs going on . One is that the black elite that 's grouped around Jackson sees rhis as a vehicle to fun damentall y de mand a better share for themselves ... Wha t it amou n ts 10 is a few more blacks lei into the system while the majority is ground down. The other thin g that 's going on is that (he rulers need 10 generate some interest among blacks and minorities in the Do yOIl Jupport the New Afri ca electoral arena . It has rallied a Movem ent (See Eye, Sep t. '83) section of black people and not in their effort to create a a small section at th at - but sep arate black notion in the the numbers gained is not rhe point. You've gOI to look at soutbem U.S ? As far as the qu estion of a where thi s is headed . " We are not worshippers of right to a sCJ~a ra le state , we think that ifthat was the deviolence per se. but we do th ink we have to take a realistic mand of the majority of black approach as to how you are gopeople; the revolutionary governmen t would have to go ing to end thi s exploiting with thai , but we don 't feel system that sits on the backs of that now is the tim e 10 fight the people all over the world . ~ We don 't think tha t there's for only an independe nt black state - even if that' s all you any way short of revolut ionary want . But I can 't see the U.S. violence by masses of people to end us domin arion.. government giving up the " When we talk a bo u t Sourheasr 10 black people short revoluti on . we're not talking of a revolution . What we gOt about overthrowing imto do right now is unit e 10 gel perialism and puttin g our peorip of this imperialist governmem o ple in power.. W h~ t we.' rt· try Does the j esse Jackson cam10 9 to get to IS a situation where the class society is com came to town to announce that pa ign serve your cause bv uniting the disonfrancbisedi pletely done away with. 14 pan ics and organizations H OUl do you relate to A ngelo People's int erests aren't served worldwide had joined together Da/l1S and the Com m u nist Parin the electoral arena. l .don't to form the Revolurionarv Inthink people want to be dragg. ty U.S.A? ternationalist Movement ':"'- to We sec that as an outfit thai fill the vacuum they say was hasn' t been revolut ionary for lef by the dissolurion of the decades. In my initial approach Communist International in to rhem I could n't distinguish 1943 and the ' revisionism' of between them and a 10 1 of rh e Soviet Union. Represenliberal Democrats. tatives from Ceylon. Ind ia. IFhol about the tactics of the Nepal, Colombia. Tu rkey, Red Brigades of Italy ? Arc they Haiti, New Zealand and even the Dom incan Repub lic were revolutionary ? Frequently revolutionary on hand-in London. along with ' violence gets slandered as tcrthe RCP's Carl Dix. Their rorism. We'think tht· people in ded aration was to be released the Red Bri gade were fig~ting on May Day in 22 languages for revolution bur our difand distr ibuted worldwide. We ed to war but the missiles keep ferences with them don't come spo kero Dix last month . down to the use of violence, gett ing built . Peop le of GerFirst, how did you gel many registered overwhelmingbut do they have a st rategy ~ p oliticized? that will actually lead to the ly thai rhey didn ' t wan t U.S. Growing up black in America missiles there, but the missiles' ,. overt hrow of imperialism? We and being dra fted and thrown are there. People here never ' th ink no t . because it fails to into the Vietnam War. It was base itself on raising the condecided lhey wanted to send at that point that I decided I the missiles there! Anoth er step sciousness of large numb ers of had to fight aga inst what towards World War III. people and unleashing them in . America is doing in the world , struggle at the proper lime and the proper situation Are the Sandmistas revolu · tiona')'? They lead a genuine national liberation struggle' and threw out the puppet of V,S. imperialism. We don't th ink the conlinued on 64 (hat their probat ion reports. which revealed extensive FBI surveillance of their personal lives, wou ld refure anv suspected " d andest in'c contacts. ' . In her opening sta te me n t. in Brooklyn Federal Cou rt , Shelly Miller of the New Movement in Solidarity with Puerto Rican Independence and Socialism angered the prosecution when she said, " O n behalf of our movement we send our greetings to the FALN wherever they might be. " Charles Rose. Assistant U.S." Attorney, leapt to his feet and sneered , " We'd like to greet them in court with long prison sentences. ' , -c-Spencer Rumsey ~ f LL-"",:,::,- --::--.---l Carl Dix ,• MAY DAY MAN By SPENCER RUMSEY ad Oil' is a nice guy with a hard line . The 3')·ycar· old Oil' first (arne to national an enlion as one of the Port Lewis S'ixG. I. 's who refused to go to Viet na m in 1970 - and was sentenced 10 t WO years at Leaven - worth f ed eral Pen itemia rv. Th ere he served 1'6 month s in solitary confinem ent after being cou vicred of "co nspiracy to over throw the legitimate aut hority of the stockade . " Toda y O ix is the an icutare spokesman for the Revolutionary Commu nist Pany . the small group of radicals best known by their allegiance 10 Chairman Mao. his widow, and the Cultural Revolution that rocked Chi na in the '60s. Unde r the guidance of Chairman Bob Avakian, who was hounded OUl of th e coun try aft er the government accused him of plotting to take over the W hitt, House in 1079 (the charges were later drop ped) , this communist parry finds fault with the Soviet Union (' 'Socialism in word, imperialism in deed ." said Dix ) and the People's Rep ublic of China ("Ca pitalist read ers") and . of course, they have unk ind things 10 say abo ut the U.S, government - not to • mention th e U,S. police with whom they've banl ed at countle ss demonstrations over the years, Dismissed by some as a splinter group: the RCP publishes the Rellolutionory Worker. and here in New York runs the Revolution Books StOH: at 138 W. 10th . But something happened with the RCP in London recentl y that you didn' t read about in th e New York Tim es. Dix was in New York to spread the word about ir in time for May Day (His favorite holiday, he says, " I'll be celebrating it in app ropriate revolut ionary tradition !" ) Dix • EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 "1 decided I had to f'!lht agGinst what America is doing to the world." THREE YEARS FOR CONTEMPT rand jury resistors Sylvia Baraldini and Shelly Miller were both sentenced 10 th ree years in jail for "criminal comcm pr ' -c- refusing to answer questions on their alleged conracrs with the Puerto Rican indepen den ce r no vcrn cnt FALN. hot'. :'The Trouble With Harry"? A real estate operatto in one act presented acro•• 'N)m ttle Helmsley Polace Hotel by the Solon Bon Ton troupe lost April 21st, under the guiclance of former Eye art editor Eric Darton, A hundred people witnesses fbe 20-mirH,lte performance lambasting Harry as the greedy~ speculator supreme with such classic numbers os " Don't Cry For Me , Loisoida" and " My Leona ." The piece - which got 0 good review in The Times - will be repeated ot 88.(. on May 2nd (11 p_m.) and at a 2 p.m. demonstration May 6th in support of the harassed tenant. of Helmsley's Porit West Village who are fighting condo conversion. (Set' Eye, Feb . '84). Sylvia will now serve 43 years-t hanks \0 her previous ao.vcar scrHCIlC(' for her involvement in rluBrinks Case (Sec Eye. Sept. ' 83), Both wo men deny an ~( direct links wirh th e underground group which tht" govcrnmvm holds responsible for a series of bomb <mac ks. The women say NO PARKING eople will han to stop VI ing the park for DImost 0 ' ....1.. ' Idalmed LHftOIW Cekteron of the Lower lost Side Joilrt Planning ("neil (IPC) ....., Mayor Kudo' . " piau to 'opatId .pwordo of , U ..HIla. 'a ...... 'a.pld", Squcft Perk . hidt pa,sed till, co....Jlity boonI 20 to I .. April 2~" , G,..nd hoi ahaady """ ..........1Ido..... end trees choppH doWn for the $1 milfiott onmaul of URion Squore which won't be .,.. to the pullIi, ........, ... and of ' 1985. Davie! Piafu, '" ordritect. would do the H M to T."ifts Sq..re Itvt its trees won't cOIle tumbling !loW" until the eM of the nut year Itt ttl, earlielt. The vote Iplit the JPC' I .... mbers who on the board. Some, CaW.ron said• • ont.d to lpend ttl. money on lpot repoirs, upkee, .116 s,aui" rattMr than tearing ttl, pork apart a II Union Sq. ... . But ttl. pod.., pas.d thcmk' to the persuasive lecture by _rdmak, Jade'lynn" who worb .. aiele to Conti Bellamy, City Co,uldl president. I.,. ,' RICH ARTISTS ONLY ByJEFF GOlTESFELD BULLm 'N' BRIE " yJEFF GOlTESFELD race yourself bu t city businessma n Lewis Imperaro wants to ope n a "gun boutique" in Tribeca this Au gu st. It could become Ih e p lace in to wn to p ick u p th e latest in fashionable • firearms like a C ucci gn:. nade-lau ncher. pe rhaps. o r bu y brie a nd bu llers. Im pe rato . who o wns a nd operates t he Joh n j ovino gu n sho p an d warehouse downt own on Center Street. has filed his applicauon with the City Plan ning Co m m issio n 10 o pen a retail SIOr t in the: warehouse: he own s at 4 16·424 W ashington Street . In th e baseme nt he intends 10 SCI up a pistol rang e . "We 've alread y got a lax a bateme nt for the property. ' Im perato told the Eye. " but I'm no t sure abou t City Plan ning. " Im pe rato is a m illion dolla r-p lus professional ar ms de aler whocoums private gu ard services. po lice depa rt mem s. correct iona l insrin nions and even foreign cou nt ries among his diems. He has 4 2 employee s dow nt own but hopes to add 30 with his planned move to Tribeca. Howeve r. h is proposal has come u nder fire from Co m mun it y Board No . 1 wh ich recom me nded to t he comm ission that it be denied because it vio lates t he present zon ing . " It 's zoned 10 protect large man ufactu ring bu ild ings: ' said Paul Goldstei n . CB# I di str ict manager. " and he want s ground floor retail space !" " W hat he really warns 10 -do." said Ca role DeSa ram . vice-chai r of CB# I . " is use • three of t he five floo rs at rhe wareh ou se for back-offi ce op eratio ns where he can cha rge office-space rent . Th is bui ldi ng has been bought and sold seve ral times ove r t he past few years . O ur records indica te that Im pe rato bo ug ht it in Decem be r 198 I wit h $645,000 of the pri ce loa ne d to h im . Edwa rd Katz of th e Katz parking empire h as a com pany t hat made t he Joan ." . Imperato scoffed at these he plan 10 sell rwo cityowned bu ildi ng s for one do llar each and have t he m eve nt ua lly convert ed 10 "artists hou sing " (see Eye March 1 9~4) was tejer ted by Com mu nity Board #3 at irs Mard i 27th meet ing . T he con version plan was opposed by several com mun it y groups an d art ists' collectives . all o f who m were re present ed at the Lower East Side meet ing which was m ended by a crowd of ' nearly 100 people. In effect the CB#3 reco mmend arion -c-rhe decision of its hou sing comm itconcerns. " W hat we' ve gOI tee -k ills the plan . he re is two or three people who Oppositio n 10 t he plan was live t he re . .. who think we're tr iggered by certain de facto reo destroying thei r litt le haven . I q uiremems of the prog ram . To th ink they' re t rying 10 create a purch ase th e a bandoned buildzon ing pro blem . " he said . ings. located on Ludlow and The Plann ing Com mission East 11th streets. purchasers were req uired to have " good will ru le o n t he gu n sto re application some t ime during the . cred it. " and offe r assurances of next several wee ks. private fu nding for rehab bing t he buildin gs which could cost $70.000 a u nit . T he Lower East Sid e Joi nt Plann ing Co u ncil, wh ich lo bbied against t he p lan. said t ha t the city p rerequ isites mea nt th at " pract ically no Lower East Side family o r arrisr will qu alify: t'nt')' can' t afford it. and won' t be able to get a loan . This is an other at temp t by Koch to sel l o ur valua ble housing stock 10 specula tors and high incom e peopl e from outside ou r commu nity." Spea ker afte r speaker echoe d rhat posit ion . suggest ing rhar th e real goa l of th e art ists' hou sing plan was to d ivide the Loisaida com munity by pitt ing affluen t art ists agai nst residents. T he primary p roblem with the p lan . said ph otographer Brian Rose. was rhar it did not offer a com prehensive art ists' ho using alterna t ive. " There art" plenty of art ists who can afford th e 170 .000 need ed to ren ovate eac h un it. " he said. FREE SPIRIT GONE ByJOSH GOSCI AK incem Titus. a ra-vear-old East Village poet. a volu ntee r in t he Abraha m Lincoln Brigade du ring t he Spanish C ivil W ar . and one of the first cont ributo rs to The East VzJlage Other. d ied sud denly o n March 16 at Second Ave . and SI. Mar ks. He was hit and kill. ed by an MTA city bus. T itu s. who was in and OU t of the early East Vi llage scene in rhe'sixnes-c- involved with such grou ps as Th e C razies and .sOS- was best known as the lover of j ean Harlow and roommate of C ha rlie Parker . At a memorial service for h im at Wash ing t6n Sq ua re: C hurch on Ap ril I he was eulogi zed as a frce spirir. the last "of a dyi ng b reed , a man of old \V ASP stock who chuc ked it al l for a life of a bando n and poetry. Coca Crystal. a prod ucer of a N.Y. cab le talk sho w and in t im ate of Titus", recalls her first m eet in g with him . " I was wo rk ing ar EVO in 1969 ." she recalls. "a nd he' d do occasional poe ms for t he Other. II was one of his last sto ps and .. he' s spend hou rs and hou rs. He was 60 somet hing and had ca ncer and leu kemia. •We even d id a major biograph)' because we thoug h t he'd d ie then . He was very fun ny and when he' d come to an EVa meeting he'd do a willin mass and read some poems. He had Ihe corr~CI line on any given th in g and was an expe re on sniffing out po lice - altho ug h he was occasiona lly wrong ." Titu ~ was o n his way 10 gi ve his wife some money- his last five bucks in fact whe n a bus swung around and clipped him. It was an anticlimax to a long and illustr ious career which began in T itu sville (a [OWn his fami ly found ed whe n rhey struck o il - t he first well in Am cri<;a), o n to ba uling Prance-in Spa in. study ing theology ar Harvard . becoming a Franciscan monk and a Hollywood scriptwrite r. H is career ende d in 1946 when his family, t hinking him a litt le tOO eccent ric committed hi m to Rockland Sta te Institution . T itu s was soon released an d he fou nd ed Fountainh ou se. a right s organ izat ion for mental parierus. Throughou t h is last da ys Titus cont inued to write and be active. As Coca observes, " The last t ime I saw Vince was on Feb ruary n nd o n m y show. He never m issed a show except whe n he had a heart attack O! burned his beard. He always opened t he show- he eit he r read his poems. d id j:all or .. dan ced , " · 0 In faCi . the pe ripatetic ",. free sp irit mi gh t st ill be da ncing somewhe re out there on the s:alt flats of Nevada . H is laSt requesr was for h is fi shes 10 be sca tlc r~d bclween Win ne mucca an d Lovelock . And . as evc:ryom' knows. in W innemucca you could da nce up a sto rm . B BANK BOOKS OUT .. - ,.tt-y only in it for the _y1 It's I Mft Mt tt.t COIH Mey l ' th M••uf.ttwert: ., Ynst wiI dose fh ~ ~ ft 3111 _wing thou of lowI, Eat $Wen witItout I . . . _ bl . " It • • Id IMl disa.trou. for tIM community," IOid Father Jodt IKen· Nngton of the Holy R•••1ftIt Churd! on fast 3111, Jineetit'. the ony banIt IMltw"n 14th and Deloneey ... t of 2ndl, . ...... h en a . .tint with City C..ftCilm• •, MirilnIt Fn.ct' " In Febtvary IalIH to dis...... _ Manny-H_ puIiog . "' hey ••,. doIItn·nd·celth ,..,a.," ...._ FetMr I · toll, no IIso tIM low" Eat SitII c.thoIc l rM COIIftftfICI• ''l1Ioy ....., , - ., .., of _ ..._ :. dted l ion of $1",000 in 1913 ... . PROJECTED lou of $300.000 for 19&4. FatNr 1•• ••tOll otWecI filet M.Nty....., is to do.. .... 1tIter ~. -"st " " poorer MighhrtaOIlQ lit. . . l ..... loot lWo. " It'• ..,.,.... tt.t thy WIMl do.... now," ... tM prilst, referring to ttlo ...... .., ,.. '')vot .hoA tIoings . . looking .....: . H. IOid tIIIt . . CatftoIc l rdtdioc..e, . hidt repreltrrts 22 city churdIe., is " COftCilt'lMd and ..ary upset" about tftI bcn*'. pIoM, their interest covld ,.p', '""" no. -. _ ,_My odd up on the bottom line '*"••MlNlny·Hanny'. their bonkl - Spence, Rum•• y • MAT 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 9 ."HE DOESN'T THE'PIMPS LIVE HERE ANYMORE" OF WAR ByJEFF GOTIESFELD By JO SEPH NECH VATA L n Eye investigation has revealed rhat Manh attan Borough President Andrew Stei n's lat est appo intee 10 Co mm u- nity Board #3 listed a Lower East Side , add ress on h is a pplicatio n to the Community Board Io,GtNCV ll~ DiSTRICT se,RVlCE CABINET which he on ly uses ""a" infrequently and in fact neither lives, nor work s in the .d isrrict. A co mmo nly acce pted prerequisite is thai th e ap po intee must eit he r hai l from or have a bu siness in t he district which he or she re present s. Carm ine Musumeci. a 29yea r-old attorne y. practices law in a mid town Man ha tt an office and lives with his wife in Queens. He was appointed . d Yov r Commvl'uty to by the l eo gl)e a i,! Eye. Musumeci ad mi tted t hat he lives in Q ueens and th at th e 35 Montgom ery address is his parents' . " But I st ill receive mail there and am registered to vote there;" he stressed in a te lepho ne interview. Musumeci has no present ties 10 th e Loisaida comrnuniry save for serving on the Par ish Council of 51. Mary's Chu rch on G rand 51. He does. however . come from-a politically wel lconnected fam ily. According 10 Rich ard Ropiak. curre nt cha irperson of th e Co mm un ity Board , Musumeci' s fath er is a to Mi ke Rosano. a press aid e to rhe Manha.ran Borough Preside-Ill . Musumeci ind icated on his applicati on t hat he maintai ns an add ress at 35 Mont gom er y 51., within the CB#J disi ri.. W~ en q ue st ioned by tbe THE LOWER EA~T SIDE BUSINESS f AND PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION. r in conjunction with ~ - THE EAST VIllAGE EYE ' .• announce the jim monthly , "GIMME" AWA~D FOR LANDLORD " GREED AND COMMUNITY DISREGARD • • Prc,fenJed thi.s mo"th ' v /6:. -, > , MR. SIDNEY WEISNER For t>s.hibiting cp~plete lack ofconcer» fo~ hIS commerdol te114nts aT,,1f or,the l Lower £tSI 5"It, Commuttity . . ,'M IIE .... ~;/~ .,t·. .! -: .....( .1.. '\I'. I , y rhe Lower East Side board on March l Sth , according ~ d" Boo' do led h om "VOl) ,0" Grophk 0 P f w o me n vo,ef~, ~ . ' . .1i '\< ., _ ., < forme r member of t he Co m rnun ity Board. ~ Ste in spo kesperson Rosano said th at accord ing to th e City C harter, there is a litt le-known cat ch-a ll exceptio n wh ich allows ap pointments of non resident s 10 a Community Board , who have "osber sigmf icant interest in rh e com munity" (emphasis added ). Rosano says th at Musum eci' s in volvement with t he parish qualifies h im for mem bership . " He is th e excep tion 10 the rule," Rosan o said. " No o ne else 10 my know ledge has been appointed to CB#3 du ring t he past len years who has nOI been a resident o r hasn't a business in th e d istrict ," said CB#3 cha irpersonRopiak . He also said th at Musumeci had not brou ght h is out sider stat us 10 th e att ent ion of the boa rd . Since Musumeci listed his Loisaida " ad dress " on his.applicarion to the borough presiden t , th ere wou ld have been no way, apart f qJm a special investigat ion , of de te rmining th at he ind eed reprcseme d serio us d eviati on from ot he r appointments. " I grew u p on t he: Lower ' East Side," said Musumeci defen sively. " I was appointed to .se:rve part icu lar in terests. There's inadeq uat e represen tsno n o n the boa rd by members of the middle-class. T he re's no non -j ews." Musumec i said. 'W hen asked wheth er he: had informed CB#j chairperson Ropiak of his t rue address. Musumeci replied that he hadn't even me t him yet . " But at the t ime of m y application I was st ill living on Montgomery Srreer." Ropiak said he 's fearful that' Com mu nity Boards wou ld become: a launching pad for th e poli tica llycon nected and t he po lit ically ambitiou s. "We don 't want a board based on 45 people not living in th e com mun ity," Rop iak to ld th e Eye. " O ne: o r tWO mig ht n.ot cont am inate the board , but I'm conce rne d if it becomes more of a problem. " Wi th the possibiliti es for su bte rfug e so appa rent in rhe Ci ty Ch art er' s "catch-all" provision, and wirh so littl e: invesrigario n of a ppointee s by t he bo rough president , Ropiak's night mare cou ld beco me cold fact . and the Lower East Side's commu nity boa rd another cog in t he pohucal machi ne . 10 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 . onald Reagar. will in four years have hi ked the Pentagon budget from S 178 .4 b illion in 1981 to man . a srrrali. single-warhead $30 5 bi llion in IC BM that may follow the 1985, an increase of de ployme nt of t he MX , moves 71%or $ 127 forward . Co ng ress accepted th e: billion . And if he is - MX last year as a " Bridg e" reelected in 1984 toward a world of sing le• warh ead m issiles. and his futu re budget p lan s are "BI bomber : fiscal 198 5 re-realiz ed . he will inq ue st for $8 .2 bi llion . The crease t he Pentagon 8- 1 is the ,single largest bud get another wea po ns pro gram in the: ' 85 79% to S446 .1 budget , with most of t he bill ion in fiscal mon ey go ing for 34 brand new 1989 . bo m be rs, At th e cost of $227 Th e: -t -ycar m illion pe r bo m be ro rhe BI is figures are even th e most expensive of all l im e. more imp ressive when com' Star Wars: fiscal 1985 req uest pa red to th e fate of othe r for $ 1.8 billion . The Pentagon federal pro gram s. D uring th is has lum pe d a number of tim e, energy conse rvat ion funballistic m issile defense prodi ng wil l. declin e by 44%, grams toget her under the label pollution cont rol by 19 % . 01 Strategic Defen se In itiatives. training and emp loymenr by T hese p rogram s const itu te a 47%, and ge neral revenue d irect violat ion of'rhe 19 72 sharing by 11% . Spe nd ing for Ami-Ballistic Missile T reat y. eleme n tary . secondary and 'Trident II Missile: fiscal 1985 vocat iona l p rog ram s will inrequest for $2.3 bi llion . T he crease by on ly 1% over 4 years, T rident II sub marine-la unched ballistic missile shows a great jump from last year' s $1.5 b illion as it moves int o prod ucl io n . Th is missile is-designed 10 ad d a first -mike capaci ty to our ' sea-based forces for the first I lime. food an d nu tr it ional spendi ng will.rise by 5% and incom e for vets w~ 1I increase by 17 % . The Reagan budget for t he next 5 years req uests a total of S1.9 ·Triliion . (198')· 1989) . Every American fa m ily wou ld be taxed on the average of $30 ,P9~ to go to t he Pentagon over t he next 5 years . . New weapons procurement or p rod uct ion totaled $47.8 billio n in fiscal 1981. For t he: 1985 fiscal year , th e Pentagon has set t he procu rement tota l at S107.6 bi llion, ' an increase of 125% .. After adjust ing the: budget for in flatio n , next . year' s ou tlay tot al will sur pass the rota l ou tlay for t he peak spe ndi ng years of bo t h th e Viemain and Ko rean wars. Here: arc: some of the ' highli ghts in this yea r' s budget : 'MX missile: fiscal 1985 reo qu est for $5 billion . The: Admin ist rati on is requesting anothe r-large chu nk of funding for th ?: MX, perha ps the most cont roversial weap on in the budget : $3. 2 bill ion is slated for the pro d uct ion o f 40 additional m issiles. Co ng ress approved the first bat ch of 2 \ missiles last year. ' Small IC BM (Midg crman): fiscal 1985 request fo r $465 m illion . Research into mid get- ' Nerve G as: fiscal 1985 request for SlO 5 million . Th e Ad ministrat ion has been d efeated over rhc last 2 years in us- attem p t to 'end '3 14 year moratorium on th e producti on of dead ly nerv e gas . Th is year. th ey arc tr ying to esta blish a production line and begi n to m ake: compo ne nts for th e next ge ne rat ion of nerve gas weap on s. ' Toma ha wk cru ise missiles: fiscal 1985 request for $670.5 mill ion . Th ese small, 20 foot sea-lau nched cru ise missiles can be lau nched from a variety of vehicl es. "Pershing II missiles : fiscal 198') request for $472 mill ion . Prod uct ion of the Pershing 1I ma rches forward even as t he: flap ove r its d eploym ent in Europe cont inues and th e Soviets make advanced cou ntermoves . It was t he ini t ial Persh ing an d grou nd- launch cru ise m issiles de ployed last Dece mber that led the Soviets to walk out fro m both t he strategic and the: intermediate:' nuclear weapons . So t hose are th e fans . Have a n ice' day. I I' I I I J ..... , ~ mai\ana presents.., .. • :Y£NU£ 8 'STH£ PLA TO 8£~ --- ;-:: ., ::::::::::=:=::~ . . . -~ /j- " -~ ~~-~EYE~"': lJJ I !!--~"~~_~--~'_"- ---1 I' Reading j eff Ge nes~/Now feld's and Spencer Rum sey 's cover sto ry on the latest Alphab et City police smackdown"Operation Pressur e II Poi:;;," is it now?-I peered ( 0 be bored and disgusted. Here are the city and state and fed eral narcs. linking up again [0 tell the same lies [ 0 inquisirive jou rnalists as they were te lling 20 years ago . I was writing exactly the same heroin-sweep lawsy-c- and the on ly horror sto ries in the Sixgood it ever did was to sicken and depress bleedties, fu lly believing the tripe the cops and politiing-bean liberal types cos were feeding us, and like me . But at least I believ ing it was new. could think . back in the Sixties: •'Well. when our And here it come s around again in 1984, generadon gets in there , we will ord er th ings prothe sam e lousy record in the same o ld juke: box, perly, and do some good, right ? and not be so fuckin g . But you r people: broke mean and stupid and out of that , by getting a racist and everything ." G iu liani assuredly has 20-ye:ar perspective out of Ed Sanders and Allen some H igher Purpose in Gins berg and th e neighconduct ing thi s sord id borhood people . Th ere " O peratio n Pressure really has been an effort Point " ent erp rise: like , under foot since th e Sixbam boo zle th e public with a lot of u ltra-tou gh ties to mu rder th e com . ant id rug drama , and ge t munitie s of th e Lower E3St Side ; concent rate on h imself elected Gove rno r, th e junk traffic rhere , when maybe he can sta n dri ve OUt the middleclass doing some th ing real. and even the poor, enAnd hell , by that time the developers ough t to courage th e area to rot into uninhabitable: havoc, have turned Alphabet City into a br ight 'new and then sell it off dincheap to real-estate devel- high-rise Valhalla for reo opers. And the on ly reo specta bly-em ployed leasedeem ing effect of thi s hold ers. That will mak e latest fly-by-night it easier: I su ppose . to "Operation Pressure: forget t his current Point " smackdown will episod e of ugliness. be to get Rud y G iu lian i's Again, thanks for a name ali over th e pap ers great dope article . and television . so th at Dean Latimer we'H all rem ember it High T imes when we go to vote: for Govern or a few years To th e Editor: hence. Wow. like. I got th e And now he' s got fedApril issue of th e East eral narcs OUt bustin g nickel-ba g vendors in AI- V,IIage Eye, righ t . and th ere was thi s ad in t here pb ab et City, and federal for a record called Basket prosecu tors send ing up Case by t h is band called th ose poor sorrowfu l Bab y Boom , righ t . and I jun kies for 15 to life in said to myself. wow. Danbury , just because: what a gross picture . like, they had t he bad luck to t his like de ad baby splatfall afou l of Operat ion over t he pavetered Pressure Point . Exactly ment and stu ff. Th is that sorr of th ing was gomu st be like some cu rtaing on 20 years ago rem ember th e Rockefe ller geous band , right . so I UC".u he's got federal narls out busting nickel.bag end ex- . ors. . . ' all went dow n to Tower k ecords and I said wow, wbere's that record by ' that group Baby Boom , you know. it ' s nam ed after my favorite movie, ' B" ,ket Case, right . about this guy that carries his deformed brother around in rhis. like , big hamper. you know , and like all these freaky peop le get cut up and all. It' s a really wild flick. right. All mx friends got like: totally grossed out by it but I. like. rea lly dug it.'. you know . All those people getting blooded out and making all these like strangling noises and alt." It was real ly neat and th e lad y veterin arian. when sh e gets all th ese knives :in her face, it's like: so totally great because she like you know, rea lly deserved it . And you know , so [ bought th e record. and on my way home , like , I was remembering my favorite scene in the movie where this, like, motorcycle lady gets thrown out of thi s che ezy hotel by th e man ager and when r get t he record hom e, I like put in on and it ' s like really out rageous and like 1 said to myself, wow , I want to be JUSt like j.D. Rage, you know, and like I to ld m y mom I wanna be JUSt like J .D . Rage: and she: liked screame d and broke a plate over m y head but like th at was nothing , my old man brok e both my legs and like rock 'my record pla yer and th rew it ou t the window but like I .don't care. I'm still glad I bough t it. - Tommy Teenage r , Saturday and Sunday May i9th and . (Ra in Da le M~y 26/27th ) . 20t~ ~ 3 pm at Tompkins Square, Avenue A and Eight Street.' • Two days of music; performance; dance and • 'Soundings' a special magazine for this weekend ~-_:...-- ALL FREE! SATURDAY, MAY 19 lON . HASSELL ~SO LO) ·,h IUCH",RD . . w..iENDERSON THE ORTHOTONICS COLLIN ... WOLCOTT and FAREL lOHNSON .. .. - for info 4'75-4395 MAY 1914 EAST Vil LAGE EYE 11 , JT'$ ALL LIES A Mixed·Up Med ia Co lumn By TUU KUPf ERBERG . LOST LEADERS nee agai n th e bem used and be nigh ted d en j z el~ ~ of these Disuni ted States app roach th e quadrennial vOJ:ing fren zy. of the Pres ide: nt ial ~reCli ons >. _ Think of it as Con st itutiona l D ictatorship Wit h a choice (?) of D ictator every ~ years. (W hy not I year ? And why not . in t his age of electronic marvels. at least have d irect electron ic vot ing of till the citizens on eve:ry piece of ma jor legislations) . Once u person is put in churge ofa community . be he Ihe most uonbless, he is regarded as the mightiest of the mighly. . THE SPORTSTER By GLENN O 'BRIEN The good news is th at t he Mers look great with all t hose watched Ja ck Morris o f kids in th e lineu p . Su re it 's the Tigers p itch h is noApril. but what was th e last hitter on nati on al TV. It time t hey were in first place on was very exciting past t he IRS day ? sixt h in ning and Detro it T he bad news is th at they' re looks like th e team to go ing to pu t in Astroturf in beat in t he AL East. I order to improve Shea also like the runnin g In- Stadi um . If th is ha ppens it d ian s, th e o nly team with me an s tha t in t he N ationa l five leadoff men in th ei r League the game of baseba ll lineup. will he played on grass only in Speaking of no-h ill ers. C hicago . San Diego , Los th e best spo rts story in rc- An geles and Atlanta . I wonder cen t weeks was t he if Rogers Hornsby wou ld have revelation by fo rme r played ball in St . Louis if he Yan kee Dock Ellis that h ad known th at one day t hey'd he pitched his no hitter be playing it on p last ic. Rogers for the Pirates in 1970 on Hornsby didn ' t eve n know LSD. 11 seems that he wh at plastic was and in 1922 h ad d ropp ed some hou rs he had 250 hits. Baseba ll not before th e game , not realizin g pinball. th at he was schedu led to pitch. Accor ding to Bill j am es in Although he allowed no hits in 1983 the Mets were 54-60 o n the game . he did walk batters grass, bu t 14· 34 on astrot urf. and hit th em with p itches. Did you know that , Ed Koch ? loading th e bases a few rimes. Mooki e W ilson hi t 57 average Ellis also revealed t hat o nce in points lower on plastic last 1974 he intentionall y beaned year, George Foster hit . 168 on the first th ree batt ers he faced it. Mike Torrez had a 3.93 ERA to show hi s fellow Pirate piton grass, 5.28 o n green p lastic. che rs th at t he Ci ncinna ti Red s So JUSt when you th ou ght it were hu man . He clobbered was safe to go back into Shea Pete Rose . j oe Morgan and Dan Dreissen in order and I think t hings are go ing to tri ed to hit th e clean up hi tt er . be okay with t he Yankees. who ma naged to dodge th e Love t hat Yogi . Ge t a copy of th rows. before hi s m anager Roy Blount's article on him in removed him from th e game . a recent SporlI IlIuIlraledHe said tha t if he hadn ' t been removed he wou ld have kept on throwin g at them . Ellis was h igh on "pep pills" at t he tim e. ' C razed , yes- but ma ybe effecrive. Teammate Dave Parker said . " H is purpose was fu lfilled . We went on to win t he Na tional League East . . . Dock won 12 gam es for us." When I was a kid I used to be scared just watchi ng Ryne Du ren come in to pitch relief. He had like a 95 mi le an hour • fastball and glasses as thi ck as th e bottom of a 70z Coke bottle. Sometimes he 's m ike guys out on th ree pitches: somet imes h e'd bean the he ll OUt of ' em or t hrow t he ball way over th e catcher' s head . It too k a brave man to bat aga inst Ryne Duren , or catch h im , o r ump hi m . r JUSt th ou ght it was th at speed com b ined wit h those glasses. W ho ' d have guessed thar h e was act ually roa ring drun k? Maybe the hinerskn ew. bu t what a way to get on base. Tha t. as N ixon wou ld say, is playing hardball. _ Doc k Ellis is now a d rug cou nselor. He pitched his nohitter for the pirates in 1970 on LSD. 12 EAST Vil LAGE EYE MAY 1914 , Talmud : Rosh Hashan a. 25b Don ', f ollow equestrians tracing souard the monolith) WIJlch out f or the pedestrians, (avoiding fecolithI). it 'll make you r d ay- even if you are more inte rested in phi losophy t han in baseball . Plus with Clyd e King tak ing over as General Man ager I thi n k th at Steinbrenne r will bun ou t more th an has been h is pat tern. And th ere are plent y of posit ive signs. Oscar Gam ble is back and the Yanks have: got him . I' d love to see him ge l some real D H d uty. Baylor lead the league vs. lefties last year and Oscar co uld do the same vs. righ ries. if no t in average: in sluggi ng and on base pe rcen tage. You 've: got to love Ph il Niekro . t he: oldest guy in baseball at 45, t hrowing th at weird spi nless p itch with great effectiveness. Righett i and Rijo are working like: a charm in th e bu llpen . I'm not going to m iss Nett les. T ob y Harrah has been o ne of m y favorite players for a long time . He 's sma f!: and has aged well: he m igh t not make those spectacu lar-looking Nettles di ves at third , but be'H h it a Jot better and be just as effective: in th e field , if not more so, and run berrer and not b itch . Th e on ly guys I'm really missing are Cam pane ris and Mumphrey. I' m st ill pu zzled by th e casting ofOmar Moreno as leadoff man-centerfi eld er. but Yogi ma y know how to use him effectively. I'm no t missing Andre Robertson . now workin g on h is arm at Co lu mbus. Robertson is certainl y a fine sho rtstop and he: hit okay last year, but you know I like T im Fol i. He' s no flash wirh glove: or bat but he seems co be a win ner who makes things happen . I li ke th is Keit h Sm ith kid 100 . Th ey say he 's all field and no hit. I' ll tel l you . I'd rather have an all-field no-hit shortstop tha n an all-field noh it centerfield er. Cou ld Keith Sm ith possibly be worse at the p late t han O ma r Moreno ? No. But you know, I' ll tell you a secret : Sma lley isn 't t hai ba d a sho rtsto p .-(As of this writ ing he's leadi ng th e: league in huting roo .} If I was ru nning·t he Yankees. an d str ange r th ings ha ve happen ed . I' d put Hur rah at th ird , Smalle y at short , Ran·:"'" dolph at second , Man inglef 'a1 . firsr. outfield of Griffey, W in field and Kem p - st ick Lou and Oscar OUt t here a few l imes a week for a wh ile: and lei Ceron e play once a week . Moren o ? Long relief man . T rust me. .~ "-" J ob, Billin " t am nOI a labor leader. I don ', wont YON /0 follow me or . anyone else. If you are 100Ring for a MoseI to lead you oul oftbe caplialiIt wildem cS! YOll wi/I Slay righl ~here you are. I would not lead you i1110 tbis promise.d land If I could. be ~ cause if I could lead you in, someone else could lead you 0111. Eugene V. Debs , Thou seeeest foiknoers. Then seek ciphers. Nietzsche, TWllighl oftbe Gods Yes. th e average: American 's political life consists of going into a polling boo t h for 2 minu tes on ce every 4 years. pull jng a cold m.erallever for " .Ieade rs" ~mrone else has chosen for him or her. com ing OUI with a Bengav-glow of having do ne some t hing important , and th en f? rgertlng about effecting poli tics at all for an oth er hopping 1461 da ys. , That' s the way " t he system " works. ·It is abdication (not even " delega tion" ) of powers. " Leave: it to th e: lead er. " He knows. Kn ows what ? How 10 Reep the Ihit in place. > . All the current Presidential candidates speak of th eir " leadership capabilit ies." W ha t is (or shou ld be) the place cfvThe Leader" (Der Fuhrer?) in h isto ry? " The- Hero in H istory." (Hero incident all y is d erived from t he same rocr as Eros) . W ould th e Russian Revolution have: been different (or been at all) without the Ge rmanspo nsored Lenin Express from Switzerland rc St. Petersburg? Has everything grown too large. too com plex, tOO lost for uny of us (espec ially t he President) [0 co~trol his-or .her o",n destiny - let alone th e fate of huge nauons of an IO~ cred ib ly in terlinked earth of nearly 5 billi on hu mans? (Don ' r look at th e boo t m of this colum n, for the answer is no t rhere .) .'. , " . Reflect on how easy it IS to ha nd your free wdl af\d actron to someo"&. eire- (Or God j -c-to a Maximum Leader who h ~ all th e an swers. Conside r th e awesome power of The Presiden't. He has become like Sh iva, th e. G reat Destroyer Qf Worlds. And consider whether yo u want th at pqwer in an)'.: J d iot's hands, As Devo sa ys:~ ,. Aft' We Not: Id iots ? ' ~ , , For-President vote " No " ? For Governor vote: "No"? For Mayor vote " No" ? ;,,;; ' . , ~, ~ We have to flnd 'some ~ay to devolure the power J>a~k down "again to th e com mo n folk:That!s wh~t;.th(: RUSSians were trying 'to d o in 191 with th eir Soviets (Co un cils) of Work etS; Peasants. Sold iers and Students. Somehow th ~ never mad e it - for very lon g anyway. " . More's the pity . r • • • 41, • • (lO<n'M!'IOIl 'flip un, UIllImI <l'WI u.Illl, .......... l",-n --.. .. . , . . " . . . _ ·. _ ,--" _ U . IlKftUl ( OM'71Olt _ _ .'toM" .._ ...,.IU. _ _ ....."I .... S ... ito ·. . . . . - WIllIlO'tlWfw"" IU s-_ _ ... ~ . . .. _. OPEN EYE By CRAIG BROMBERG Noose-paper Time ? or sup poses th at with the de mise of th e Su/w Weekly News th ere wcrc ' JUSt too many hungry ex- staffers in {Own 10 leave well enough alone . • Two years ago . some folks tried to start a free weekly called Me/ro. The project failed -the publishers seemed to thi nk starting a newspap er was sim ply a matter of moving numbers aro und - bU I as almost everyone knows (or a least th inks the y know) the city seems ripe for a free weekly. After all. goes the argument. Los Angeles, Ch icago . an d several ot her big cities have free ahe marive papers. Why not New York? At nearly th e same time as the Metro fiasco was raking place (over a period of a year and a half) two cx-Soho sraf- fers. ed itor David Hcrshkovirz and writer Laura Cotti ngham . were working to revive what am ou nted to a virtual copy cat version of the Sobo Weekly News. That project also failed but Hershkovnz and Cottingham kept plugging away and ironically, not 100 long ago. they were d rafted by Harris Publications (which published Block.treu and other celebrity magazines) to start you guessed it - a free weekly with an uptown slam : New York Talk. Hersbkovitz never made it 10 the starting gate. Replaced (unceremonio usly, we understand) by Nee Go ldwasser and then by current ed itor Bill Poeaik, Hershkovirz now freelances for several publications and is said to be planning a mon thly. Cou ingham rem ains as listings ed itor. an important job on a free weekly. The only other new entry in _"")4 .. _---....I., lt" _ .... ......, .......... II .J. ~_ to.., -..- .., ... lMo~ ~ _prt ....... . """""'" ten t graphics at any rate . Now if only VF ran more interviews with Michel Foucault (I' ll bet the folks upstairs had a fit with rhat one) .. .. It'll probably only a matte r of time before we see anothe r new look for the book too. to the weekly market is Dozier Hasty's NY Beet. Hasty. you may bi aware, is the fireb rand publisher of several Brooklyn newspapers. who may now see rhe East River fo r the ocean it is. It will be inte resting to see how the newly weekly Beat. anot her Sobo derivative. costing 75( and with next to no listings. can compete against Harris' free Talk. with its beefy listings. chi-chi layou t and copy. and -c surprise c--Merle G insbu rg. whom Talk " stoic" from Beat ed itor Howell's stable. (Ironically enough, Merle has, at one time or anothe r. been on the staff of Metro. Beat. Sobo News and nearly a!1y other start-u p o r upstart In recen t memoryeven the Eye!) Wa lch th is space fo r de tails on the upco ming newspape r . " war. NEWS NOTES As repon ed in the N Y Times. Washington . D.C. will soon have a new weekly tabloid (The Washington Weekly) and , surprise, the money I love a band wagon . especially when rhosesr raggling at the back should have been leadin g the way a 10ng ,I long time ago. J' m talking about Dance Magazine's April breakdancing issue. with no less than five (count 'em) articles on hip-hop and breaking - includ ing the cover story. [This month 's fave and co urtesy McDonne ll Douglas Corp. who took off Monda y. April 2 in honor of the founding of N ATO , " THE TRUTH . SO STA RTLIN G IT SOUND S LIKE PROPAG AN · DA. The truth is rhc last n years have been one of the longest periods of peace in the European roruincn r in recorded history.. .The truth is NATO needs your support . And rhc (ruth is. you need NATO ." Like a hole in the head . I'd sa)'. . ... Passion. the fantastic French mont hly printed in English in Paris. now has an equa lly wo rthy counterpart here in New York for all the Frcncbics with great graphics if nor necessarily the latest breaking news (currendy lead Story: "SO HO OUT . E. VILLAGE I N , Ex plosion Crealrice a I' East Village. " ) Passion itself seems to be growing by leaps and bounds. Latest ish is 9 5 pages with several fou r-color full. page ads. Not only gre at fashion coverage (e.g. excellent SIOry on the Com munis t party paper Liberation's fashion editor) but also in-depth intecviews with Paris's leadin g intellecruals . Some like it hal. Take New York POSI Metropo litan Editor Steve Dunleavy, who recentl y caused qu ite an alarm downtown at the Post' s office on South Street when he was found in the fifth floor sauna Rupert had installed for the elite. Trouble was. they thought "Ole Blood ' n Gut s" was dead. NO! so. The man was "medi raring" - his guru : John Barleycorn . behind the paper isn' t from Rupert Murdoch, but from The New Republic (Martin Peretz). The Attantio (Monon Zuckerman) and a "Georgetown activist. " Joa n Bingham. Does this mean vacations from now o n in DC? .. Can' t imagine why people are so down o n Ti na Brown. Ms. Brown. former editor of Conde Nasr's British ultra-slick The Tatter. is Leo Lerman 's successor at the foundering Vanily Fair. The-first ish under Brown's ed itorship seemed lively enough to me: better organized: clearer. more consisMAY 1914 EAST VilLAGE EYE 13 EAT IT By CA RLElTE McMULLAN Cu rry Ma hal 78 2nd A venue (be /ween Fourth and fifth Strut) Lunch and difl1ler:doily 777·9070 he au rhc mici ry and qualirv of a n Ind ian restauram cou ld be-suspect where tun afish cu rry is the Frida )" night spec ia l. But in IhC' C~ of Cu rry Mahal . the SV;O (" 01 1('(' is a l ip-off 10 t he esrab lisbmc m -c-o ne rich with ba rgains a nd var iet y. This bouse is d ist inct from nearby brot he rs on " Ind ian row," 61h St IC('! between l SI a nd 2nd Av. e nu cs. with chea pe r price s a nd a lighte r at mo sp her e . At first glance the scene is remin iscent of a New O rleans bo rde llo . guarded by d ark suspicious-loo king wait ers. Told it ' s a br ing- your-own rest au rant . we cross the street 10 a liq uor store neon lit o nly with t he lett ers IQ . forcing us to wonder abo ut the' su rround . jog me nta lity. T he Cu rry Mah al d ining room is a small. long , na rrow corrido r lined with elaborately pat ter ned red velvetee n wallpa pe r. Tables fo r tWO a nd four arc pu shed alo ng t he walls a nd spread with red colton tableclot hs and white pap e r placemats. Th e fake bri ck floors a rc spo tless. Several o blong- shaped ph oto re prints of Ind ia han g on the walls. An orna te gold clock ticks above a row of ba ngles on t he kitchen doo r where a cut-OUt pan el allows t he waite rs t.O whisper throu gh t he ir orders. Th e eye stoppe r is the mulncolored p last ic flower ed bou quet dangl ing abov e the tab le tops. W hen seared. the tall invariably knock thei r heads aga inst t he ill-po sit ioned arrangem ents t hat also b lock a view of your date . But th e- oddly shaped H awai ian -looking morass or corer IS somehow am using . As weirdl y homey a re the pai nt ed me tal fish heads th at serve as the light fixt ure s at t he sid e of each table. An- ot he r seemi ng Hawaiian derivat ive is I he mu sic - not t he mourn fu l plink and wh ine- of record e-d sou nds normallv heard at nearbv Ind ia n row restauranrs. bu t a' sped u p . (wang}'. funny versio n . Th e menu is all exp er ime nt e r's d rea m - nearly everyt h ing is well un der $6 . An orde r of lam b kab ab d inner includ es appe tize rs. Vegeta bles pap adum , nearl y weightle ss wafer s a nd vege tab les pa kora. bot . mild ly spiced, cr isp Inners su bd ue the violen ce of del iciously hOI sp iced o nio n ga rni sh an d accom pa ny ing gree n chi li sauce. T his version o f mulligataw ny sou p is mi ssing th e usual ch icke n and veget a ble b its a nd tastes like ca n ned tom ato so up, thi ckened with flour. Good sweet man go chutney is also supplied from the seve ral condimems avail able . Their ma in cou rses a rrive in small sunken bo wls- in fai r proponion to th eir low p rices. Th e lam b kebab com bines spicy, te nde r chu nks of lam b wit h o nion, to matoes and green peppers . Th e accompan yin ~ parat a . a solid pan cake of baked wheat dough . is 10 0 greasy. A stri ki ng d ish' called ch icke n shag m ixes sp icy me at wh h fre-sh coo ked sp inach t ha t is at o nce ca nby and delicious. h's accom pa nie d by sim ple bo iled cabbage [d ai}. T he warn in g t ha t rhe vind aloos arc terrifically hOI is unfounded in th e- veget able om" we- ger . cvcnhclcss. the mixtu re of firm po tato . zucchin i an d carrot chunks wit h peas is sarisfymg. GOod yellow rice in a bu ndance is doued with green peas a nd a single bay leaf. A t h ick ler nil sauce also a ppea rs 10 com piemcnt rhc rice and lea ven th e would -be fiery spicin ess of rhe vindalo o . T he Indi a n dessert of Man go ice'crcam is diffi cult 10 ap prcciall' as it is Floury rarher th a n sugary. O n a gold pai nte d li n arrive s a mo re inr eresrin g e nd ing -c-licori re swee tened fenn el seeds a nd toot hp icks - a teo m inde r of a down to ea rth . but at sam. e lime celest ial. d in .IO~t he expenence . • Arbiter of the Taste The $6 - 8/hr. studio Where tomorrow's music is rehearsed today at yesterday's prices. 67~3763 14 EAST VilLAGE EYE MAY 1914 DOCTOR ASK Dr. MUELLER I'M DUBIOUS! By COO K IE MUELLER PLEASED TO MEET YOU, MR. DUBIOUS. nly at th is time of year arc all New Yorkers uni ted in one co mmo n cause an d preoccu pati on . Old . you ng . rich poor. red . yellow. b lack . white . br ight and stupid are all do ing th e same th ing as they walk down the st reet. They' re 3.11 cruising · . . experienCIng the pangs of th e vernal sex mot ivatio n brou ght about by th e wea ring of skimpy. clinging outfits. Even sick people do ir. O f course the O lym pian way to do it is to wear rhc dark glasses so thai you (a n op en ly stare without being caught. Here 's th e best method : As yo u' re walking down the street with your su n glasses on your face and you .S('c a person who arouses you r mterest , aver! your he ad a linle in th e op pos ite di rect ion . Th en )'OU can watch the person all you want by look ing from the corner of your eyes. T hcy'H never know because your head isn't aimed at them . But then again )'OU mi ~h t want them to know that you' re inte rested . In th is case. when )'OU ~e someone you really like, you might as well do it with some osten raio n and Babylo nian splendor. StOP .dead in your tracks and la)' down at the person 's feet to bar their way. All of my recent letters and phone q uestions arc about sex and how good peo ple arc feeling about the " beautiful" weath er. I hate to dam pen the enthusiastic spi rits but I personally find spring rat her offensive. The reasons? ( I) l rruly love the sun and warm weather bUI not in New York Cit y because I'm indoo rs at my typewriter o r doing research in some d usty Gothic homeopathic hideaway. (2) l thin k abo ut leaving New York the minute the tem peratu re hits ') <)0 because what good is it if there is only concrete? People and their new o utfits have to sup plant flowers, [fees and beaches. This is not easy. (3) Sp ring is always the harbinger of summer which you'l l have to ad mit is sickening in the city when it gets so hot rhar the cytoplasm in the cells of rhe human body can cook JUSt like the whites of hard boiled eggs. Dear Dr , Mueller. I' ve JUSt return ed from Berlin where my finger nails grew the longest thai they' ve ever grown . Now I don ' t chew my nails o r pick them but the )' never Rrow as rapidly in New York City. The climate was rhc same. I did change m)' diet. I ate meal because I JUSt could n' t find 100 man y vegetarian restau rants. I do eat lots of chicken in New York and beans and rice. I d rank lots of beer there. and you know abo ut the beer in Ge rmany. Should I give my secret to the peo ple that run the Revlon Nail Bank? . Love. J ohn Heyes is less full of toxins. as the grass and fodder rhe meatbearing anim als ear is not satu rated with poisons from the air. Tal king about air ... the q uality of the air )'OU breath e anywhere outside of NYC has Rot to be better. I noticed that my nails and hair grow ben er whenever I leave New York for extend ed periods. Remember tOO th at it 's 'I tot al holistic thing . You were probably mo re relaxed there. free from career pressures and able to breath deepl y (Iilerall)') . I believe thai one of the most impo rtant th ings for a person who lives and wo rks in New York is to Ret away from it fo r at least two mont hs a year. There is just such a bombard ment 10 rhe senses here thai it gets taxing, Even walking OUt o n the srreet for a leisurely stroll can be hair-raising. Car horns blare, people scream at you. you walk in dog shit, your feel gel tangled in garbage. people bu mp right into you and don' t even say excuse me , buses will mow you down. bicycl ists will play chicken with you, taxi rab doors open in your path and some people will even laugh at your shoes. Love. Dr, Mueller Dear J oh n. The answer is obvious. All the food you consumed there is .Dea r Dr. Mueller. I' m still not thoroughly richer in B vitamins and protein, even the beer. Also. u's a satisfied witb the suggesrions you gave about increasing pen is well known fact th'lt the food size. W hat's the deal? Signed . Dissatisfied Dear Dissatisfied . Wh en men are born without the normal amount of male hormones (testoste rone). hormone shots do increase all secondary male characte ristics includ ing pen is size. Now don ' t run O UI and gel th ese ShOIS, perhaps you should first ge t a blood test 10 :see if the ho rmone level is normal. Applying a 0 .2 % water miscible o mtmcn t of testosterone 1I1t1J produce some pen is growth, but since testosterone is uriliz ed by the bod y through the blood stream this is like trying 10 gel nutrient s to the brain b)' wearing a Tcbone steak on your head . Suction devices tha t you sec in ads in magazines might swell il up for a lill ie while (not yo ur head , your pe rus.) Love. Dr . Mueller lions. Th ere are so man y considerations here that it would lake me th ree o r. four pages 10 tell them all to you . Raw garlic. a veget arian diet , rutin . potassium . magnesium . vitamin C and eating less are some of the first suggesricns you 'll read abo ut. Also. you have 10 get rid of the emorional stress befo re any nutritional cure would be successful. Maybe you should see a psychiatrist ... no. lake a vacation . That 's an order. Love. Dr . Mueller Dear Dr. Mueller. I have hypertension and I'm laking cata p res to redu ce the blood pressure. I' ve noticed that my desire for sexual relatio ns has decreased since I' ve been laking these pills. I asked my doctor and he keeps telling me that I should see a psychiatrist instead . Do th ese pills have any bearing on my problem? Sincerely, Unable Dear Doc. Last month I sent you a letter about 'I very famous person who had his asshole removed . I read it in th e POl l o r somewhere. I wondered where the a~hole was taken and what was left in the spo t. I was serious and I want ed an answer. Also what happen ed to your old logo? It was greal. Signed A Person Wh o WlInlS an Answer Dear Unable, Oh. please StOP laking this stu ff. Ca ta pres causes im po renC)' . O ne of the other antihypertensives, Ismelin. causes d ecreased ejaculation and renograde ejaculation. Reserpine. another type of medicine used for high blood pressure. causes difficult ), with erections and loss of libido. High blood pressure is not a disease, it is the body's comxrive and defensive measure 10 cope with things like o besity, kidney disfuncrion s. toxem ia . gland ular problems, fauh y calcium meta bolism, Stress and nervous tension . etc. You have to go to a health food store and buy a hook about hypertension and follow the d irer- Dearest Person, I answered your len er bU I my ed itor didn 't prim it . He always vetoes letters about assholes. I thin k thai this famous person's asshole was claimed by adoringfa ns. As to what is now in th e spot .. . the person must look somet hi ng like 'I Barbie doll. Here's my lett er: Dear Mr. Editor W hy do )'OU always exclude th ese kinds of letters? Also, I want my oid logo back. Love. Doctor Mueller THE VILLAGE-EAST DENTAL GROUP • • • • Quality Care at Reasonable Fees The Most Modern Equipment & Services Pediatric and Cosmetic Dentistry Sports Dentistry & T.M.!. Care • • • • Nitrous Oxide Available Emphasis on Personal Care and Anxiety Control Immediate Emergency Care No Charge for Consultation COSMETIC BONDING AVAILABLE Many chipped. discolored or malformed teeth. as well as teeth with spaces between. can now be repaired in one visit without drilling by the new conservative technique of bonding. ALL UNION AND DENTAL INSURANCE PLANS ACCEPTED TOWARD PAYMENT THE VILLAGE·EAST DENTAL GROUP 158 East 7th Street (be l. Ave . A 8< B) Tel. 254-7459. 228-7112 Me VISA MAY 1' 14 EAST VilLAGEEYE 15 4 St. Mark. PI., NYC II101i3 982-3590 Rock & Roll 7b Wear l 172 Spring St., NYC 10012 Send for Cata1<>,gae - $1 PHOTO, GENE coo. • u, '" ( i It t • ..- 226-0590 • , . -----=-~ • ETC. tha t timeof the year again, an fans-Apri l {' S showers br ing May club openi ngs . Slated for spring unveiling is Save the Robo ts on picturesque A venue B between 2 & ; . Ab . yes, spring does co me to Death Valley. It ' s th e mir acle of one StOP shop ping: ge t your works in progens when you pic k up your wo rks. Mean while. over on su nny Aven ue C. that connoisseu r of the au courant . Veri Parnes, is convert ing his humble abod e int o a mu lti-le vel nitespot to be ch ristened Club Cha ndelier. Maybe you can pin Mr . Parn es down on an opening d ate if you catch h is slide show "Violating the Frame ." Th ou ' s on May 5 at SSC, As photog Mr. Parnes has a "more the merrier" altitude towards a number of 'exposu res per frame . Last show fea tured mobs of mud wrestlers bursting OU t of Cuc hifruo sta nds. As the Lower East Side continued to sink benea t h a tidal wave of gesso. Ano nymous Prod uctions mad e a heroic effo rt to cata logue me debris. It was a one-size fits all fet e: a preview (avec cataloguel} for the limbo Lounge An Au ction on April 2, as well as an o ppcrtu nity for bridge and tunnel cultu re vultures to hobnob with th e valedi ctorians of the School of Tompkins Sq uare. Performances on the cavernou s l st floor by the likes of the Sleazeb uckets, Karen Finley , and a duo of volupruous torch singers on a tra peze helped round OUt th e evening . Another successfu l Anonymous bash -thou gh one question lingers in t he mind of at least th is spectator ... was m is an or April Fools? Co mi ng u p in June , P.S. 122 is sponsoring a worst performa nce festival . Emc~~d.. by th~ u nsin k abl~ Jim Four:m, judged by P.S. 122's Mike Russell and Ho lly Hughes of W .O .W., th ~ f~stiva l is aimed at scrap ing th e absolu te bot to m of the barrel . S ur~ ... it 's been d on~ .. . but not wit h BC is gett ing so popular, wha t with Toul ouse Wom en and all, that huge lines of cultu re fiends are lining up ou tside the door on weekends so get there ea rly fo r goodness sake. Th e old TR3 space on We st Broadw ay has gene t hroug h a few incarn ations since m en , Srillwende. Clu b Masque. and now Pep Lounge mastermind ' Frank Roccio and fashion figure sup reme Sally Beers have teamed up to recreate the space as Nig ht Gallery. wh ich features. " . NST IN THOMAS you guessed it - paintings! . O ne unusual t hreeso me seen chatt ing toget her - director Pen elope: Spbeeris, Laure n Hutton and Dcmiaiana Gio edane (th e female star of Andrei 'Tarkhovsky' s NOllalghitJ) at th e open ing pany for Sphee ris' SuhurbitJ at Area. . Those sticky patch es on the floor of W .O.W , Cafe are th e aft ermath of Karen Srroker's recent performa nce . which ended with Strokes an d Brier ,Arbelius dow ning a couple cans' wonh of Hers hey' s choco late syru p. Watch th ose waistlines, honeys ... Wasn 't that full page picture of Ann Some joken at A nn~ ~n'5 Hanoi Rocks party. Magnuson in the last Vanity opened the B-Side Gallery with srudly stuff on Florida' s Fair spe ll. bind ing ? Bigshct balm y beaches ... Bobby writer and editor David Hera Shafraai-hk e fren zy- it 's Bradley' s Fellini party at righ t beh ind nighti ngal e Pat shkowitz is sta rti ng up his own Limelight was even bet ter Hea rn's gallery on 6th and B. . monthl y mag , to be calle d .. . than seing Arma(ord. You The Paper! An other mom enRick Prol and Bobby G . w~r~ wou ldn't be lieve the decadence tou s occasion in modern jou ramon g the painters she An nie Deon and ou r own nali sm occured when assembled, and the resulting Richa rd Fantina threw a lavish Newlweek covered th e Life party at Dancereria was sim ply party for Ha noi Rocks at Anall-scar. O utsi de Radio City Cafe and Gracie Mansion nie' s fab loft. Annie was really Th e fabul ous Franz List was ' Mw ic Hall where john Sex led perhaps the foremost expo nen t turn ing th e dud es on in her .an expedition to see Liberace tight black span dex ... D ian e of me ritocracy, excelling th at include d Keith Haring Brill- a well kno wn femme aristocracy. Before th is most and Bobby Beadley, th e fata le - is in the new Car' s charismatic of geniuses , artists reformed pom Stat was signing video. ah. let 's get m at usu ally entered th e palace ' autugraphs and-lovingly straig h t, the Cars are in the th rough t he servants' q uarters. ' smooch ing ado ring gran nies , Yet aristocracy still prevails, land even d id a spot for Live AI new D ianne Brill video, afte r all the Eye and Details are in witn ess the pages of publicity ·Fi" . An dy bought Mr. Sex a the Brill Buildin g , aren' t we??? tha t do-nothing David Kenlovely p resent for his Ace carrocnist james ned y got for dep arting thi s birthday party at th e Romberger just finished up the mortal veil while Count Basie Pyramid . . . animation for Bob Dylan 's new himself wh o died the sam e Liberace 's performance, video. and it 's go nna be real da y, was relegated to a half besides bein g a record buster. ugly. Ugly-beautifu l, ya page stashed way towa rd the was probabl y one of th ose understand ... The sixties back of the dailies . Of course , one in a lifetim e th ings. His scenesrer sad ly seems to have the Cou nt 'S music will still be jokes were timely an d wiit y,. lost h is sp iritual stri vings and is making me pany lively c~ n · His C hopin was xnsitive and once agai n saving thi ngs that tu ries aft ~ r th e Kennedys no fed ing-provoking , h is sets will probably land h im in lo ng~r fascin:n~ . Would that with the fabl ~d d a nc in~ hellfire for sure: . .. society cou ld accord ou r Bachs wat~rs, candelabras. shifting Erik KiUi O~n ' s New Math and Chopins th e appreciat io n backdrops and Rockeue:s opening iIIustrat~d JUSt how our d esc~nda nt s will . . . W~ ar~ were eye clean ing , and h is popu lar goth ic and spoo ky pleased to annouce th at Hen ry . .costumes are q u ite justl y, tax motifs a r~ with your art lov~ rs dedu ctibl e . . . Beck, v~t~ran of hundreds of ... Th e Roxy is heating up like . If yo:u notice a few barely l~gendary high.financ~ th~ a fo r~ me nt io n~ d hel lfir~ . busin~ss d eals has signed on muted sobs coming from th~ hon~y s . . . How can you tOP a with us as ou r new ad uSUsal cast, it ' s cause Tanya bin hday part y for Chaka man ager , and h ~ ' s a l r~ady ,Ransom is threat~nin g to Kh an ??? O f course: sh~ sang! 8 makin g us rich ! d~xn . Hummph ! The ou trageous mural in t he J ohn Lydon Memo rial Lounge . True . he and illustrious Stephe n . Kroninger w~re sported in the mufal reading the Eye, but seriously folks, Davis' shadesof G rosz on da yglo has begu n eliciting a variety of visceral ' reactions at Colin de Land ' s new Vox Populi gallery on Clinton Street:y' know Piezo Electric ' s o ld home . Roll over gallery gals! Here comes Karen Scarp ulla, who prizes and a m andatory swim suit competition . Festival organizers Robin Epstein and Sarah Schulman cau tio n th is event will not be for the squeamis h. J ust when you beg an to think sp ring in N .Y.c. was heralded by litt le more th an th awin g dog turds, Kamikaze . rem inds us of that ot her fine sp ringtime trad ition . Th at' s righ t. They're pla nni ng a debutante ball. An all star . committee featu ring such luminaries as Rud olf, Diane BriU,Jacki While of Fashion Moda , Michae l Limbo - 21 (cou nt 'eml) in all-is co ming up with th e coming out. Fo r t hose of us who JUSt can ' t swing t hat summer sha re - don' t despair . Th ere is life beyond j ones Beach . Dancereria will open a branch i " the Hampt ons . .. No w it can be told! The true story of how the Eye taught Robin (" Mork Meets Moscow" ) WiUi2ms the me aning of gentrifkarion . " By accident I happened to be standing next to Rob in d u ring a break in shooting MOICOW on the HudIon o n East 7th," recalls Eye reporter Arlene Hellerm an. " 'Nice neighborhood .' he remarked . To which I rep lied , ' But not for long - it 'S being ge ntrified.' Hear ing t his new word aroused his curiosity so 1 . had to exp lain. H ~ got t he message. ' O h ,' he said , sou nd ing l i k~ an old codg~ r in Tom bstone, Arizona . 'that's when all th~ rick folks mov~ in an' kic.k all t he poor folks OUt .' ' You got it ,' I said . Bf th e way, Robin said he liked the Eye a lot - can w~ g iv~ him a su b?" O nly if h~ come} to th~ office! .. , Eye art dir~ct or Mark Michae lson insists th at t h~ only great thing about Steven Sty le>s r~c~nt grou p show :at Kam ikaze wasJ oe Davis' ;======~iiiiiii coward ! Th e girl h as gone n not io ns of Hollywood in her head and the re is no Slopping he r ... Um bo Lou nge was aided , but despite the repression of the fascists militaryindustrial complex , th e spirit of the t he lou nge is in. domirable ... Steve M2SS is innccend , .. Craig Vanderberg rocked the hou se with mu sic and laughter pany at the Cat Cl ub . He has JUSt returned from stru tt ing his ALL OF US AT EAST VILLAGE EYE INVITE YOU TO CELE BRATE OUR FIFTH ANNIVERSARY WEDNESDAY, MAY 16TH DANCETERIA 30 WES T 21ST STREET, NYC PE Rl'ORMANCES BY ;~ B USTER "',. POINDEXTER WARMUP BY GLENN O'BRIE N NE WCLEUS ("JAM ON IT' ~ COMPLIMENTA R Y ADMISSION WITH THIS INVITATION • MAl.'" EAST VILLAGE EYE 17 WE.ST 14TH STREET / SUBWAY I "'::>z "'>< ~ I c ;;; ROCK HOTEL 113 JAN E STRUT 1 ::12: THE JANE WEST HOTEL $18 929-8632 '"z I~ " In t h e Village on the Hudson " DAY/uP $79 WEEKIUP WEST 12TI1 STREET Carlton Arms Hotel "ww 0, 8 ~ ~ ~' % • , z n N ~ < w o ~ val ue the p restige associa ted CARL"'~ A~'\S C O " ..1 1l 311C ... .. r....,' __ with staying at a inJ.lon Hotel. . 896185 . ~~./ • o ~~~ Whether holdin g co nferences in the grac ious surround ings o f their hotel room or cont aeti~ g CA1t,-1tlN' clients at their offi ces, they find a J.Wl.4en 1§~~s enhances their business standing. Th e convenient loca tion!. modern accommoda tions , ~v'll:;' K,-lly c_.~<'lO""""S and distinctive character make J:H+ten HotelJ the ideal headqu art ers for men and women. ..... BUCIMAGE THE UGLY ,' APRIL 15,1-6 People & Places Christopher Sippel May 17 to June 21 Two Photo Shows April 19 to May 16 Through a Lens Lightly Ann Sanfedele 11 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 .. ... ••• , " DI\'[\,E TIIE.\TRE I lH E S E ~TS ZASTROZZI THE MASTER OF DISCIPLINE hI' ( ; E( »(;E \\AUi.ER MAY 3-26 Thurs-Sat. HPM Sal. Matinee 2 PM Sf>nr TI JF plll~ 5 l.S0 477·llIi,7 Ik'>C r\ ;H ~ ,n~: ) JI VI r\I ': TIII,:tiI R E :; 0 E. 71h Strc-c·! ' ,"YC : 1000.> , MAY AT FRANKLIN FURNACE Exhibitions ICELAND: THE ART REVEALED JIM PRIDGEON, Inside the Brain FOUND LANGUAGE, group show curated by Larry List, opens May 30, 6-8 prn Perfonnanc88 May 'May 8:30 pm $5 3 ALEX MAVRO 4 MAGNUS PALSSON with Alison Knowles. Rip Hayman, Philip Corner, and Vivien La Mathe ·6:30 pm May 6 SNAP with films by performan ce artists May 10 RON LlTTKE and BENITA ABRAMS May 31 LIN OSTERHAGE 112 FRANKLIN STREET 925-4671 20 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 You are c ordially invited to FRANKLIN FURNACE'S 8th ANNIVERSARY A speci al eveninq featuring BENEFIT ART SAL E, PERFORM AN CE S and VID EO SC REEN IN GS by tooa v's lead ing artists, MAY 21, 1984 6:30 - MIDNIGHT at Ronald Feldman Fine A/Is . NYC Gall tor reser va tions & Info 925 ·467 1 . ...... -.:-~'fH _ by f 'Ktiow 0IcI0n41 00';" co' er ~ Jeff a."'.:~ 2000. mnr... .. MAY 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 21 --- I"e ct One, Scen~ One. An apartment on the third floor of 13 E. Third St., three floors above the decomposing railroad flat whe"re Bill Rice used to live, and where he still has his painting studio. In 1978 the downstairs space and backyard area tarted being used for productions 01 The New York Theater of the Obvious, whose original members were Bill Rice, Terry! Robinson, George-Therese Dickenson, Mag gie Higgs, James Presley, Bruce Rich and Gary Indiana. later production s at the Mudd Club and The Performing Garage also featured Tina l 'hot sky~ Vicki Pedersen, Cookie Mueller, Taylor Mead , Sharon Niesp, Robin Harvey, Allen Frame, Patrick Fox, Kirstin Bates, Donald west, John Heys, Kevin Bradigan, Betsy Sussler, Viva , and Mary l ou Fogarty. The original theater had an upright piano and a defective phonograph, crooked 1I0ors , eccentric seating and many paintings by Bill Rice. The upstairs apartment is lull of bOOKSand memorabilia, more Bill Rice paintings , and overloo ks the Men 's Sheher.) . Indiana: We 're supposed to . . . travel down memory lane a bit . Maybe I can begin by asking about Patricia Highsmith's going· away party. Rice: '52. Summer of '52. It was at Provincetown l anding. and they were all wearing trenchcoats. That's about all I remember. Indiana: What was the East Village like in the 50s? • Rice : I never got east of Broadway . I was living in the West Village in the 50s. In the 50s the lesbians were much more out than the gay men. And the lesbian bars were more interesting. I seldom came over here . . There wasn't much beyond the Cedar Tavern. and that was on Irving Place . In the 50s I was painting. I moved over here in '1960. I lived on Great Jones Street , above the Great Jones Cafe. I had a 10ft there. I wasn' t involved wIth theater at all. Indiana: When did you first do theater? Rice : In 1976. Gabriel OCean's mime drama called Raisin Pie and the Hermaphroditic Umbrella . I played a gentleman of a certain age who picks up a hustler in a colfee shop and lakes him home. The hustler steals his umbrella. This was a story by Elmer Klein, that Gabriel adapted. I've heard that Rosa von Praunbelm fifmed it, but I'm not sure. Something called Foreigners and Immigrants , orArtistsand Immigrants . . . like a collage. Vaccaro, Jackie Curtis. maybe even Bill Burroughs, 1did it on a dare. Then t did Plebians Rehearse the Uprising , and there I met Eric Mitchell. because Eric was in the play, Indiana: Was he a plebian? Rice: Yes, he certainly was. He said he was making a mm and he was interested in using me, but it never worked out. Then I mel Scott and Beth (B). Eric in- traduced me-to them. They were getting' a film together and Eric had recommended me for the part, so they wrote me a letter. Then I did G-Man. That was my first film. I fell into it. Then Letters to Dad, which they got together in a moment's notice . . . I love that ftlm . Indiana: When did you meet me? Rice; I think it was in '78, wasn't it? I think we met at Max's when we were showing one of the episodes of The Offenders . No. we met at The Bar. Somebody introduced us. Indiana: Maybe Tina L'HOlsky, Rice: I don 't think it could've been . not in the bar. Indiana : Tina went in The Bar in those days. They had1t hose lillie tables. Rice : That's right. That's when it was La Boheme. '78, Indiana; I think you were one of the first people I met in New York. I came in '78, and t met you and John Lurie. 1met John through Evan. because I'd met Evan in Boston. Oh, you did Voidcville, that year. Rice: Right. With Fred Bessec and Ruby l ynne Rainer, Richard Weinstock. Indiana; And IhenRice: Then, that was the summer of '78, Terry (Robinson ) told me you were interested in doing something in the back yard, and he wanted to do his piece. so we did those things in - what was it, four days? Indiana: Four days, tops. Rice; Red Tide. that was the first . Indiana: That was done in four days, with P(OPS from the novelty shop on Second Avenue, and dry ice from somewhere. Rice: You got your sheath off a fire hydrant on the Bowery for Anne Flaubert. Indiana: It was tied around a parking meter in front of Phoebe's Rice : We did Terry Robinson's Second Thoughts. we did Red Tide, we did Anne Flaubert. and we did Minding the Store. That' s the picture there from Custody. Gary , you're supposed to say something in this interview. That fall was Alligator Girls. India na : It had to be '79. no? Alligator Girls Go To College. That was the epic. You played. let's see, how many roles? Rice : I played a teacher. [ also gave a lecture . . . I was also a biology professor, and I was Eddie Indiana: Eddie the guy next door. who gets a pie in the face - and every time you gOI Ihe pie in the face that little brat who was my assistant didn't have the towel tor you. Oh. God remember Monte? Rice: Uh-huh. Indiana: Monte was so interesting. He was a merchant marine. and he was also a staple gun queen at Bloomingdale'S when he was in town. He was about to ship out to Hong Kong again when I met him, he spoke Chinese Rice: How on earth did that come out? Indiana: Sometimes at rehearsals at the Mudd Club we would steal out to Chinatown and Monte would order in Chinese. I was so impressed. Monte Streitfield. I met him in The Bar one day when I was com- • 2HAST V il LAGE EYE MAY 1914 ... . Rice : I think somebody should say something about Jeff Weiss . Indiana: Jeff is one al the truly fantastic people , I've seen him do things that nobody can do. like going up the side 01 a wall , he 'd generated so much energy, I saw him one night in How The Rent Gets Paid just walk up the side of a wall , the wall wasn 't enough 10 break his momentum and then sometimes Ethyl' Eichelberger gets that way . too . . . and they all have so many imitators. AI Pacino has, in his bedroom , hundreds of photographs of Taylor Mead. pinned up . but there's something about Taylor that 's just too much lor the American public. Maybe it's 100 real or something. Rice: I don't think that bothers Taylor . II never did . lndiana: American society makes it so advantageous and attractive for people to conform to its own boundaries. They like homosex· uality now, I gather . R~e : They're learning to like it. God help us when Ihey tinally do. Indiana: They'll probably have these machines you can put on your head to change your sexual orientalion. Rice: In the 50s. in the West Village , the girls were all over the place, the lesbians travelled in gangs. There was the meat rack in Washington Square, and then those deadly gay bars - Mary 's, the old la ndmark, almost totally dark in there , everybody was standing around in attitudes, not making one move, There was only one integrated bar, that was the Riviera, The only time you could go and relax with black people was in the Riviera. It was a wonderful bar. There weren 't very many, it was all coffee shops : the San Remo. There were some mixed bars , almost like The Bar. Indiana: Well, I came out 01 such conformity that I reatly believed that there were maybe ten or fifteen homosexuals in the entire world . Rice : So did I, what else were you supposed to think? Indiana: Then when I saw them in reallite. I was so scared! Rice: Dh. they turned me off completely . It took me nearly two years - I came down to the Village because I was gay, basically, and 1\ wanted to find other gay people that I found attractive. But there was no way, because of the repression . I'm sure they were no different then than they are now, but my attnude was so shaped by Ihe world I'd been living in, there was no way I could even make physical contact. 11 wasn 't until I met the lirst black person that I was able to do that. and that wasn 't because of me, it was because of him. Because he wasn 't hung up . . 4 .~ . . . . _ . ~ . . .. .. . . ~ - -~" " ' - ' - " .' - - - - -- - - '!l- • - '''''::"11'' .-.-,..... - our members. Indiana: As have we aiL Rice : But we expect they 'll very clearly at all. be back. (Pause) BUI I don't really have what you'd Rite: It's the scene where you give birth. call a point of view . Indiana: No wonder I don't Indiana: I think that's remember it. Bill. what do refreshing, Bilt . you see as the chances for Rice: Oh , do you? a major nuclear war in the Indiana: Yes . next few years? Rice: I've been shopping Rice : Oh, pretty good! No around lor one , but haven't problem! Glad you brought come up with anything. that up. High time, from (Act Two , Scene Two. what I gather. Later, that same evening.) Indiana: People seem conIndiana: You know, I think cerned about this topic. we 're lucky to have lived Rice : What. nuclear long enough to see a Renaissance 01 mediocrity in destruction? Indiana: Yes, nuclear New York . .destruction . .. and also , Rice : I don't like that cube whether or not to buy a on SI. Mark's Place, I've home computer. been meaning to mention Rice: When you put the two that. Can I take this opportogether, you get dynamite. tunity? Indiana: Please do. I've had , Look at thai kid Matthew my own difficulties with that who made thai War Games film, he's making a million cuoe. dollars now. Rice : Now, a friend of mine, Indiana: Don't you think Paul Thek. has wonderful we 'd be better off? ideas for outdoor enRice: We could be. vironments, and I don't Indiana: The young people I think he 's ever been listeninto, they worry so run ed to, in that respect, 1, as much about their cuticles well , have ideas. Using .. . let's get back to the bricks. Found objects, and real estate empire you've one of my great crusades is been amassing down here to reconstruct the Third in the l ower E ast Side. Avenue EI, using found R tee : I'd rather net talk materials from the streets of about it. the Bowery and just all the Indiana: Well, I think the Bowery, and I think if we public has a right to know. just brought it back from Rice: When Channel 4 Houston Street right up to comes down here I'll talk 14th Street. it could be like about ii, but not until. I a Bar Gar, sort of a l ucius have some holdings. Beebe type of thing, and it Indiana: Well, I've heard it would all be done with said that Bill Rice is " sitting neighborhood work and pretty. " What exactly does community cooperation . We that mean? can just construct jt. I'm Rice: It must be a reference sure that somebody down to Clifton Webb of some here has the original plans. kind . II wouldn' t be an ambitious Indiana: Is it true that thing to do, I think just lrom you 're playing the Clifton Houston Street 10 14th, Webb role in the Brian that's limited . That's one of DePalma remake 01 Sitting my great dreams. Pretty'? Rice: That' s right. Indiana: You also have ideas for a cosmetics firm? Rice : Yes , I do. They 're sort of in their germinal phases right now. I have some girls who are giVing me a lot of input . . . it involves rouge, I'd rather not talk about it further. People don't use rouge any more, you know . Indiana: They realty don 't. Now, Bill, you've appeared in a lot of movies recenltyR~e : Then there are depilatories. I'm planning to get into that in a big way . Indiana: Is there any truth 10 the rumor that you 've found a kind of napalm base for depilatories? Rice : I found a cache of napalm in upstate New Indiana: And that Tuesday York, I was up there visiting Weldsome friends. Kevin Rice: We 're filming it in Bradiganliberia. Indiana: Kevin Bradigan Indiana: That's an excellent the last time I worked with choice. I was in liberia last you I had to have plastic year, just for a few days. I surgery. Don't order the shrimp. Rice: That film is coming Rice: I think over the years , out. The snon. Happy life a lot can be said for many of Sissy McUpton. things , don't you? Indiana: Oh , my God. Indiana: I would say so. Rice: With l arry Ray , Jackie The longer you live the more Curtis. Taylor Mead. there is 10 say about your scene with Taylor iseverything. And at the same Indiana: Huh? lime. the less reason there Rice : Your scene with is to say anything. Taylor isRice: But I would say Ivy Indiana: I dan', remember it Cornpton-Bernett. and Thomas Beer, thai about says everything. about reali ty. One of my great crusades is to reconstruct the Third' " Avenue EI. here on East 3rd street . Rice: Hither and yon , Here and there. Indiana: Is this like the Crackerjack box , where there's a hidden surprise? Rice: We hope so , anyway. I'm not quite sure what that would be. How did you lind out about that? Indiana: I always try to do a bit of digging before I interview anyone. To tell you the truth, I can 'I keep anything . straight withoutRice : Spade work? Indiana: Spade work , I guess you could call it that. Rice: Don't you have a pause button on th is thing? lndiana: No, this is just going to run on continuously:.... This is the kind of tape recorder you just don 't turn off. Bill, you and I have both been.kickinq around the East Village fOF:a long time, and I guess we've seen people come and go, haven't we? Rice : I've seen a lot of them come . More of them go. aCT lually. Indiana: More come than go. but then more go than come , in a funny way too . Rice : 1I's like sperm warfare. Indiana: I thought it was odd when aU those galleries began springing up all over the place that you had n't been tapped to show your work. And the only thing I can think of is, that everybody stole an their ideas from you . Rice : Well , my work is stale . That's basically it. Indiana: But that's what makes it so fresh, Bill. Rice: You think so? Indiana: I think the staleness of your work is really its originality. , MAT 1914 EAST VILlAGE EYE 23 The Way I Was ill· reicn year , q itied o rile about life on the Lower East Side a quarter'cenl ury ago. I moved inlo 239 East ~ n d Street, between Avenues B and C. in early 1960. Gelling a pad wasn 't all that difficult then. I was tipped off about the possible availability of the apartment and went to see It. Muller, the old German-American who was the super for the bu ild' ing showed me the two room , $25-a-month place. a fairly average rent then. later I found out he had been born at the turn of the century , on board a small German Ireiqhter which plied the Pacific captained by his lather. The price seemed right. There was the obligatory bathtub in the kitchen-dining room-bamroom , . . the loilet was on the staircase. The rent included central healing and the few slicks of furniture there: the place laced south over Houston street and was flooded with light. I took it and lived in it till 1977. Af the dawn 01 the sixties the Lower East Side had not, as yet, achieved its later, hippie-born notoriety. It slumbered on , not much disturbed by the scattering of bohemian spirits who were attracted by the low rents, cheap space and nearness 01 our mecca , the Village -Greenwich Village . W.H. Auden lived on St. Mark's Place. William Burroughs had a place on Avenue C. and Claes Oldenbu rg's pop an creanons inter 01 d been rt. by arch re was already t at Iu summer energy in the air. People just went out all the time, and nobody complained about boredom , because the scene never had been *better than that. And there was so much going on ! I adorned the store window of his " Ray Gun" gallery and happen ing scene on East 2nd Street between Avenue A and tst. . If you want to know what the area looked like in the early sixties you can ta ke a stroll on the blocks on both sides of tst Avenue today , north from East 2nd . Except for the lew cafes. boutiques and little art galleries which have crept in. the neighborhood has.not changed that much. Further east it was dillerent then: on Avenue C between 2nd and 10th Streets there were still many pushcarts in the street, selling pickles, notions. hardware. everything that had been peddled in the area for decades. Most of the inhabitants were Jews. Italians. Ukrainians. Germans. There were very few blacks or Puerto Ricans. There were still quite a few people left over from the decades 01 the great melting pot. lrom the many years 01 the mass migrations from Europe in the nineteenth century . My landlady, a Mrs. Brecht. had been born in the house I lived in. Her grandfather had built the building in the 1870s; the family had boughl the ground earlier Irom the Peter Stuyvesant estate. As a lillie girl she remembered being taken to lenox Hall down the block to see and hear Theo dore Roosevell campaign lor the Presidency. peared . Where are tl'ey? It would be the last What were their names? summer of grand old Studio 54. The club was at . . . Gone with the Wind ... 1979 marked the end its pinnacle and parties 01 the great loll-parties. were wild and luxurious A time when everybody like belore the- fall 01 the Roman Empire. And all the was wondering what was fags in town filled their going to happen 10 Soho. Now we know . moulh every time they mentioned SStudio FFFiftty· It was also the last year in which everybody could fffour! Interview was their Bible, and they were still live in the East Village glifter·blind followers. for a $120 rent. One could At the same time, that alford to be a bohemian. was the year to frequent Then. in the middle of that the Mudd Club. Being '79. I saw the lirst issu e there was so glamorous! 01 the East ViI/age Eye . I New Wave was " beloreremember all the Irendies mainstream" and we were on the second 1I0or 01 the the only ones to know. A Mudd Club talking about whole generation 01big it! Everything was so unegos that " should be fapredictable- including lhe mous by now " was hanglact that you never knew ing out there . . . .. every when it would come oul! A nite! every nite 01 that entotal surprise! One used to tire year 01 1979! Then bUy it at a newsstand on there were all those other 2nd and St Marks, after a people who were there all royal dinner at Ihe old the time and then disapKiev , when the lirst lights 24 EAST V.tUAGl' EY£ illY ItI4 Up on 10th Street run Kupferberg, laler 01Fugs fame. was publishing his delightful pamphlets with Sylvia Topp. Another later Fug. Ed Sanders. ran the Peace Eye bookstore on , Oth Street and scandalized the authorilies with such poetry magazines as Fuck You! The Beat poets 01 the time read their verses, sometimes to jazz accompaniment. at the Metro . a cavernous and antique-stuffed cate on 2nd Avenue . A sealood restaurant now stands where Tuli , Allen and the late Ted Berrigan strutted their poetic stuff. Jazz drew ils devotees to Slug 's and The Old Faithful. both on East 3rd Street. right next door to an old movie 01the morning were approaching and all the bums were snn-coicasleep. Then. one would go home, preferably with somebody . and lay the paper aside. to read it lor breakfast at 5 in the afternoon . . . slowly getting ready for a nocturnal and now sporadic stop at CBGB 's .. . Rough Trade was the arbiter of mu sical taste , and Wet magazine and File were required reading . You r general culture would also not be complete without the ritual research 01the pag'es of Soho News. a mu st! To be terminally " In" also required consultation with Addix. Manhattan Catalogue and all the weird pamphlets that were comi ng out all the time: Bikini Girl. .. Smegma , Praxis. etc. . . . It wa s so wonderful to read about ' 'the world of tomorrow" ano once . a whole issue' was dedicated to " Fashion in 1984." The predictions were. naturally, as accurate as the ones 01 Popular uecnen- • theatre , the New American Cinemaowhose slogan was " Always a Good Program for the Whole Family." It cost 25" 10 enjoy the show in the highly uncomfortable wood en chairs. The l oew's on Avenue B was the first cinema built by Marcus toew . the founder of the Metro Goldwyn Mayer empire. Below Houston. at the Winston , you could enjoy three leatures. plus the coming attractions for the next three programs. nine in all, lor the princely sum of 60'. Orchard Street was just another shopping street, but Katz ' already anracteo the throngs pi pastrami devotees; the fancier crowd went to the elegant Ratner' s on 2nd Avenu~ , which stayed open all night. The basket of rolls they put on the table was a meal in itself . As the sixties progressed and the Village grew too expensive to live in, more ano more of the avant-qarde discovered the joys of cheap living on the l ower East Side. The term " East Village" was coined by sly.real estate brokers such as 0.0. Stein on Avenue B. whose weekly ads in the Village Voice promised cheap pads in the Wild East. In 1965 the East Village Other was born. The summer 01 love, the hippie invasion and all it brought with it were 'round the corner. And now the damn area is being Soho-ized and gentrified. Oh well, damn nostalgia. or, in the immortal words of Mort Sahl. " The Future lies Ahead ." ics. many years before. As a mailer of fact, Pop Mechanix was the style to follow. Everything was supposed to be austere and post-industrial. certainly it was the design inspiration 01 f raserhead. And that him just drove everybody crazy .. . ertaln places tried 10 anticipate the Brave New World lor fun and no profit: it was the most creative year of Club 57 on SI. Marks Place , as well as 01 Tier 3 in Tribeca. II anything new and revolutionary was experimental in these 5 years. it certainly started out there. Those were the real events with anliclimaxes! Plus ears ringing becau se 01bad loudspea kers! The lack 01 air-conditioning was de rigueur . . . Conceptual Art finally agonized and , of course , noboely noticed . 1979 was also the year in which Manhallan Sleaze was at its best! All those bars in the West Side, and the Mineshaft at its highest-lowest poinl ! Fucking was so simple and harmless in those days .. . We also were blessed with real scummy afterhours clubs. Lots of them! Opening and closing all the time! How can one forget the Crisco at the peak ? And the eternal Nursery (then at University Place) and, underworld-supreme . the Club 82 or Stickball. Sex and drugs in the dungeons ... no limits! Sleazy discos were also everywhere. The king was , of course , G.G . Barnum 's with its all-tran svestite show -and clientele! And Inferno, really trashy, was on 19th 51. and 5th Avenue. The Fu nhouse also opened that year and Quickly became what it is now - just that this wasn't fash ionable then ! So many other places to go! Remember Studio 10, the yippie place on Bleecker and Bowery? And the Tomato, on 27th and 8th Ave .? And Heat down there in Tribeca? And the conlimted on J4 ·.. . er Times . ies was the decade that extended 1958 to 1973; nwas pretty busy and ed a few extra years to meet hs deade. he fifties were McCarthy repression, s, Barbie, Barbs, Beat and Booze . There were n e sp pers and the onty professional was A.J. leibling; Wobbty voices in the wilderness crying , " Oh the epiphanies, Oh the epiphanies." Kerouac sucking his Bud and Ginsberg sucking his buddy, cried , " Oh wot a bad boy I be," and on an island named Bikini they exploded the Bomb; fifty million wimps jumped Into the closet , some creatures crept out 01 the woodpile to service their daughters. The word was YOU . and spotted Jaakov Kohn , survivor of the Holocaust, exIsraeli commando, West Village (ava nt-garde) jeweler, socialist and editnr-in-chlef of the f ast Village Other. EVO , klddles, was the counter-cuhu re newspaper of New York in the sixties - hallowed be hs name. " Wotcha' gonna be when you grow up ?," I yelled to Jaak back then . " I'm gonna have some fun , change a nelghborhood rag into a political powerhouse, make a cuhural revolution and get high." "Wotcha ' gonna do when you grow up, Nat?" " I' m gonna shatter the windows and knock down the walls, help in a revolution, get high and splh." Recentty I visited Jaakov at his apartment in Gateway Piaza . The sixties ' revolutionaries are n't throwing bills on the floor of the stoc k exchange anymore. The seventies didn't exist, everybody was too tired. They're working at their papa's stores or raking bills off There was, I suppose, Masters and Johnson, masturbathe noor of the stock exchange . tlon and Watergate, and some other critters who crept out Jaakov is alone, but not lunety-neither bloody nor un01 the closet . .. The Word was MEbut cum between the bowed . he is looking forward to kicking more shit. We fingers , like the queens, is a drag and I booked earty . .. 1 rap ped about the sixties. Also in attendance were Ann returned last year. Quinby, my 2o.year-old assistant, and Judy Roland , a On the crawl out of the woodpile I looked to my right, longtime mutual friend. Nat: Well , the fast Village Other came into being about when ? Jaakov : Starting late '65. Nat: When did you take over? Jaakov: Didn't take over until '68. Nat: No. you were there for the party, the famous '66 party, the fundraising party. Jaakov: No, I was on the West side of New York . There was a big division . Between the East Side and the Village, if you remember. II you were a Villager you were never seen on the East Side and vice versa. So where are we? In the mid-sixties? What really brought it 10 lite was when a lot of them went down to the South to march in the Civil Rights marches. They came back , nothing else happened, then the anti-war thing started and that 's when everyt hing solidified. Then they accepted dope, you know. N.t: In 1984 dope means heroin. Jukov: O.K.. but I' m talk· ing grass. Grass, hash, which was a pariah as far as American consciousness is concerned. But that 's when Tom, Dick and Harry first heard the word joint. That was when they first started and it was indeed, thaI was like 67, '68 and then Chicago (the Democratic COnvention) happened. There was a meeting in Peggy Hitchcock's penthou se apartment and that's when Dick Gregory declared (lor the presidency]. In '67 or '68 he was living on Uncoln Park. Uncoln Park became the thing. That meeting took place and there were l eary. Rubin , Holtman. Hitchcock and that nighl we went to see Dick Gregory and there was a regUlar meet and in the back room of the Village Gale. Oick GregOf'/ came arou nd and shook ingaside Irom buying and ;Selling things on Fifth Avenue? Jaakov : That' s what they were nutured on. You can 't have it all and you can't have it on the tlrst lap either. Nat: So, if your function wasn 't to organize, wasn't to prepare ground. wasn't to achieve long range ob· [ectives . exactly what were the motives? Jaakov: Conveying and settling information- be stoned . if possible, have a good time and try, above it all to survive. somehow. And all those points can be achieved somehow and it was a glorious experience. But you cannot expect children who were raised in ! hands like we were all col leagues, and then Leary ogy. II doesn 't relate said, " Have you thought because there was no revo- Nat: Doing something that lution there. about cornlnq to Chicago will upset the apple cart is and celebrating in Ijncoln ,Hat: There was always a not revolution. Revolutfon is revolution. If you're a . Park?" And Oick Gregory seizing power. said, "Great ! I live right on Marxist-Leninist. you beJaakov: Nat, you weren't in lieve that there's always a Uncoln Park." That was New York in the early '70s the begInning of Chicago. revolution. atter Cambodia, when in Jaakov: That' s the problem the middle of the week, N.t: The beginning ot Chicago was the decisive with Marxist-Leninism. No Fifth Avenue fitled , uptown, point Which broke the back constitution in the world downtown with groups of of the movement, but the mentions the word revpeople from everywhere olution as much as the beginningof Chicago was from five to fifty marching . American constitution_So 1965. In san Francisco it demonstrating , right here was the Summer of l ove. revolution is something that in New York. Nobody can And of course, the beginthe American conscioustell me. Nobody can negate ness is very akin to. They ning of New York was in it with Marx, Lenin, Stalin , April 1967. have a frame of reference, all of them -don't mean their perception differs from shit. It happened here . It Jaakov: But Ihe Chicago convention was very conthe Marxist-Leninist interhappened for one glorious structive. pretation. moment. • Nat: How can you say that The thing is that there Nat: And today, Ihose peoChicago was very construc- was a whole set of values pie who had their one tive? All that Ch icago did that simply don't relate glorious moment on Filth was to propel such finks as anymore. One of them is Avenue, what are they doAbbie Hoffman and Timothy that we're going to relate to the very narrow interpretaLeary. Jaakov : No, at that time tion 9f what Is a revolution, ~ . they fulfilled a very imporyou 're going to do some- I" ..... tant role. thing that 's going to upset Nat: As counterrevoluthe apple cart. you're tionaries. going,to cause Jaakov: That 's all terminol- a revolution. fJ1 ---_...11 an environment where they were told, you're going to become an MBA and you 're going to have a bowl of cherries until you pass on. 10 create a true revolutionary environment. II doesn 't go. They've had too much, they've been indulged too much. You can't expect that they will suddenly turn their back just because they went to Nova Scotia , that it enlightened them. Nat: Ann. you're twenty years old . You were born during the sixties - what ellect do you think these events of the sixties had upon you? Do you support a revolution like this? These cultural revolutions? Ann : I don 't know . I'm so ignorant about what the revolution has achieved , all I know is that they were very active. I don 't know how much relevance it had on the stupid mainstream blondes that I meet today. MAT 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 2S , 4l:-5HOPI.-II:: 1ER. ARCHITECTURE and CONSCIOUSNESS .: DAN COMA MAY 19 - J UNE 10 WED SUN :1I 7 RECEI'TION:MAY I9, 5 - & STORH RONT FOR ART AND ARCHITECT URE 51 PRINCE NYC 26 EAST VilLAGE EYE MAT I'•• GlENN M1LLUI ALPHAB ET ClTY'S AMO S PO E Famous Amos , ur of undernd films as Unmade , Bia k Generatkm and Subway Riders. has just compleled Alphabet City, a Hollywood-financed feature based on our own " Toilet' section of the lower East Side. The action lakes place all in one night. when Johnny (Vincent Spano, Baby It's You, Rumblefish). rebels against the Malia's orders to burn down his own mother's building and decides to cash in his ill· gotten chi ps for a chance al lile and love on the outside. This is lhe lower east side gone Apocalypse Now. eroding buildings etched against purple and pink haze . the eerie morphine landscape pu nctuated by trash fires and junk ies, arson and drug busts. Alphabet City is a strange hybrid of art and exploitation. with sometimes laughably'cliched plot and dialogue overlaid onto awesome camerawork and flashes 01 inspired vision. Produced by Andrew Braunsberg (Being There. The Tenant, Chinatown) the film show signs of real liIe in the directing . acting , and camerawork, but me underdeveloped charactertzatcns and a shallow treatment of the real issues at stake keep Alphabet City trom going past a, b.c. Choreography by Lori Eastside, music by Nile Rodgers, cameo by Miguel Pinero, ciuc scenes shot at Area, and a great shooting gallery-bust scene give the _ film local color and interest. But will ~ play in Peoria? I had a chance to ask Poe, who when his beard finishes growing out will look like a younger version of his mentor, F.F. Coppola. this and other questions: How did you get hooked up with the producer? He saw Subway Riders and I guess he liked it. Then later he came to New York and we looked lor a proper-, ty we could do. Then I heard about a treatment lor Alphabet City. Did the film tur" out the way you wanled it to? All in all the film has something 01 what I'd perceived it to have in the beginning . which is a cerlain kind of vibrancy, but I would have liked it 10 be maybe evenmore vibrant. But I can't really quarrel with il. it's done and I learned a ct. II's a step up from the home movie arena. Yeah , up from the underground, into the mainstream. Working in 35, with a crew, a production designer . .. You come prettymuch trom that part of town, don't you? Yeah , I lived there . l think 01 myself very much as a regiooal titmmaker. All my films have been about New York, and basically all my films have been about somebody trying to get out 01New York in one way or another. The Lower f ast Side looked beautiful. Well . now it's cha nged since they cleaneoJt up. I think it was almost the last time you could do somethi ng like that. Almost an anthropological document. Well. lt's a fantasy. Was Vince 's family supposed to be Spanish or Italian? In the original script it was commercial. Spanish, but the producers Did you study any other thought that was uncom-... commercial movies? mercial , so then-we tried to We~t Side Slory, make it both. Once it FJashdance. all ihat kind 01 became an issue I wanted slulf. We played with colors 10 avoid it as an issue a lot. because I wanted to go We wanted to create a beyond that. I had an . dream feeling, like Black idealistic idea of what the Orpheus. Play off the hardfilm was about anyway. that ness, but use the architeconce can avoid being a Vic- ture to create an iridescent lim of one 's environment. beauty. It's there in some And that's what he was do· scenes. in some frames. To ing that nigh!. sort of compeople who know the Lower ing 10 manhood. like East Side, they 'll recognize American Graffiti, it au hapsome things, or they'll say ' pens in one nigh!. all these that' s phoney , that' s real, icons of his lile playing off that's beautiful , but most people who see it won't of ooe another. I saw Gino as being his Darth Vader know anything about lather. Alphabet City. So you 're I think of myself as an excreating in a way a mythical perimental filmmaker in the place , like Chi natown, or narrative sense, and I • Alphaville. always try to find out in a The stylizedacting is one of film, what is the experiment the problems for me of the here? And generally tnat film . In some scenes the achas to do with the producting and the dialogue are so lion method . And the exstylized that it's a cliche. periment lor me here was II you can get to thai whether I could make a degree , you can get an ar~ ew York , underground. chetype which almost ~ experimental new wave transcends your cliche then. whatever, movie , but in a But il you dan ', hit it right, commercial sense. • you can get down to a My lilms have always been cliche which is almost like a seen in Europe, have been tattoo, or something, and so on a cult level somewhat that's the chance you lake. , wish we could have done popular. but never in America, outside of New a little more writing lor York. It's Irustrating. That's. some 01 those parts to give Why I identilied with them a littfe more of a hook. Johnny. Johnny's trying to Do you feel that you've get out 01 Alphabet City, escapedfrom New York and I'm trying to get out of with this film? that. So the experiment was No, I son of leet that I'm to see il I could make it gettmg out 01underground .- ...... \ • filmmaking to a degree, because underground lilmmaking can be very frustraling. It's great on a creative level, but I always thought that I was a commercial filmmaker, I just didn'l have the distribution or the means. I think the idea is just to make good films and those films will eventually be commercial . like Blank Generation was made torabout $15,000 and a lot of people saw it but still, it's a minor cult film. I hadn 't always approached it in that way. Unmade Beds had nothing to do wlth peopIe seeing it. in a way. It really only had to do with the tact that can a lilm be made for that much, and if ~ can be made, there are people in my immediate cunure who can pick up on that and make films on that level too . So as a group, people like Beth and Scolt (6) and Eric Mitchell and Jim Jarmusch , whatever , as a group we could come out of New York and then that could alfect the cullure. And it wasn 't until years later when that actually happened that I actually understood what Unmade Beds was all . . ,. . . about and that on thai level it was successful. 11 was more a dialogue bet· ween filmmakers? Yeah , At that time I was enaroored 01 the French New Wave , and how those critics eventually made movies Ihat came to the U.S. as a Diock. So what I was trying to do was 10 make another wave, from New York to Europe. And that's happened. In Europe we 're viewed as a group. even though there 's a great disparity in our styles. Now ~ 's a question of going to the next step , which is America. It Alphabet Cily is successful, perhaps people like Eric Mitchell, Beth or seen. or Jim Jarmusch . will be able to make films thaI won 't just be viewed at lilm festivals in Europe. This is a different movie from most of those that I've seen of yours. Most of Ihem are about while alienated youth. I wanted 10 try something altogether dillerent. In tact . none of my cast, none at my crew, except lor the producers, ever saw any of my lilms betore, So accor- ding to style , or whatever I'd done before. it was a complete blank. I didn't want a reference point. One part ot Alphabet City which wasn " mentioned is the influx of white kids into the neighborhood. Yeah . well , one 01the limiting actors of the lilm is that it all happens in one night. So everything 's com- _ pacted . So there's no real character development on that level, like what nappened last week? Because you;re always going forward in time. not backwards. And the idea of always going for' ward in a movie and almost like never showing the same shot twice keeps the film going. moving. This is somelhing I learned from lhis film , if you keep changing the visual, you'll move forward. Which is something you can learn from Road Warrior. This is a whole new thing in movies now. I heard that you were friends with Coppola. Yeah, we see each other . definitely think that Apocalypse Now and The Godfather I and II are the two best movies of the seventies from America, one dealing with America and the war. and the other dealing with America 's whole thing with success. I think they 're both very important movies, as important as Cifizen Kane, or a hell of a lot of other movies. l think the Einstein movies that I've been working on tor the last lour years, are my big movie, that Einstein is 10 me a Citizen Kane of the realm . And if one is to do a film, who's the one person whose humanity or philosophy you can most readily ascribe to? it hcis a lot to do with his feelings about life and death. As you approach the end, it's like approaching the speed-of light, you never reach it. Your mass stops. In a sense your immortality begins before your mortality ends. so you never have that finishing point. II has to do with energy and mass. And then the film also has a lot 10 do with light, Ihe speed ot light. Time and space are relative. as in litm: time is not always the same. space is not always the same, it's where you're standing, it's where you 're measuring from. I want to explain the theory 01 relativity. lor example. in the most simple terms, so that anyone who goes to see the movie, will understand that. And that's worth five bucks . , TERN was born on October 27.1 949, of a German Jewish Puerto Rican mother in Hoboke n, N.J., directly across the rom New York City. She still lives there , alone where all the n this book were written over a four month period in the summer a f 1911. She ha s since devoted that 01 her time not spent in flip· ping coins to eemneslnq a love story, Thin Skin. It describes the murder, in ten chapters fired by Theresa, 01 her closest friend. " WANNA GO OUT? is a question ohen I asked on the streets around the cheaper bars in New York and Hoboken ." So goes thr CHAPTERTHREE A rock sits gathering ba rnacles at the bottom of the ocean . Fish, an inadequare word , suggesting a bass on a plate, walk their word for swimaround it in perfect grace . Our urge to anthropomcr phize and project preventing us from ever seeing these creatures in their unselfconscious , independent and unique splendor. A person feels more in common with a plant than with the sca led , gilled , necklesses of the seas. But they are there , like the other side of the mirror . Odd to think that we travel on the surface of their world in a fashion similar to the beings who use the upper layer of our atmosphere for a " skijump." Not a very high proportion of fish ever experience the sensation of air against their scales. They not only don 't need us, but for the most part aren 't aware that we exist. as they say of the debuta nte queen . II is very dangerous to gel emotionally involved with such a being. It's probably insane. a deliberate tntliction 01 pain on oneself. II's at the least " unfortunate." unlike loving a wall in your own apartment. On ly a very sad person wou ld love a fish I think. But that 's hea.rt -rending matter far from the SUbject. (No one could really love a fish, with the possible exception of aquanauts for whom . even men, it must be love at first sight since they aren 't likely 10 see the same fish twice . A fish outside of water isn't the same nsn . Of cou rse peopie love ' 'fish, " a species , but that's like loving a fish-like person. These are huge creatures circling the rock. With eight -loot wings of flab, jowls, and jewel-like lill ie inscrutables lounging by the grotesques - all un knowing characters in a suspense novel about a girl pumping bullets into Frank t he chi mp is btt and now the robo ts arc taking ova Lexin gton . Ah , there 's Frank now . You can (1:11 Frank becau se the knock sounds like it 's co ming from the floor. Bue who has the eoungt to answtr the door at 4 in the morning when she knows she'll find a chi mpa nzee all alene in rhe halt ? WeB, I'll do it. OUC H eocksucking littl e prick! Kiek you r - fucking head off! Morn ing. T he mil kman gets out of •bed saying ''Time to stan prete nding!" Says " How can you get up and read a book }" It 's because I'm the other half of a book. I remem ber the robo ts who infiltrated distan t Lexington , I remembe r Fra nk the hairy chimp and slc:c:ping in th e flyskullshaker . But now the su n has come up behind me his hands around my th roa t, her best friend. Each outlet seems to put her friend one inch nearer death but she won't die. It 's a book and screenplay by Theresa Stern. She began writing ltat the age of 19, conceived as an acl of revenge against Sam Pecktnpah . Arthur Penn , Sergio leone, herself and humanity. It soon became apparent , however, to her and God, that she requ ired no excuse for writing the book. II embodied her visian and her dream and she had obviou sly been destined to write il lrom the first moment that she 'd shed a tear, in other words: from birth. A Puerto-Rican Jew from Heboke n, she was most at home in her adolescence in the huge abandoned warehou ses built on piers that faced the new York skyline. A skyline like etabolieal pitted building blocks interspersed with erect needles in a cloud of gagging smoke. A parody of science fiction visions of biographical note to Wanna lio Out? (Dot Books, 1973), the only volume of Theresa 's works yet to appear. It's absolutely brilliant - pure hilarious despair, with a lot of good sex and heresy. Below is attached a further description of Theresa excerpted from my novele"e The Voidoid which will appear in the book of my own works, tentatively entitled Unrequited Narcissism, that I've bee n compiling and revising and ignoring for a year now. (Chapter two of The Voidoid appeared in " Slum Journal #1 in the Eye #5. Further below is a selection from the 17 poems Wanna Go Out? conta ins, • the futu re. II seemed to her outrageous that she was regarded as a victim oflhese circumstances rather than a new microbe bred in the filth, a mutant radiant oracle , like a new disease for new limbs. Who was to say which preceded. the limb or the limb 's disease? They're Siamese twins, or Vietnamese twins, Namby and Bambi. The disease or the disease's object? Thank God , she thought, something appeared for me to prey upon , or I'd 've been doomed to be a trivial cell with a passing reference in lhe textbooks , rather than a chapter. Tomorrow. a book! . . . Today's garbage is tomorrow's culture, and on that slide,.below that microscope, l'rrrthe premier sneer in the smear , you Queer! She loved to slide . As twelveyear-old she played in these Hoboken pierhouses, whorehouses on the doc k filled with mysterious twenty-foot mounds How come no o ne forces me to do what I wo n't do? All the boys and girls lie dow n in th e boulevard and hug an d cry for a long time on receipt of my subliminal a pology. The ptrson you de n's know whispers goodbye to you on his dea th bed th e waves from his eyes carress my swolle n back in return you strip the out er paptr f rom you r to ngue revealing the cha w of pulp. Then I unbuck led his trousers I saw Illal he was not a m:H1 . Between his legs was the Addams Famil y ma nsion , . .no . . .maybe chis is what mt n loo k like! l l hought th ey loo ked like herons entangled in airp la'lt pmpcllors and 1'm never wron g the sadistic brick drugstores of Main St reet. But she was older now. Her friends of old , with whom she spoke like a tree to dirt, would misinterpret her presence. Her only friends were the ones she wrote . Her first and so-far only novel a 190-page rendition of the murder of her best friend committed by herself on the average of one bullet continued on 64 The str::anger and the moon I re good bu dd ies. Th e stranger is a puddle and th e moon is th e moo n's reflec tio n in the puddle. Th is is as d ose: as wt poets call come ro life. I depend upo n you r mercy as a gOO$(' upon a cigar. Close:this boo k I scream and come look me up so we can fuck 3.S long as I don', have to talk . I'm no t abcu r to pay any of my debts ever. G o~J b)' Beethoven , yo u should know what It's ijk(' 10 be built inside a little: honle OUI of wood. The stranger has u cigar anJ is obsc:rving geese pass across rhe moon like an inlril,....tc model ship or sy mpho nic violins, and all I can do is drea m of mud, oh mud , mu d . © 1973 Richard Meyers And furthermore, I' m here to reveal that Theresa is in fact a colla boration between Tom Vertaine and me. Above appears the evidence in the form 01 two of the pictures I had taken of us in drag In ord er to superim pose the ima ges and arrive at Theresa 's - -------- .. of white powder (some sort of waste?) where crews of pacifistic Hoboken queens would romp. Gangs of ten or twen ty faggots would come , their shrieks absorbed , into these abandoned caverns originally built for the contents of now-obsolete ships, their windows high small v's smashed by rambunctious teens . Slapping each other on the ass and giggling in anticipation and Pavlovian adrenalin rush , forgetting and confusing and substituting male and female hug , they would stroll and prance through the trash like children while Theresa watched , a perfect unobtrusive but stunned audience. The queers wou ld separate and rejoin dreamily in the enormous box 01 the warehouse like a rocket assembly line, their bodies accumulating white dust, as Theresa flirted around like a Utile dark Annie Oakley in her back yard playhouse , much better than _~-- cool. cruel visage. A few copies of this book, originally neglected by consumers at $.95, are . v. ilable Irom me c/ o the Eye, 611 B'way, NYC 1001 2, @$10.00 each. Signed and numbered copies, litty 01 which were printed . are $25.00. .. \ ". •, • KNOW THE STARS Taurus: Sacred Cows and Burn Steers ces of re are n us: p 9 is sprung and all's 9 n and it' s Taurus lime agai n. where power's the name 01the beast. The cycle 01life is kicked off by Aries at the equinox . and il's in Tau rus that its initial lire is brought down to earth and reinstated. " In the beginning was the word and the word was bunsfut ." Tauruses are always bullshill ing and have a burning desire 10 head herds, states and money monopolies. Taurus doesn't always opt out for titles or deeds and frequently dominate the territory 01the mind. Mostly cun-wineo and bed bound , they make an incredible organic substitute for sleeping pills. A great exceplion 10 the rule was found back in ancient Athens where Socrates mifled the city lathers with his " bottoms up" philosophy. living in a " free state ." he utilized his rights lor free Ihought and free speech (and the right to be a poot)- and look where it got him. This unfort unate Taurus was forced to take the Greek persuasion , in the lorm 01 a cup 01hemlock . (Ironi cally. lellow Taurus Jungle Jim Jones also practiced a "bottoms up" philosophy. He milked his devotees dry and fucked the lot. proving it with the old Kool Aid acid test .) Socrates later reincarnated as I. Kant (though he did). Kant established the thought " Be as you wish to appear to others," a credo mat was given a more practical twist by Taurus " Big Mac" Machiavelli with his golden arch theory in The Prince: " Appear as you wish 10 be to others. Never mind how you are. This is of no relevance to the world and in politics." His was the vice of vices: hypocrisy- and this inspired ~ the next step in political conscious ness when French revolutionary Robespierre used his reign of virtue to fight hypocrites. Royal headh unter Cromwell was anot her puritanical boar with eoough balls 10 kill an English king, but the herd turned against him and had his head. He opened Britain to Jews, and one 01the subsequent immigrants was on-me-ism " entrepreneur Karl Marx, who wa s a big fan of Robespierre and an even bigger hypocrite. He fan- • ciec himself the darling of bourgeois elitism , and went to l ondon not to look for the Queen but to shoot his mouth off. He managed to shoot his wad at any rate and fathered,. seven children. How's this for hypocrisy: he married a baroness, three of his kids died of malnutrition, two committed suicide, and meanwhile maintained the services of a maid who moon lighted as his mistress. However. the gods didn'tlet him off lightly as he suffered from writer's cramp. boils on the butt and other capitalist ailments. Then came lenin who beefed up Marx but lefl out Ihe part about free speech. Since 9/10ths of the people don't have property, he said, let's have a revolution and make it 100%. Ultimately he had a stroke and toodied around for a couple of years until he was poi· soned by Stalin, becoming an embalmed museum piece a ta Evita Peron . Known for giving great head, ole Evita bulldozed her way to fame on her knees. She went down on nobility lor upward moonity. Evita prodded her mate to power in the world 's largest supplier of tinned beef, and with their combined efforts amassed the support of the working class. She said, " Peron is a condor that flies high and near to God . All that I am , all that I have , all that I think and feel belong to him." He said. " She gives the. best blow-jobs in town: ' Other famous Taurus sacred cows and power groupies include former Parisian busboy and len in disciple Ho Chi Minh. who was so impressed by Harlem during a visit here that he wrote a Ian leller 10 the U.S. government. The Ayatollah Khome!nl is a Taurus, as was Sigmund Freud. He praised the q ~a li t je s of coke as a pa nacea. and developed cocai ne pa ranoia . Famous for recreati ng sexual guill and rediscovering the su bconscious mind, he never quite found the light. In the end there was only guilt . .. and a couple more lines. Read below for further hints to astral mysteries. • CANCER Nepiune oppo tlon brings thu mbs ARtES Retrograde Pluto brings sex in confinement and a needed break. Aries should be eeries. Boyfriend goes on rag on or around the 19th, dumps you in the hamper soiling ragtrade aspirations. Hung out on the Hne againpressed out in the press. You think you 're on the way to the top , but the only time you 're on top, baby, is in bed. You don't have to bare your breasts to be important, but it might help il you want that title role in porn farce . \O"" , lf/ d ;;; :;;J... (~~J To ~.l.i! V S TAU RUS Mercury in retrograde: muddled mania and possible Ethiopian cocktail table . When intellect bogs down , never mind, as people are barely aware you have one. Eat what the big boys eat. Mars transit incurs locked horns with authority figure and probable aUditing . You may think you' re living In carefree lite of Nanookie in bed with married partner, until you realize it' s more than oclopussy in the afternoon. Don't worry-possession ' is 90% of the law. s and chipped pat accentuate the obvious . Search ing high and low for inspiration, you'll find it lower than you least expected. Revelations on designer sheets until you find what' s underneathyou may uncover a relative (mother perhaps?). Expect parental blackout . No sooner have you achieved relief than you're too cloistered for comfort by some drip you picked up. mon you leel d when you notice runs, and a certai ness. Fear not, all toms will dissipate in approx. 2 weeks along with all discret ion in sexual matters. SCORPIO Forbidden ev· ening with she-devil finds you cavorting with carnivores and witnessing animal sacrifices - but have you ever met a macrobiotic Mexican in the park, especially alter dark? You're just a figment in your own eyes, a prick in your finger and the punchline of your own jokes. ' Your thirst for life tirings new job leads and a super-B safari to greater adventures. Remember God is not a fairy. IJ AOUARIUS Full moon square in Scorpio means it's no treat to trick. u's time to lighten the reins, dear, as your wedding album is beginning to look moldy and rather like wanted posters wallpapering U.S. Post Offices and F.8.1. files. Your fingerprints are spotted on photograph ic negative by secret government agency I . .. what does this lead to? You gef the attention you 've been looki ng for '. when fondled by the I.R.S. ' I ~ Vacation break loomsforget Europe . Rent a l ear I T T1\ <' jet and take the gang thrift shopping through the Bible SAGITTARIUS Life will seem Belt. And if you're not inprincipally stylistic until dependently funded . get a the 16th when Uranus job and get out. forces you to look more deeply at the nardcore. But there 's time to repent ' l ( ( on the 20th before all sub· VIRGO Extra points for tlety fades and liberace ( {L{ •• belting atheiststhis month . syndrome sets in. In the You used to chant namdictionary sympathy is ber:mycho-reneqaoe-kyo . but tween sh it and syphilisnow you wake up morn.s( 9 ~ don't ask for it. ings unable to utter anyPISCES Springtime junket thing but "where's the beef?" Then you return on sampan nodding out in the sun on Chinese junk. home and realize the counDon 't you just wish . Wax try's been taken over by Bolivian . Beware of noctur'crooked politician s and gay nal injury on the 23rd when Maoists from Vermont . . socialite-hostess starts baiting her boobs about injuring several, including a CAPRICORN Since Neptune reporter. love life will will be your houseguest for force you to consider a the next 15 years, and you satin straight jacket during late nights at Area. being the astrological seat Dress down during ovutaof self-aggrandizement, you may be in for a lew sur- non. Wear white and curb prises. In the middle of the artificial penetration ... lEO Venus, Mars and Saturn square you head on: a geeky month ahead and a barrage of Cole Porter. Think beige and uncultured pearls. Contemplate fun-filled evenings paper training bull dogs in a condo, and a perm on the 18th. Bad sex may lead to a green card and long sought after in- . sights into truth and visions of world peace, but it may be more apocalyptic than you anticipated . \~~ .)~ .~ ': . ~ . .. S " .s ~ (('.\,,0:, 1](( ~ U ( l<,l~ , p .. GEMINI You may be naughty but you 're not bad . Even electric eels do it. Solar eclipse on the 30th in your sign: brace for unexpected conncntalion with yourself. II you don 't put you r foot in your mouth someone else will. Egos fight lor control and you'll feel club sandwiched somewhere between the pastrami and tongue. Oon 't fight it -sink to your own level. MAY 1914 EAST VtLLAGE EYE ft pur FOOD OUT I" THE SAm~ ; LACE EUERV OAV A"O TAL~ "TO THE PEOPLE· WHO cnmr J o EAT A"O -DRCA"12E THEm . .ENNY HOLIER is ...... familiar to the New York pubic than it pralIaIIIy l'llCIizel. During 1979 ...s 1980, 1tIou...... of flye.. bearing what lhe colis "trvisms" w.... plastered a. avo< the city, giving pedeltrianl a ..... stant supply of contradicting ..,er1iaaI 10 punle over. They've since.,pecnd on walll and bl-..-u in E.rope, and in galleries Oft both sidelof the Atlantic. Now lhe'l working ...... with electronic: IIghtboants; a number of her pieces ho.. appeared Oft the SpodacoIor baanI Oft nmes Squcn.' Holler plans to rent a trvdt·mountod ,.per digital video syllom to display her and other ,..,Ie's audio/visual pieces, s....where in MmL.... n..., right before the electlans. - LeonanI Abrams color one hour processing color xerox . black & white xerox black & white contact black & white custom prints slides same day processing HAHD,COLD AND HEAt TOM _, , S • FREDDA MEKUL ROGER TIBBETS. STEPHEN WESTFA' OPENING MAY 16 FROM 6'9 8HOWDATES MAY 17TO JUNE 10 0-' I FRY HOU_ TUESDAY ANO WEON ESOAY6'9 THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY 1·8 GARRISON fast service sO EAST VIllAGE EYE MAY"" 1$ S E COND AV E NUE, NE W YO RK CITY 10003 l Zl a } 505-.'38 I .. t '. ABC NO RIO ..-,,. f " , , \ ., .t"t.." '\ . • • . .~ t ""• By ALAN MOORE n N~ar' s Day , 1980, a show opened in • an a ooed city-owned storefront on Delane ~ re et. Named the Real Estate Show . 13 was to expose the dangers that en'II\''M'<\'r':;;>' oaC ' hing development, compounded by real estal s 'eculation and indifference to human needs , was beginning to have on the local populace. The city qu ickly busted the show , confiscated the artwork and began wrangling with us, the artists, over our right to address the public. Out 01 this historic confrontation wa s born ABC NO RIO , the best deal we could extract from the city government , a cold , leaky but nominalrent storefront on 156 Delancey Sireet that gets its name trom an old peeling ABOGAOO NOTARIO (Lawyer/Notary) sign that hung on a tel1ement across the street. The building ha s now been renovated , the sign painted over. But No Rio 's still there , looking pretty much the same, as a younger group 01 restive artists plots and works inside. This place has seen a 101 of action in four years. Nothing anybody planned on , just what seemed necessary at the time . Shows , parties, workshops: paintinqs. poetry, performances . All t.he tal k and people meeting up; and the trouble, alway~ soumething -lires , thefts , official schemes. winos making trouble. The gallery began in the contagious lever of political commitmern . We were going to bust Ihe chops of the status quo. But artists make indillerent politicians in the long run unless Ihey put their art behind them. and in time our central committee went back to their studios. But the place remained. an institution rtespne itsell ~ A seemingly endless procession of people came along needing it. Over the years , No Rio became a way station lor hundreds of artists, and a particular kind of lens on the renascent cultural scene in the lo wer East Sirfe. It is Irom this conception of the gallery rather than from any sense of its transcendent importance that ou r-catalogue has been prepared . The book, 01fidally scheduled lor Fall '84, records the life 01 No Rio through texts and hundreds of photographs. As these excerpts show. this book is an in-depth look at the cultural and political currents at work in the East Village today , at the forces tnat have shaped the growth Of the Eye as well as No Rio and the artists who live here. The book begins with a look at artists' organizanons which influenced No Rio's development, most notable Collaborative Pro[ects. In the introduction. editors Moore and Marc Miller write : "Colab members were closely involved in the emerging rock music and nightclub scene. X MagaZine was printed wilh the money raised from a benefit featuring new art rock acts: the filmmakers used rock songs and rock stars as actors; and Cotab participated in the " Punk Art " show in Washington, D.C . The confrontational performance styles and corresponding "tu ck you " life mode of the musicians ec~~ed the unsettled political developments in Europe. Imagery and themes relating to the terrorist movements in Ger· many and Italy popped up in films played in the nightclubs, in segments of the All Color News cable television show and in the pages 01 X MagaZine. Overtly political posters appeared in the streets, vying for attention with the flyers 01rock bands. Restive artlsts endorsed populist goals- discussing .and attemptinq to actualize ways of changing the art auoence through cable television, low-cost mu ltiple art- works, and different kinds 01 exhibitions. " Shelley Leavitt quizzes No Rio's directors for Bomb magazine shortly alter the gallery opened : " II' s not a dictatorial situation at No Rio . II's not. 'You can only make your works if .. . ' Nobody's saying that at No Rio . We 're saying what are your ideas really. l et 's reveal them , let's expose them and then we'll be able to see if they stand up, if they hold water . No Ria is a laboratory lor art ideas . People bring their chemicals and mix them up and that's it. And we 're not going to,say. well we can't show that stuff because it stinks . We don 't say that. but some of the work may say that." Kay larson wrote in the Voice of John Mortons ' Suicide , Murder & Junk show; " For Morton, art is a bare act of exorcism . He's the one who painted I'M GOING TO KILL YOU on a wall at the Times Square Show. He says he was feeling particularly angry that day: suicide is now on his mind . ' I was thinking of killing myself. so that' s what I wrote ,' he says of his piece on the wall at ABC No Rio . 'Writing iton the wall helped me to deal with u.':: Tim Rollins interviews " Richard" of East 13th Street. exposing the other side 01 gentrification: "You know, we know each otner and get along and talk a lot together, but you 've got to admit that'we're both straining to relate. like you can 't even speak Spanish . We're not enemies but we do have different histories. And I can tell you right now, we can relate and shit, but we don't see things in the same way. like I look at Celinda and you look at Celinda . Now ..you probably see a tough th'irteen-year-old girl and 1 see that too, but I also still see a tough little six-yearold cursing everybody out right in front of their laces.' And I see her as the gjfl that got hit by that lucking ANTHONY BUCZk O • AVA HARh k EITH CHRISTE NSEN' PATRl eJA IeElLY JAM ES CONBOY • NEl SON OCEUNDI SHOICHI SHIM O TSUGU CON wi th F[MINI NE FAMI N[ Sl ACIe HORS[ Anl ipodu n Room - Robe rt M()flto,.~ Courtesy 0 1SHOE R[P AIR , 74 E. 7th St . N YC •• • --- TOP: n.e Cardboord Band at the Iskmd Show, From left, Wolter Robin.on, Ellen Cooper, Bebe Smith, Ud Smittl, Christy Iv" and Bobby G, (INTlR, Rebeeea Howland pa.tes ttle octopus on ttle fran tof 123 Delanee,Street dvring ttle Real btute Show, 1910. BonOM: Cop and passerby out front of ttle lodeed lip Real btate , cab a couple of years ago. And when 1look across the street at those buildings . being renovated I don't see a bunch of burned-out buildinqs. I see where Oscar and Noberto and Rafael and all my buddies used to live before they and kids took their wives , I and left after the fires." The catalogue will retail for $12. During the month of May Eye readers may preorder the boo k for $8, taking delivery in September '84. Post checks to ABC No Rio Book. 156 Rivington Sf. New York, NY 10002. •• ,• CAIDOZ M..,. 4111 . lune 2nd Ope ning M..,. 41h 7 10 ') p.m . 226 EAST 3RD STREET IA\'t. BI NEW to RI( CITY HOURS: THURS. _SAT. 1·6 P.M. OR BY APPOIN TMENT (212) 673-3)(J$ • MAY 1914 l AST VtLLAGE EYE 31 You Call Yourself Barbara Kruger By SYLVIA FALCO N How do )'0 11 relate 10 t he , notion ofarllJl;r illspird- • /1O,,? 11 's SOrt of like trial and error. I ~(' my .....o rks ~rom the verv beginning. l ~ diener of men. The idea is of a series of 3HC'm pIS ; t her e is not one work. o ne masterp iece. I' m nor a " great anis r. " I' m not int erested in thai not ion of greamcss: I find ir very questionable . I don ', In m :m )' Wa)'5, :IS a scnes wail for inspiration 10 of an cm prs ( 0 ruin cctrain repr esem auons and ro welcome the female spect ato r inro th e au- knock on rhc windowpane and come tOOd linJ!; in and knock my bete l off my head . Do l'OIl _ _ _ . _ _ .. ... . "..-~~- _. ..... . -c -.""- ---- ..--- .__ -" - - _........-." u '// !l1 10 qualif)' )'o" r 1t.'Qrk as "politica! art ?' The problem is that rhe not ion of art is such a rcsuicted rerm . There arc JUSt certain th ings you can do rha r are an. W ha t I' m interested in is gene rauve work: rhe q ue st ion s and no tions of wha t is an. I' m more interesred in how images work in society. that freeflowing e bb of image and of words and sound, and how rhcv either reccn sr r~J(1 and per petuate or d isp lace ce rtain con ve nt ions. W' hUI abolll categories 'like " social artist" or "political artist ?" I can su ppo rt a lot o f diffcrcn r kind s o f work because I don ' t want to d estroy d ifferen ce . There's norhing wro ng wit h paintinJ:: tha i ' s no t . jssue-spec ific in a pol itica l wa)'. Thai kind of aurhorirarian view, rhar kind of moral designa t ion of what's righl and wron,g is exactl y what I'm not imcresrcd in. I'm nor illl ~r:st ed i~ bi.nar)' o pposiuon : pamnog \'S. political an or men \"S. wom en . Th at ' s rorallv convem ional. I'd lik~ 10 break th at down into pluralit ies. There is a very divisive mode within the Left that is based in rhe not ion of co rrccmess. I'm not interested in rhe kind of ort hod ox Left line that disallows issues of gende r and issues of feminism . I fecl thar an y discourse th at docs not take fem in ism into consid erat ion is rc mplicir. Somet imes yo u have a kind o f Ame rican boo tstrap femi n ism rhat ignores eco no m ic and class issue s; so what you have is like Pau l Mazur sky bullshi t or (..a,,\H:n ce Kasdan bullshit . tlnmar- ned Woman. Big cu« big sh it like th at: who cares whe the r these oco pic went 10 college and they remem ber each ot he r. t h is woma n t hrew up in Bloom ingda le' s. 1 mean who cares. O n anot her level. 1 am also suspicious of th e more rigorou s econ om ic ana lysis which doesn ' t ta ke gende r int o con sid erat ion . W hat you want is a cooflarionary fem inism wh ich unde rsta nd s issues of class, Th ird Wo rldi sm , 32 EAST VilLAGE EYE MAT 1914 '------------------------------------------------iE~~·;;; -- , domin ance as it is and th e market rhar accomthe accusative: bill, as a panies it , to pigeon hole woman, I don 't feel (IS 1/ work and 10 say, "Well. you're attdcking m e. Are thai work 's political so it yotl ollacking m en ? The doesn't enter rhe capi/alist p ower stmc discourse." For me, as a woman tore? ThaI while m id dlefirst and th en as an artist, age 'male menratity? it was important that my Well, I want 10 di splace work-which J ho pe is something. I JUSt want to critical and is read cha nge a ste reo typic a l critically- enter th at viewing and to make for discou rse. So it' s not only a mo re 3(1I\'(' spectator III posters, which are imporsome way. If anyrhing , tant but they are (Overed when a male viewer says two minutes later by a "t hat's nor me" maybe John Cougar poster: they rhat makes a place for a become fugitive and abo third te rm o r a th ird figu re or a rhird 'person . sent right away. If you Your work is inflamdeal with galleries, you motor)'. btll it 's nothing enter an art historical personal? I, 's 0 11~.r a d iscourse which has been device fa arrest allen/ion ? the domain of men, who Are )'0 11 dog matic ahou l up unt il recently wou ld the " Us " om/"Th""," still look at my work for- , mally and say, "Oh. _ syndrome? I use that as a fixture Hearrfield .-, They.- .-........... because il cxisu . Tha t wculdn 'r undefS tand' the " binarv-ness is a dominant gende r-device and the mode of address. ir's a gende r-add ress because dominant mode of rcccp- the y couldn't afford roo uon . n's a dominant They don ' t want to lose mode of behavior. their power. " Hey, How aboul cOlll lllc lllmg listen, this ain' t me 0 11 specific texts. like babe." It seemed impor"Y01lr p/t'aJ1lre 11 tant 10 address that. IPOWlOdic and sboruived: or ., You reenact the dance 0/ insertion and wounding, ,. that address the male very specifically. Some of them do . bur I don't think that those do. The one th at says. " You construct intr icate rituals that allow you to touch the skin of other men." has an implicit address in rhe re . I think those works had to be said only because we arc being held hostage by a libidinal device that displaces aggression , that turns the whole world into a theater of aggression and -some son of armament . Sometimes you have to be explicit like that. I always felt that I wanted my work to alternate between assorted notions of implicitness and expl icitness. I didn' t want to JUSt show a photograph because I thoughI that whereas the art world might be cool 10 a certain " read ing ," Some ofyour works do verbatize certain rages that women have. fo r ex . ample. " )'Ollr gaze hirr the side 0/ my face. .. For women that is very mecines. Being only the object in tha t su bject /object relation . when I say that I want (0 construct a female su bject. I want in some way 10 have women look at that work and say, " That's the way it is." knowing then that they can de ny that address because they're hip. to certai n construc ts.' The" would ,Vo u sa:rlhot essentially you make work for women? . -~~'F . have (0 make some movement . You have to be active. Hopefully your work can slice th rough the an- world smudge . It can be on the SHeets. J like the idea of a plu rality of activities. l m working on a film; that 's a mystery, but it's also about wome n and their relation to consumpt ion, to murder, love, sex, food and it's a comed y. race, ge nde r. You phrase your text i" Since we're talking about tbe art world and since art is a commodily, do you sell, a lot? Yeah, I've been selling my work. The problem is that my expenses have always been so high that it's always very difficult; photograph y never sells for the prices that paint , ings sell for. You are froma different generation than t hese people coming out 0/ the East Villag e now. It;;hat do y01l think 0/ it? at all thar. tl s In cvcrv gallery, so if ther e 's one lin lc smidgen that makes them feel. " Hey. whc rc's this chick at ?" I' m sorry, but I'm not sorry. Ba si ('~ll y co.nre?"pt. of women ISan Institution in pat riarchy: it's sanctioned . If's somet hing that you do like b reathing . If a wom an is critical. not hateful . JUSt critical. she becomes apologist for a particular reading of my an . It's irn pon aru to conside r the reading of a malt, voice and what irs judgmem of m ~' work is: hut becau se mv work is about a female voice, it's expected that the male voice would try to silence a female voice when it becomes vocal and it becomes seen in pictur es. ~ tu re. so it doesn 't have anything to do with a particu lar area, it' s the same all over. You know I' d rarhcr go to the movies personally. I don ' t go to that many galleries. Film and TV are more powerful cultural forms to me. It 's not ~h " t 1 c,an:r ap precra re pamnng or photographs but to me film and Tv arc where images constitut e social life. NO! in some atelier which is really a reaction . it' s a step back into history. And the reason I might locat e some of my practice there, but nowhere near all of it. is because I still see thai as a site of the meeting between spectator and picture , and J wouldn' t want to aba ndon that site because it's st ill a viable one on a very minimal level. I feel about the East Village the same way I feel abo ut most of the art world. There 's no difference to me bet ween the East Village and SoHo. It's not wheth er you get pub licity on a particular artist or a particular area which is pheno menal; it 's t he constructs thai need phenomena which is the phenomenon . You have this r d ucaYou 'fie been called a non al system thai is gum/la semioiogist . How spewing out much theory does o.ne undergraduate and need 10 underitond your graduate art stude nts every semester and it 's an work? Hopefu lly none. I'm not incredible amount of " a theorist , I'm not an inpeople. Ten years ago abrasive. she's difficult . she's a troublemaker. If ~ n r th ing .I' m interested In rrnperunent corn- mer us. in impertinent Absolutely not, I'm not a questions, I' m more inseparatist. I really deny terested in qu estions th an the idea that men are in answers. If peop le arc bad and women good. going to say. "She' s Moral d ivision is never abrasive," well. that's biological: men suffer JUSt convent iona l for from the pat riarch a l con- them to say that. text as much as wo m en People always descn'be do . Certain men have " dl!filllll " '/llomen as b,'more of an investment in mg sel/de/cat!ng beca1lJe perpetua ting it because o./,their anger. th eir desire is located Anger is self-sabotage. there. A man can rake anger is being pulled back into childishness and ab sence and silence. I'm interested in ill/pertinent Or what men call " hysteria." I think that comments, in i,npertinelJt quesrion». we have' to be very aware of these srcrvor ypes. So if someone savs I' m this or I'm more interested in questions tba» I' m that . I 'know where that 's corning from. Mv til ausuers, work is a provocation on , a cen ain level 10 displace if you were in a certain advantage of the o ption those convemions and gallery, but for me I andsa y. " I know what those accusations with a wanted a more secular she's saying bCTauSC we kind of circula to ry ron reading. I wanted a lot of know what rhc structure versanonal device . I people to be able to is. I know it's not me, " would rcallv like 10 work understand those words right ? That 's fine if thcv out of a position of and pictures and nOl 10 Want to do that , I mean'. bl'nevolenn'; it's in· be issue-specific, like they ha\'(' p lt· nt~, of tert'sling how m an~' peo· "Shoreham Power Plant things to look at thai pie gel upset berau se Go Home" or something makes them fed likt· S(\lllChow whl'n \'ou like that. I was irllcrested gods. that makes tht' m scratch till' surfa;T . sex1n something that played feel that thC\' can shit uality is lO ur h a pOlel11 in· around with thost, dtvict·s eggs. and w~ l k into dicator of that libid inal of criticalit\'.llh ink that temples and , affy seroUs and psychological con· it's so easy 'for the and look like Gt'rman Ex- stru('f . cultural structure in pressionists. So tht,y look I don't want to hI' an .m cO"'l'k t",1. " "',,\ iou, l ....f"" J " ''''L < 1 " ,,,,,.j 1... " " '''''. • •oJ .1'. h ~.l '" , • \" ''' ''' ..r '\'f' ~~,. ""n . "J 571h Street could not accommodate them. So it resulted in the growing of Sol-lo. The East y illage is (he .same. I see It as sysrcmauc . as (JTI?inal illUlgt· mixht generalized cultural pro' .ruhmerxe Ihe im/dicit critif/IIt' in the /j/ork. am/ duction . I was talking to one arfhal anorber is that a/I . /mipnatirJ1! can rein/ ora tist and he said, " I want it 10 , like, disappea r." rllllt.i!.l!('J.r in the all' He was th realened by it dinge. 00 \'011 l/'flllt If) befause he didn ' t unders, conllllNlt? lf you' re petrifiC'd that tand Ihat iI'S just part of the readings arC' going to the phenomena of an and the kind of desirous be reconstituted , Ihen object and site tha t Ihat you remain ab.senr, un , plays withi n society. It's a seen unheard~ and kind of bohem ian advengenerally crippled . You So I exp ect it and I' ll take' the' rap if I have 10 . Y01l hOl/f' said thai ()11l' pmh/" '111 of appro/mll/iot] if tllll! thc'/1 9 /l/('r 0/ ti'f' t ~lJ eclUa l 3 nd I'm not a theorist. But I' m not interested in a language that is defensive about theory because it 's intimidated by it. I would rather suspect authority with a defensive petul ance. Th is kink of ant i.intellectualism that happens especially in 3rt schools is very unfor!tlllate. Theory has a very impo nam pl:tce, but /' hopefully no one has to read l acan 10 undCfSt and my work. rm not interested in illum :tting theory. MAT 1984 EAST VILLAGE EYE 33 ." . "" f f i t . If " " .,. .1' "I I t y • • I. " .'1 1'" . ; " 1 ' 111 ' r~ n ~~II " I" , I. ' . ' .' •• I I ~ ·' .' .' ." " " " ' - BLACK TIE may 16 optional H AL BROMM 90 W EST HROA UWAV AT C II AM HERS 7)2-61% . ........ _ ,$>" #' Ill'\"~ .• "~ ~ ."" w..,,· ~ ~~ .."" I ~~ y '/ ROB HAMELLINE TIM DUCH ROBERT GOBER 'Slides of a Changing Painting' May 10 - June 3 RECEPTION Friday May 11 7-9pm Tuesday I May through Saturday 5 May 19H4 6:30 pm No late admission Jus de Pomme 338 E 11th Street NY, NY 10003 212-674-5389 GALLERY HOURS WEO-SUN 12-6 PA U lA COO PER GALLERY 155 Wooster Street New York 212 ()74_0766 GR IICI E M IINS IO N G li t t ERY -; Gallery DAVID SANDUN TED ROSENTHAL 3 May to 27 May 1984 -"'- - ~ -- 337 EII S T TE NT H ST - N YC -N Y - 212 -477 - 733 1 . 36 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 BACK DOOR MAN by TIM OTHY COHRS d ies of vo m it. In the 1960's Nun's wo rk was co ntras ted with N ew Yo rk Po p . bu t tho ug h N Ull and h is fellow exh ibito rs from Hyde Park. th e n la bel ed th e " Hairy W ho ." sh ared sou rce ma te rial with the Ne w Yorkers. there was in fact no co m pa rison . Wessd m an ' s nu des were no t poc ked a nd co rrupte d : O lde n bu rg's humor did no t t urn sto m achs: W a rhol's coo l had littl e in com mon with juvenilia and th e o bsessio ns of the naive . Writing in 1966. C hicago criti c Fran ze Schulz e d escribed New York Pop as an an o f " cr isp. well-tailored elegance" from " the sta nda rds a nd va lues of th e m iddl e an d upper classes." The Ha iry W ho and re la ted Chicago art ists wr re classified b)' Schulze as SubPop. d erived from sources in th e working- and un d er -classes th at wo uld p rohibit th em from beco m ing irue rnariona l cornmodiries (Arl in America. No v. '66), Schu lze was of COUf'S(" correcr. N UH a nd hi s Ch icago colleagues have retained a co m pa rat ively low prof il e, despite ict u re a n exh ibit ion in an old sro refrom a b rief stro ll fro m ;J; sect ion of se rio us (1 1\' b lig ht. In it the . wo rk of six young a nists. all d iffering in st yle bu t link ed by com mo n sources -c-co rnic books. rhings scat alogic al. na ive a n. ad ve n isin g. and a burlesque of hi gh a n pretension . The work is hu ng o n wall s co ve red with garish linoleum a nd is catalogue d in a co mic boo k. No . th is isn't a not he r closet size ga llery prem iering o n Avenue C. Instea d . it is a n MI:hibition at C h icago's Hyde Park An Center and it introduces the wo rk o f. among ot h ers. Jim N UH . The year is 1966. and thi s is art history ta lkin g . N u n 's work from th is period was m anic and viru le nt . U nder the punn ing m ant le of titles such as De {;reepy Lady. Dam - JIM Mvtt. Which Ever m il (A Lonely Girl is an A wsum Site). and I' m Da Creepy Roomer. N UH p rese nted single j!o Your1. 1'''' repeal ed showings in N ew Yo rk. whi le' Wa rhol' s an nam e and ima ge fire inte m a rional co m rnodines. But in a st range figures th at had suffe red ampu tat ions. mut ilat io ns . a nd any twist. N un 's wo rk itself has go ne o n to influen ce the varic tv of serio us deviat io ns fro m n o rm alcy. O n ple xiglass o r g raphic am. illustra tio n . m agazine work . a nd t hro ug h paper. these figu res co u ld at th is back doo r has co me t ime s see m co mposed of the a rou nd to spark m an y aspects gra ph ic-a n eq u iva lent of pud - • of the' co nte m po rary sce ne . To da y it can pl ausibly be stated t ha t N un ' s influence is pro foundl y mo re widespread th an h is own recog n it io n . NUll ' s cu rre nt sho w a t Phyllis K ind reads like a cha n of his impact. bo th stylist ica lly and in te rms of content . In his colo r pe nci l d rawin g. If/hich E,,~r /J YOUTf . a n aked wom an . gazes into a ha nd m irro r wh ile co mbing her pu bic hair. The sell ing is a thea te r stage where she is co nfront ed b)' a sm aller naked m an holdin g a test tube and an envelope. o r is it a di ldo and a valise . T he scene appea rs na rrati ve. but t he o nly explicat ion N Ull pro vides is a slap -in- th e-fac e ut te red as Richard Homble'on a' Salvatore Ala "ob!" In One Good Look.. a By YASM I N RAMIR f.Z H ARW OOD ho woul d sus pect that Rich ard Ham bleton has a sense of humor ? H is fa me d srrccrworks " Mass Mu rde r." chalk o utl ines o n th e pa vemcm simulat ing a mu rder site . and ne ar naked woman faces a sicklooking casa no va in a cram ped interio r. H ere th ere is a sense of carica tu re and d u m b sm ug ness reinforced by the giant two-faced he ad t hat do m ina tes [he background . Th e hu ge eyes: of the head are echoe d in the eyes of rhe m ain and lesser fig ures and t hen re-ech oed in their prominent nipples unnl every item d rawn seems to be peering from vacant eyes in wonderment . NUH' s wo rk has no litera l o r nar rative se nse. Instead . his ram pan t sen sibilit y is pan naive art ist. part exq uisite d raft sma n . pan ba th room graffi nst. a nd a lways prorraying an inability to co mmun icat e o r co m p lete anion . It is a se nsibiliiy that. as Max Kozloff has writt en . " can ca ricatu re itse lf and t ha t thumbs its nose at its own ang st" (Art/ Drum . O CI. '72) . In th is respect N Ull ' S wo rk ap pears a defi ni te precu rsor 1'0 much o f the a n I have previou sly labe led New H umorist . li ke t ha t wo rk. N UH uSC'S humor as med iu m but no t as me ssage. In the jam- p aeked crea t io ns of Greenblar. Scha rf . H arin g and O J Rosa . a self- refe re mia l pose of mockery is struck a la N Ull . Like o ther N ew H umo risrs. they ha ve bo rrowed from co mic boo ks, have been infl u : enced by na ive o r juve ni le boys an . a nd sha re the sam e man ic claustro pho bia and di sconnection th at is N Ull' s influen ce. In the clu nercd ca rtoon scenes of Elaine Wander (th is month a t Mo David ) o r Ph yllis Bram son ' s tilting world (last mont h at Kn o wlto n) o r t he Iour-Iimbed gro tesques of J onathan Ellis (Ex. ecu rive ~ t Fall). th e shadow of Jim NUll is also availa ble -s-and th is is an histo ry ta lking . wa lls -were maca bre a nd actuall y frig ht ening . But his o neman sho w at Salvatore Ala wa ~ a variew sto re o f kuschv seascapes . m aps. rodeos a nd Marl boro cowboys. batt le sce nes a nd toy soldiers. and lu m in escent painted m irrors . Although all thi s wo rk loo ked so fresh it co u ld be co nsidered experime ntal . H am bleto n 's em brace of such div e rse su bject mail er poses q uest io ns abo u t his a rt ist ic d irection . No law says an anis r's sta te m ent has to be co he ren t. bu t great painti ng sho u ld n ' t rel y solel y o n surface ma nipul atio n to achieve depth . Ever since Ha m b leto n mo ved from his one-no te shado w paint ings to con d uct ing conccns o (ny i n ~ paim in a cacophon y of visu a l tu nes. his un iq ue vo ice has bee n Illumed by the clamo rous rcxrurizarion he po urs o n can vas. Th e cata log cla ims that " H ambleton ' s paint in g di rect ly o n t in Marlbo ro sig ns rcpreSCntS a dev elo pment of post modernist co m me rcial im age a ppro priat ion int o the co nce rns of textural. rhrce -dimcu sional ex pressive' pa intings." To r nc, ho wever. th e fan ih ar Marlboro Alfln is painted o ver a gen uin e Marlbo ro ad does lit tle to e nhance th e paint in g' s metaphor. Th is uimmicky concept of " a ppro pr iati on" o n ly su llies the im cg rn y'o f Ha mbleton 's images. when in fact the force of o ne sincere st roke has the' power to o bliterate a ll Mad ison Avenue lies. Likewise . rhc fre nzied brush -vinuosiiy of AJ the If/ orld Berns a nd Bailie lncident g raph ically d escribes the bi g bla st but goes no fu n he r nothing o n causes or afte rm ath . The seascape Secret 5 10011 c- (named , like man y o f H ambleto n's paint ings. afrcr a daytime TV soap) is the most successful wo rk in rhc sho w. Ha m ble to n deviated littl e fro m the stand ard fo rmu la of roaring se a " N ightlife." lurking figu res o n out doo r c- lithotd Helllltl,toll. Ve nice crashing agai nst th e sho rel ine. exce pt he ad ded a flat . b lack ban d a t each e nd of the ca nvas. T hese bands, Rorh ko-like mo urn in g lines. act as Min im alist int rude rs o n t he o t herwise hype r-exp ression ist wor k. The ir presence un co vers Ham bleton 's wilt ), sensibility wh ich uSt,Ja llr hides un de r a ll the pam t. OPEN STORAGE Sculpture and Painting MAY-JUNE ,. Protetch McNeil 214 Latayette Street New York 10012 212,226 ,8957 MAT 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 37 DE N I S E RECENT CORL E;-' WORKS THIERRY CHEVERNEY MAN1·JUNE'lO Ul CULD lI.'1''IIEEI lJau..n .utIl 1lOO STEB OJ GlAND 4/24 - 5/12 184 O.l'UIlG TUEs 4/ 24 b - tJ BOUBS' tUlS ... SAt 1 - 6 MAR\<.- k(l~IABI 1)~AWIN&S "SA'I LeSS ,ANP SAy YeS: H AP~IL - 2b MAy /984- HAL BROMM 90 WE ST BRO A DWAY N EW YOR,K 1()()()7 (212) 732·6196 CHRISTMINSTER sketches after piranesi S\l)~ l;,ALL~.\l.'i , .'" CD . .JOEL HANOORFF . ,. , . ,. • may 23, 1884 to ju n e 18, 1884 • I opening wed e ve may 23 7 to 8 pm fine a rt . < 336 east 5 street ny ny 10003 212 475 8369 h ours: wed - fri 7-1 0 pm s a t and sun 1 -6 pm steve 8CBW'artz paintings max gallery r626 east 14th ..,. new york city may 16 - june 10, opening: 5/16, 6 -9 31 EAST Vi lLAGE EYE MAY 1914 ._--- Gregg Smith at Semaphore By J E ~ NN E FREIU CH o portray h is visio n a t 20t h ·ce ntu ry life . G regg Smith draws from an eclect ic poo l of su bj ect matte r. ranging from an exot ic East Asian Buddha [0 a Pennsylvania land- scap c . (T he su brcxt of "rhe m aric di versit y" is • photog raph y' s colonialist . u n limited accessing of vastl y d iffere nt subjects .) The co py ing g rid he uses. and leaves Guy Augeri at Gracie Mansion evident. is u adino nally deft and moderrusrically mechan ica l. In a picture tha t transcend s verisim ilitude . A Portrait 0/ Dun can Hannah (1983) illustr ates Sm ith' s de sire 16 present the subject in his full complexily a nd beau ty. Co pio us amo u nt s of pr ima ry red and blue (which Smith de ribes as " d reamy ") used ih ta nde m arc . . \and h'ypar once msouctant noric , fiery and impassioned . A very d el iberat e han d lin g of bo th brush an d crayo n ma rks Sm it h ' s Ceza n nesque Fmit (1982) , whe re rhe paint is appl ied ge ne ro us ly, in flat , even st rokes . The Korean Musician (198 3) is co m posed of agitated. linear cad ences th at th reaten 10 twang right off th e surface like b ro ken g u ita r strings. Th ese restless. mean dering lines a rc see n repea tedl y in Smi t h 's p ictu res. nervously jum ping abo ur with raw , su p pressed energ y. In Southwest Desert (198 3). th e y wh ip across th e b lea k lan dscape like a n electrica l cu rrent. The h ig h ly cha rged lin es of Rocket Launch (198 2) palpit at e excited ly in anticipatio n of t he blast -off In, rcntrast , two sh im m ering, light -filled land scapes. WoodJ ( 198 3) and Rural Road (198 3) , owe th eir t imeless q ua lity to thei r m e asured d abs of red , blue a nd white pain t o n a silvery g ray gro u nd . The effect s of ligh t possible with thi s palette are asto nish ing , as is the way it can define and reveal form . Gr egg Sm it h 's neo-realis r p ic~ u res depict th e mod ~ rn wor ld In a m a nne r ap pro pnate to o ur time and rherefo re di ffe rent from past m od es of paiming . Peter Grass at Serra di Felice By A MY SLATON. I first glance Pete r G rass' s acrylic paint ings of the nighr sky look like illu str at ion s fo r headli nes like " Alie n Be ings Kidn ap Housewife " o r " Su pe rior In tel ligence Fou nd in Galaxy." But th ere is so met h ing m an ge an d se rio us about t hese pain tings. Grass' s hydroce ph alic, seve ra l m easu ring JO by 10 feel . O n thi s scale th e pain tings d raw us in to a Ge ld of wh ite stars. Ilouresccnr b lue a nd green d ou ds a nd d rifl in g figu res. G rass leave s c ut any hor izon line o r in di cat io n of rel at ive size; h is creat ures co uld be inches o r m iles h igh . What loo ks fro m across t he ga llery like JUSt ano ther pin point of light turns OUt to be a t in y space traveller, or perh aps one that is light-years away. A Pttu Gr1II. , Sncrlspoce, I" . whi te- lined figures float t hrou g h t he bl ack fir m ame nt in we ird clu srers -c- almost symme trica l, almost e rotic . W e can ' t be su re whe re o ne figu re e nds and another begins, but the re is somet hing fam iliar abo ut th e way t hese creatures cleave together and so me th ing fascina ting about the deep . velvet y-b lack space where they d well. The new paint ing s are la rge , gangly gu y in hi gh -to p sneakers h as been sliced in half and wal ks off the left side of t he canvas as he walk s 0 010 th e right side . Clearly he' s stuck in a space warp . O ne of rhe besr pictu res in th is show features a clu ster of em bracing creatures from IWO viewpo ints: o ne stra ightforwa rd and t he o t he r st retched o ut as th ough it we re bein g sucked int o a b lack hole . Grass has inve nt ed a whole By TIM O THY COH RS o provid e prop e r sett ing fo r Gu y Augeri' s ca nvases. th e m a in wing of th e new ly e xpan ded G racie Mansion Ga llery was tran sfor m ed vel aga in . Pa int ed a ~ich Gr-w SMittI, FI U;I , l t U la pis lazuli -blue that with Auge ri' s oc h re fig ures set of natural and socia l ph ecrea tes a n a ir bo th sum pno m ena to g ive hi s Str ange be tuous a nd sacred . rhe spar e apyond its o wn cos m ic idcnur y. H e has dro pped m uch of t he pears less a chu nk of East Village ten em ent t ha n parr of a astro logical. geom etric :H1d NA SA-t<:ch sym bo ls that ap ce remo n ial crypt bu ill ncar the edge of recorded history. peared in his last sho w, as wd l Masked p riests, ani ma ls. a nd as suggest ions of Star Trek hybrid a nima l-men popul ate plot s. l nsread G rass d raws t he Augeri's work. see m ing ly just forms of the cre atures rhcmo ne ste p up from rhe selves with increasing fa re and Neol it hic In For Cortezor. a complexity so rhar they have the orde r a nd int ricacy of AZlt'C naked figure dances befor e a fo ur-legged a nima l as tho ug h ca rvings. G rass draws fluidl y. pe rfo rm ing a priestly rite rarel y liftin g h is hand fro m t he besid e a cave pain t ing . This su rface. He intertwines o rga nic shapes int o g raceful bu nd les of figure ' s to rso transfo rm s imo an ant d o pe-like neck. a imposing , blank-eyed cxtran-rsho u lde r shifts int o the face of rcsnials . rhc drawn an ima l. an d irs ow n Th o ugh t hey are just sim p le he ad di sappears into a n ova l o u tl ines, cert ain relat io nshi ps fo rmed of t wo ho rns. am o ng t hese space dwellers a re The most successful o f th ese clear: a cu rvaceo us fem ale is ca nvases, Animal Lift fl. is a lso flank ed by big male g ua rd s t he q uietest. He re a ga zelle or and sm a ller. softe r a ncndan rs. ant elo pe , wirh lo ng horns like so me kind of Q uee n Bee. str iped alte rna tel y in go ld a nd In a no t he r painr ing . fWO sm a ll azu re , sta res directl y Out at the figu res for m the sides of. a nd appear to carry, a hu ge, ico n viewe r. Augeri's rich appl icalike head. T hese sexua l/ rel igt ion of o il and e ncau st ic de fines t his form with co lor iou s rirual s loo k rnor c m yth ic than e ver, suggest ing co ns rellathat appears flicker ing and warm. perhaps illum inated by lio ns neve r see n by mod ern firelight. The to ne is o ne of man. o r a pantheon belonging peace and reve ren ce . as if we to so me o t he r race alroger hc r. are gazing at a sacred beast o r a Despite their forma l ele fleet m essen ge r of t he god hea d . gance , it is so me t imes hard 10 In Animal Life. a slag te ll ho w seriously 10 la ke Grass's visions. It see m s u nusu- o utl ined in a n earth (One g razes am ong three g ree n tre e al th at a g rown-u p, big- cit y tru nks. Drawn partiall y ove r a rtist wou ld treat his su bject th e slag in cha rcoal are its sku ll wit h t he care a nd reve re nce o f a nd skele to n . T he double im a t rue beli e ver -but then rhar's wh at art 's a ll abou t. age recalls Salle, but has no a n -essay sm ug ness of po se . T he Maybe t he re is som eo ne o ut stag reca lls Sch na bel, but withthe re, in fact. ma ybe a whole o ut ho llow bra vu ra of deliver y. spi ritua l world . G rass ma kes the prospect look fresh and Au ge ri pro vide s a sense of t he continued on 41 sub lime . Mark Kostabi Ellen Berkenblit May 9-June 9,1984 SEMAPHORE GALLERV 462 WES T BROADWAY NEW Y ORK 1 0 01 2 212 .228 . 7 8 80 MAY 1914 EAST VILlAGE EYE 39 r; ' ~I' ., " t "'·:f' f f., ~ ,rt, . . AN INTERNATI O NAL SURVEY OF RE CENT PAINTI NG AND SCULPTURE Opens May 17, 198 4 , The Mu seum of Mode m An 11 Wesl 5 3 St reet New York, New York 100 19 TM elll,b,hon was made possIble by IIgri'nl h.om AT&T Ad d'1I0nal SUPOOlI wa s pf oy,ded by th e Na tiOna l EndOwmenl l0r the Arts DAVID REYNOLDS NANCY SPERO DOOMED EXPERTS i and ~ NORMAL LOVE I MAY 5 - JUNE 3 • CASH ~ •• 34 E 7th bet. 2nd and 3rd NYC 10003 673-9366 ; WED - SUN, 1 - 6 i i t PEDESTALS . May 5 -June 2, 1984 Opening: Saturday, May 5th 2 -5PM ANGELA FREMONT ANN MESSNER CARMELLA SARACENO JOSEPH SCHACTMAN TOOT Cu,ated by Ann Philbin Bronx River Restoration Art Center 1087 East Tremo nt Aven ue Bronx, NY 10460 212589-5819 589-6379 11'IhI ..ll lfllflon lu ndW tIr,... 1'0'* $tn COI/I'IdI OIl. Am , 8t'cHf. CouncIl 011 ~ ArtI .Itd 71NComnM.InIl)' DltftIopmMf AQoMct' (APS II',. 40 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 i• continued from 39 st rong sense of t he mystical whi le remai ning u rban an d contemporary. Alterna ting incand escent and b lack light sends th e work t hrough a miraculous change every ten seconds , with th e b lack-lit forms eq ua lly evocat ive and be lievable. nat ural lift / dearh cycle of t he beast an d an accompanying awareness of our own qu ite sim ilar natu ralness. It is a statement on the processes of b rute existence. without denying the knowledge th at consciousness provides us. A com plicat ed state me nt. it is put fo rth with Au geri ' s Strong points: simplici.tr and a tangible unity of VISion . Meanwh ile. Civilian Warfare . like G racie Mansio n . celebrated a seco nd anniversary t his month . Dean Savard an d Alan Barrows mo u nte d a show of ga llery ar(ists to ma rk the eve nt and in it intr oduced Dou g Suoughto n. His piece tu rned the ga llery's window seat int o a da rk and inti mate n iche : dolls and fetishes occu pied th e space like d emo ns com ing back from hell. Drawing from cere mo n ial rribal an forms. th ese figu res evok e a Am•• E•• Gallery " .pen. By WHEELER DIXON if he Amos Eno Gallery. on e of t he fits! SoHo coops (early .70s) , has finally secured new quarters 'after a two-yea r hiatu s. T he ga llery. o rigina lly locat ed at 10 I W oostcr and now at 164 Mercer , reopened March 17 with new work by Connie Dod ge. Forthcoming are shows by Emily Hixon and Na d ine de Lawrence-Maine . The original ga llery was th e site of numerous shows of paimings. graphics. film and video in the mid-to-late '70s. and introduced th e work of Hixon . Harrison Burns (pe rha ps best known fo r his White Hou se/Taj Mahal d iptychs of a few seaso ns back) and others. All of the stuff sho wn there was so new . un usual, high ly origina l and resolutely noncommercial tha t the artists found the mselves un able to get showings for it elsewhere. which is why the ga llery came into being in th e first p lace. Na tu rally th at' s changed with the past few years. and Co nnie Dodge' s wo rk sho ws how t he publ ic has caugh t u p with t he Amos Eno grou p . Dodge 's cloth and wire figu re scu lptu res. most of th em territo ry, and ali I can say is in poses of seem ing suffocation tha t I hope she get s a sho w or at least entombme nt, are at togeth er: now th at th e gallery on ce peacefu l and profou nd ly is back on irs feet. it 's ti me she distu rbing. Wa lking th rou gh too k care of her own work. the Dodge sho w. one get s a Women Mltke Prints: A b rief real sense of com plete removal word is definitely in ord er on from time and sensory exth e show of this name . not pe rience. Th ('S(' pieces repreyou r usual stuff by any means. sent somet hi ng of a departure wh ich opene d at th e Colu m bia fo r Dodge. whose ea rlier work U. East W ing Gallery (Ferris has been mu ch more d irectly Booth Hall. I I 5t h & B·way) . cheerfu l. whatever th at mean s. G raphics by Victoria Salzm an . !4er:- . Dod ge seem s to be workDian a Drukowski . Barbara Ing In a p rivate place be yond G ray. Nancy We lls. Takayo the concerns of the living : it ' s Node. Sarah Sears. Miki worth a tr ip . Naga no and Nadi ne de Emily Hixon . who will show Lawrence-Maine. were notable at Amos Eno in '8 4 . is one of for their usc of differe nt the cemral forces in rhe med iums: all of th ese people gallery' s existe nce ; she has were oste nsib ly doing graphics. divided her time betw een ad but the manner in which each min ist rat ive dut ies and doi ng artist approached her empty he r own work in her stud io on space on the paper W 2 S un ique . 18th Sr. In '8 2 she showed a All o f th ese people arc new. series of " pods. " stu n ningly and ,will be heard from more sexua l charcoals done in a man - dec isively in the future . ner rem in iscent of J udy David Chicago (whose work f o//owl at Manhattan Art Hixon's nor the othe r way By YASM IN RAM IREZ around . althou gh Emily is tOO HARWOOD rnodesr to say so) o r Georgia O'K ceffe. but ccnrainieg an he Imp ressionists. whose elem ent of scu lpt ural auste rity su bjecti ve Style was rival which is Emily's alon e. Before to the camera's cold accu t his. Hixo n d id a whole series racy. were the first group of violent . savage acrylics in her of an ists to fed the " Pax Domesrica" series. which p ressu res of technology. was anyth ing but peace fu l or Monet pa inted a series domestic: she used basic kitfeatur ing th e image of a che n shapes and b lew the m up train . the modern sym bol to ou tsize canvases in th e 4 by of mass mo bilization an d 8 ft . ran ge. sou ped th em u p herald of the rush of the new with lIery b righ t colors in jarrage . .AlmoSt a cent u ry later . ing com binations. and the David Kapp does brushy pa intresult was simu ltaneo usly fu nings of cars zoo ming through ny and horrific. Here . work ing narrow . un po pu lated st reets. with na tural shapes . Hixon is Through h is use of aerial veering off into en tirel y new perspective , Kapp illu srrares K." th e mod ern world in mod ern terms. The pa intings always suggest a sight from the di zzying height of a skyscraper, a look down on a di sta nt and hu rried city. To get Kapp's singu lar point of view in M,d,own Tunnel you wou ld have to be sta nd ing on t he Pulaski Bridge. p referably d rinking a tequila su nrise . as the pu re New Mexico red o range tones characteriz th o Perhaps it was m fulfillment rha pamt a view Street . McG color of Ca Green Ci ly t hen a Tex orange in Me next . O nly t he streaks in Kapp's you th at he' s actua lly po rt raying Ne w York. These pai ntings wou ld be pretty if t heir math em atical compositio n weren't so tough . You cou ld almos t see a Mondrianli ke grid in Lunch. Rat her th an calling Kapp's pai nt ings Const ructive-!mp ression ism . you cou ld say they are dynamic depictio ns of the premier Ame rican cit y on the move . -..r LOOKS AT SLI DES Wedne sd ays 9- 7 PM TON YLABAT May 18-J une 11 MAY 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 41 " ,..---------------------------, ," r"-"""'! . THE SLiCKEE BOYS CYBERNETIC DREAMS OF PI THEIR FIRST REAL ALBUM ITS ABOUT TIME AND ITS ABOUT FUN :'1 " \ ,". ~'t" ,, ~. C"- EveryThursday! i ,, I AFRICAomeetsoBRAZIL TUES MAY8 " f'~ ~ . 'J 'i' ...., " An album of glorious-foolishness, dedicated to the proposition that man can create an equal and absolute other reality, not with the tools of th e physicist, but with the fuzz-tone guitar." Paril.e Puterbaug h - Rolling Slone "The Slickee Boys have blazed a singular and uncompromising trail across - the frontiers of American trash." Drew Wheeler - New York Rocke r " Loud, fast and just as wild . . . this LP roars along like Blue Oyster Cult on acid." David Fricke - Star Hits " A gem." , ! I RObert Palmer - New York Times OLIVER LAKE &JUMPUPI THURSMAY24 M Star of XICA' Award Winning Brazilian Film MAY 29-JI THE GIRL FROM IPANEMA TWINITONE REC ORDS , 445 OLI VER AVE SO, MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55405, 612-377-954 1 Av_ bIlI ill good SlOfes~, Of by mail ($8 poslpaldj Wrwe 101 catalog Disl' 0uIch Etil. arfleflWOrld, ImporIanl , Jem, MeVo Am, Nevatre. Rough Ttade, Syslem.lPC. Tel HANO' ROCKS ,' 1 \ •47 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1984 u.s. FAN ClUB P.O. Box 1591 Murray Hili Sta. NY, NY 10156 Astrud Gilbe 204 vanck St .• 243-4940 y CULTURAL EXCHANGE s,. 81UY BERGMAN n I . 'hire bull."" on. ho Non" e-. "'Sou,h '''- e'' " pound IioI'-m.oon "'··J.;l........ Tht 1 ""*,,,,",• • Sponntl . _ , I mil<, ...... 1," 1 .." h Ro< ~ . " DOn in ....,.b. hn 101,""" ,', •ndla.. " F_ Mon,$n'. n t. ' 0 ,he Thlfd W..,.. I'mi--al of.M CaribOt... in Can .re.... bnlouth, '0 yo.. br·h•• ..- del........ of Cu>bbnn, T qUIMS. , he '" dv Eo· !>n""r..] rb )" n "" of u r_ >J>d ln '''' ' AU . 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(vt 41 • \ ,.-------1 ,.,, - - - :::::=-- , Snake Charm" J ah Wobble/Holg er Czukay/T he Edge Island Records Mini-LP . By ROBERT LEGAULT Cybernetic Dreams of Pi MONIQU£ N.Y. ..............., By CELESTE-MONIQUE LINDSEY h at 's wh at th~ eager teens seem 10 be askin us as th ey waned the arrival of D D g th e Greene Street Cafe on Mat h ura n uran at 2I conference sched u led for no ,St. A press 't il 2 P m wh h on ron r gel started " Wh ' . en t r band fin ally arrived ere are the .crowds?" seeme d to ask the t wenty or so policem en assi d d entran ce and save the five :u~J to guar the expected throngs R ' h y, guy~ from t he crowds down 10 a' ba~~n . .owever. th inn ed th e LiS2 Haun, J~visible Man Im:t ~~~~t;~~orra pher d·d :~~~~3~~;¥E~;~~;'~<~~:~::~'~~'~~~h<" was n,ot a~u~d at all. H;~~n\b~~n:~~ r~}'lor Iman s qu estion s abo ut the ba nd's alle d s po rt for the Th alCher regim e either A ge sup. POJI photograph('~ seen lu rkin g abo~t Ih~t:~_n . t rance . pr ess card 10 hat . told us kids rh h ' was noth1Og like th e d ay rwemy years a' ~ t S th e fab fou r had landed ar j f'K Wh ~ w en . mem . guys? . ere s the ('xn teO n Apr il 12. Ben ina K , f . he r ne w ba nd th roug h it ester.. ale Malan a. pu t Pyram id . The re were a I:t p review pac~ ar the dance. In the downstai rs r~f h~avywelg~ts In au enVito Bru no Berh 8 M ':J saw Ne ll COOper, and god k~w who ~Isee~Ginsburg, l ydia Lunch types' . d . ere Wefe more " indust')' " Upstairs an th ~ verd ict seem ed to be v poSIlIVt". Those who missed h . cry (or lost rime by going to Dat e premrcre can make up Sunday o( Memor ial D nceren a on May 20th _ includ e Sally Berg on d% ' O ther mem bers of th e ban d o n guitar (ex-Sylvain SYJv:}(~x1~' Egosl~vla) . J .F b· ss, Go h~a r rhem. t hey're rea~ly gC:;~~d Krnard on D ancete na h ad two im . , " month . First th ere was Haere~r~g gS, t1l1S pasr an d 30th . Mike Monroe d~" s on March 29th eyes I' ve seen in a wh ', ~te y has th e preni esr song "Oriental Seat" ,I_e . I SCarves too . And th eir auitude. too. i( you kr:. a rt"h loe rapper. Good had .w w at l mean . And on Frid ay A " 13 0 ~k ni~hlrs with ~~~:~r:~ : ;Iinued i.ts S('rik of ghoul time around bu r I' m g l d I rcy. I missed them lasl gh t don 't r~ll y care for th /orh:rab bhe~ th is rime. J breed apart . Th e don e eve ats ur t esc guys are a Lead singer And~ I .d . ch"hfeally look Ihat weird . H d' nr as a very boom' g b e m ay isclaim any intent ions ( rn ass, ~u r ' suggest he ap ply 10 LJo .1 L ° fKX sym bol statu~ I Insur anc;e. YWi 0 london for peJVIC Int o rhe futu~ - sp rin h . spring on t he Lower Eas I'd as arn ved . And with pkin s Square Park conc~ 'it~ comes ~anaqa 's TomBe. Th is y~r's festival wi'; s HII_ e B IS 1M Pl4u 10 an d Su n , May 20t h (R . d Pan"'ID d ays, Sat . May 19 The fesrival. in the ~~nof ~cs M~y 26th & n Ih). attempts to prncm •. Music ~nJlrr Uoa.JOhnstOA, that oolt~ tradirional • ~ancC' and dancewith the tC'C hnoio II pauCT!Js and Imagery balaocC'd . gyofourr~ " Th . Includes. on Satu rday . . C' CUtTem lineup with Richard H d . sta~Jng at 3 p . m .: Jon Hassel h ° 7' }um~rs. f Gtou:d ~A t M t e• l'he}unior)any n rooics. Collin WolCOtt &- F ~n unday: The OnhoTi!fl Cora, and th e D;uba ~lo~n. ~rcd Frith & rhmg for everyone J an AM' . ere ~~J1 bt' som e_ beats, Eastern infl~enc~ b'SIC • Poltrlt"s. Larin al of all and as ,'s h ' .u e D ulch . Most u nusu· t e caS(' with m OSt . b YUna --and /o r Ph r ' h e¥rnts o r~a n l zed Ched if our. e lm : t ere will be Ceh ic music too . P: The Shckee Boys Twin-lone LP Those youngsters who love the rou gh raw sounds from yesterd ay's psychedelic treasure [rove (or the new im itations of them) arc always eager to dis associate the mselves from the mote overly precious side of '60s rock wit h its strawberry alarm clocks and neon rainbows. They don 't always seem ro be aware of the synergistic relat ion shi p tha t existed between the two - or to ap p reciate t he fine line thai separates the syru p from th e real rock candy . The Slickee Boys . long a fixture on the W ashingt on . D .C. scene . walk th at fin e line bet ween bed rock ga rage-ban d and pa isley gar- T h is is a q u ite varied assort ment of sou nds, and conside r. ing th at it' s th e forme r bassist of Pub lic Image. Ltd . plus a bit of gu itar from U2 and lot s of wei rd instru ments from Ge rmany' s an swer to Brian Eno . you migh t expect it to sound fa.i rly unusual - but you' d be wrong . Thou gh lots of lillie odd bits of French hom and electroni c tapes scurry abou t here and the re in the background . t his disc ends up consisting of two rather long , langu id jams in lazy manncr of T raffic' s more excessive mom ents, one prett y and clean fu nk th rowaway. and one fairly cool-soundi ng th ing in a Byrne-Enc sort of groove . All in all not tOO bad . bu t noth ing too dangerous. and with th e possible exception of th e title tunc. nothing wor th running for. Ir." bage -wi th occasional forays into surf and au-go-go- and Nybom a for t he most pa n they end up Rounder LP with a good mix that isn't This record is. yes. not un like N igeria' s King Sun ny Ade. bu t even mell ower - iI' S the gen der side of Africa mu sic, but u nlike Su n ny Ad e's band wh ere a bunch of guilars vie with a whole bunch of drums for su premacy. Nyboma . a singer from Zaire with a smoo th , high . almost femin ine-sounding voice. relies mainly o n guit ars. with the drums p laying more t hei r W estern role o f just -keep-t he beat; they're even played wit h brushes somet imes. Th ere 's a Latin feel to this as well. due mainly to rhe synco pated horn ch arts weaving behind th e gen de bu t insistent st rum ming gu itar, with anot he r guitar noodling aro und in th e ext rem e high register . It even sounds like salsa sometimes , or calypso , but it doesn 't really sound q uite like them eithe r. In ot her words . it ' s go t a sound all its own - and a very nice one at that . rhythm ic enoug h to d ance to but relaxing enough to JUSt sit around and listen to , (Rounder, O ne Cam p St. , Cambridge. MA 02140) afraid to be it bit di ppy in th e name of fu n . and yet doesn ' t ge l too cute - or derivative , " Life of th e Part y" has some killer rwin -guirar leads that wail like the Am boy Dukes. the Status Quo 's "Pictures of Matchstick Men " is given a credible reading . and a coup le ot he r acid -era chesrm ns. " Invisible People " and "M arble O rcha rd ." arc full- fled ged wall-of-sound Freakouis in a St yle t ha i few bands nowadays ca n pull off. Turn on . tu nc in and d rop out. (Twin-tone . 44 ~ O liver Ave. . Minneapo lis. MN 5540 5) A"tisti( Sar:lwt T he Visible Targets Park Avenlle Records EP Temptations a.nd covered in t ha t collection by Tin a Turner. was her im roducrion 10 W are. No w, o n " Let'S Stay Together" (Ca pitol Records 12" ). synthesize rs arc tem pered by T ina 's sexy and sou lfu l sing ing and accentuated by carefu lly arranged horn s. For those who arc too you ng 10 rem ember (or care) th is song exempl ifies where black po p was a decad e ago, before reco rd producers and ot hers in th e music industry insisted th at every art ist co nform to the format of the fledgling d isco in dustry. I' d say it was high time Douhle Double Th ese th ree sisters and their male drummer p lay srraighrforward yet «centric melodic rock wit h little tr ace of either meta lm aiden Strut or th e new b rand of Bett y 800p cuten ess. As such, th ey don 't fall int o a neatl y catego rizab le st yle. not even classic] ' irl-group ; thoug h you nger an mostl y fem ale. th ey resemble hard y perennials like Shoes or NRBQ in tha t they formed an allegia nce at sorrf:e po int to a certain SOrt of hard .edged po p and have stuck to their own bra nd of it. Thou gh i hey work steadily in th e Pacific No rthwes t and have overs have always done some tou ring in Ca nada. been a way 10 get they ' re 'litt le known on th e East 0010 th e cha ns for Coas l. Th is EP. th eir second . th r artist who rewas p roduced by form er Bowie record s t he pa rside man Mick Ron son . Having licu lar song. and heard them live on a nu m be r Hraven 17's Mart yn of occasions. I' can say th at it doesn 't show a lot of the ir Ware has done as rough er qua lities. but it's a prod ucer for Tina good mi x of some of t heir Tu rner what hr (and the rest of many original tunes. running B.E.F .) could n' t acthe gamul from dreamy synt hrock to Police-style regg ae beat com plish with Af,ni, 0/ Qualif] to hard rock, and reprising their local hit "Life in the and Disfi",/ion Tw ilite Zone," a spoo ky litt le turn OUt a bo na fide hit . Aft/sic 0/ num ber. from the lasl record , Thi s is a band that relics only Qllahly was a ral her on tight vocal harmon ie§; a c:deClir. thou gh d riving gu itar be at, an d; very enjoyable co lleCl ion (alchy melodies. Th ink' you can of t ime-wo rn Ame rican po p stand it ? (Park Avenue, P.O . masterpieces covered bv variou s Box 192% . Seart le , W A artists. " Ball of Confusion," 98109) o riginally recorded by t he \ ~ , . , ..._ :t' Nona Hendryx fo~ an AI G reen ret rospecti ve. Looking towa rds what might lay ah ead as pop music conrin ues to experiment and inreg rate different styles of mu sic into it 's mainstream for d igestion by an ever larger and more ad vent u rous record -buying public, we find Yellowman's "Strong Me Strong " and " Disco Reggae ," backed with their com pa nion dubs. Produced by Material for Co lu m bia records. this 12" sing le is bo nom- heavy with vestigial panicles of " t he New Yor k sound" (rap . elect ro- boogie . erc.) blended in . Wh en Mate rial produced Herb ie Hancock 's "R ockit " last year. they used t he su ee twise inge nuity of Grandm ixer DST to insu re integ rity and secu re an im med iate audience for thei r labo rs. Here th ey usc Afrika Bambaala 10 the same end . Ihough in a more su bd ued manne r. Both songs arc " coo l" - d esigned to have you hiphoppin g down th e Street, mixing reggae d ance style (anything goes) with Ihe acro batic moves deployed in break-dancing . The simil arit iC'S arc suiking because ri-ggae " toast ing" is nothi ng bu t " rapping" by a d ifferent nam e and from a geogn.ph jcally sep anlte black i u lture. " D isco Reggae" is m y favor ite , perhap s becau se of the fu nky gru ntS in th e backgrou nd t ha I int ermix wit h Daniel Pon ce 's continlied on 6.5 \ , . ~ • ~ ~ < ~ ;: -•~ r the global village's pri mary bastions of artist ic exp erime ntation , and you ' haven' t been com m uti ng often eno ug h':>: t he GTO (Germ ans Toge ther OOteageously) Festival arrived last month to rem ed y' your unassuaged wan derl ust. 1=iT~ presented eig ht n igh ts (from Apr ilS to 15) of new music and perform an ce at t he Kitchen (cospo nsored wit h Goet he House) dir ect from West Germany. t I The wunderkind behi nd pTO was Bu rkh ard Sei ler. Bur khard t has brou ght NYC' s own SOnic Yout h (and o ther.bands ) to Eu rope'. t hu s balan cin g t he cu lt u ral exchange. and has record ed the likes; of Th ro bb ing Gristle o n hi s Ze nsor label. A "conservative anarch ist" as self-described . th e b lond and blue -eyed Her r Seiler cc nfi, ' d ently asserted that GTO offe red a we llrou nd ed sam p ling of rh e Ge rm an new music scene. " especially from Berlin wh ich is honest right now. " He' s awate l hat GTO's are an Ame rican car im monalized in ou r 'pop mu sic. and also an AI~ erican sixties ,band ("Gi rls To " ). " T he ti tle is a take-off o n those rwo th ings:' he exp lained. T he!festival was ope ned by a d eligh tful ly whi msical an event bearin g th e -ironic tide Sacrar)Strollim ky . A Product of the New $trapi f/sky Resean;h. ~" Sacre du Priruemps'" (v'Rire s of Sp ring '-') is amo ng "S~ rav i ns k y ' s most sole mnco m posi[ions, bu r ' ~ac ra! " is a BaVari in.exp letivt irrrespcnserro the fu nn y an d absurd . Had the Kirchen aud ience bfe n Bavarian . no doubt th e laughter and app lause would have been int erspe rsed wit h endless cries of "Sacra! Why Stravinsky? T here 's a European trad ition o£ 'ir~v.erence for the !,"a~t er. Thoma~ Kapi elski . Friede~ . Butzmann and friend s are not the first to d econ stru ct hIS tousie. Sacra! Stravinsky con sists of da daistic vuiatidns on the " Rites of Sp ring" 's mu sic and dance. which ~iplode the.larter's gravli nt cntio ns into th ousan ds of f1oati~g ab d decon textual i~ed signs and meanings. Yes. th ese are perfo rma nce artistswho take thei r art th eory se riously! IDan cer Judi th Flex appea rs in a f lowingpurple da nce gown. mounts absu rd ly sho rt stilts, and lumbers abou t. T~e ent ire group parod ies the choreo graph ic movement StyJes of Bejarr and Pin a Bausch for ' ' Rite.' T he pian ist delivers a h ighly classicized arrange me nt 0,£ Strav insky'S neo-classic rh ythmic- motif. The motif is fed th roug h synthd lzers to tran sform it into Euro-disco. space mu sic. and a tune hummed wh ile listen ing to a Walkma n .' Finally, th e group d ecides 10 redu ce th e ent ire scere to "one b low." by speed ing up a (ecorde d version un t il it takes on ly two seconds to play. T he concun:.em 'slide· show of\ ph ilosoph ickl qui ps and quotes serves through o'ut as both It heo retical u'nderp inn ing"and rein forcem ent bf th e zani ness. Sacra! 'Stravinsh . " , D ie Tod lii he Doris (Dead ly ~ori,s) . whose film Dfe of Sid Vicious was'shQw'n here jn"'March at An ist 's Space f Berlin and New York are argu ab ly tWO of Germans Together Outrageously : a festival of expen"men tal sights and sounds at the kitchen . by Louis Morra into a Naz i swastika. .~ T he second a9, i( a d ay an imation film of Volkswagens " d ancing" t he choreog raphy of the 1877 Swan Lake premi er. Strains of Swan Lake have em erged th roug ho ut pans 1 and-'2. mi xed J.,ith industrial pulses and rhythms. In pan 3. 'a ballerina r:r i e~ (in p rec ~se parod y of,cJassical ba llet) rc'dance th e T chaikovsky score. bu t IS overwhel med by th'e no ise from VW engi nes.' She falls to th e Floor exhaus{ea . while behi nd h er a d em onsrraric rt film of • VWs driving in graceful pirouettes continues un reeli ng to th e mixt u re of mu sic and engine noise. ~ Bu'tzmann creates an asto n ishi ng ly coh erent th em atic u n it.y in Wolfiburg bet wee n th e Nazi ideal of th e Peopie's Car, and the darker side of th e German sp irit . Wolfiburg is multi-medi a o pera at its m ost accom plishe d , arid Bu u:manri is a consu mmate artist who fa~ t becam e th e GTO Fest' s starring light. J Roundi ng OUt the polh icism of t he-eveni ng was D ie Zvfei. who came on fo llowing Wolfiburg. T h is Berlin whi te 'rap du o ("The Two " ) pe rformed th eir Disco Show, cons isting of th eir songs " Com m un ist Party Mix" and (shades of Andersonl ) " USA. ;USA . USA." Die Zwei employ self-created d isco m usic arid d ance rno veme nrs wh ich , at jfirsr blu sh . appea r decepti vely or OVl >OOW 1160 d inary. As they graduall y exte nd the exp ressive vocabulary of both th e m usic and dance. the perfor"WoNlburg" lu h mann's Yo. swagen BoII. t rnance exp lores power polit ics. ma le/ ma le competitio n . and US/USSR relations. Th eir rapis an inQ nr ive com (an-"'d d escribed in- these pages as the'st rangest nie-'k t hiS s i~ e or the Wa ll) , '"is a rwo women. two men an I perfoeb ination of G erma n . Eng lish . and 1nonscnse syllab les. ' '[B erlirr com poser Dih er Sch nebel. whi le read ing: the ' man ce band from Berlin . T h eir stage performance is ~ea n t to assault and confuse. Whi le N ikolaus plays ela bo rate calligrap hy 6f his sco res. perform ed rwo works built arou nd amplified breath . spoken syllables . and Frirh- sryle riffs on gui tar. Tabea bangs OUt a no -wave' bea t o n d ru ms. At th e ce nt er is W6lfga ng. scream ing g~ nde: tappin g and pa per-crinkling into the mic ro phone and gyrati ng . Karhe and Ta bea often step forward to W ith d egaQrly mimed h and gestu res, he p layed the air as' his instrument . crel ling an invisible space-struct uret rccire a text in th e aut ho ritarian ma nner of headmis tress' o,r more in'bne with the ir sugge stive black garb, The illusion of Schnebel's d elicateja nd subtle performan ce is that h e is a co m poser at work. whose noises and dominarrises. ~ g g9stu res express th e n1usic in hi s rJ ind. The pe rformance Bu t rhere is more tha n tnee rs the eye 10 these neeth us becom es the eq uivale n t of a musical score . pu n k an refugees. Dua l film projecto rs have at in tervals shown the m ythic tale of t he Man / Wo man 's ard tlous \On th e same ptogdm. Florian Iangenscheidr imerpre ted on e ofSc h nebtl' s more libid inous composition s. q uest fo r freedo m and th e sea . When he / she reaches th e waves at last. a tragic d eath awaits. jAt th at mome nt Mbuthworks. This piece also made use of am p lified vbcal onstage. Deadl y Do ris sets the m icrop ho ne afi re, and d isto rtions and no ises} but o nes ofra p rima l. sexual nat u re . Floria n licked h is lips. sucked his fingers. and ~mpl ifi es the crackling feedback. Dead ly Doris is inexg roaned with orgasmic ecstasy rhrou gb a series of inreracplicab le but intense . Not the kind of performance w,hkH tio~s with him self an d hi s prop . a telep hone . Whenever isea silv assim ilated or understood . it rang and he answered , a pre-raped choral cha nt was i Fiied er Butzm ann is a foremost mult i-m ed ia creator heard . Moulh works is an emo tion-charged monologue and Ind ustrial mu sic elect roni cs whiz . who b roug ht to lend ing credence to t he ph ilosop h ically minded GTO h is j -pa n opera IPol/rbtlrg. " on classical ba llet Schnc bel's concept of a psychoanalyuc m usic. and the Cily of th e Volkswagen Com pany. " If Laur ie ~ nderson's USA h as Hec n seriously com pared to Th ~ GTO Festivat rra versed a sPlect ru m of di verse styles and ap proaches to newm usic and perfor mance . The imWa gner 's Ring by a rop Ame rican music critic. it is JUSt lt o see in Bur zmann's W oll sburg a Ge rman eq u ivalent t6 pressiv~ly m onumental multi -m ed ia spectacles of Dead ly Do tis. Frieder BU tzm~ nn , and D ie Zwe-i rangedrfrom imAnd erson 's o pus. " r . provisal i~ and anarc~ y to d iscip lined compositio n. The Like And erson in USA . Burzmann coJla1!es several ' med ia in a critical. iron ic examination of his country's da da- p lay of rhe Stravjnsk y researchers was a ){ind of G reat Dream and nation al sp irit. In the first act . Butzaesthetic explo rat ion r\Ot ofte n found o n ouf sho res. mann man ipu lates live electro nics and tape-loo p overlays while Ihe structu red performa nce .rechniq ucs of Sch llebel of texts about Ihe Volkswagen City. wh ich he has reciled . and Langen scheid.twete exam ple-lof pu te artistry. Ge r. An ani mated film repea ted ly mu tates the VW trademark ma ns shou ld ou t.rage ~~5.~a in soo n in NYC! =; : t ~ i~ , • ~. r" UBI: STREET SMARTS ByJAM ES MARSHALL f New Yor k' s t hou sands of amateu r an d p rofe~i ~m al SU CCI mu smans. Ubi Fer gu son is cctrainly on e of the most widel y known and best loved . Immed iate ly recogn izable with his wide smile, cocked head . low-slung gu ita r a nd sto m ping fool. he is also one of rhe mosr u r uque song stylists you ' ll eve r hea r. Born in Harle m in 1927, he's been p laying mu sic o n the st reets for . t be last 1') years. Insp ired by I Bob Dyla n , who he knew fro m th e Prince Alb en Hotel in the Village in the ea rly ' 60s, he began forging his own sou nd . By his own estimate, fift een years on the meets playing da y and nigh t is like a life-long m usical edu cat ion , a nd has mad e h im into a mast er psycho logist of sons. W hile mo st musicia ns have very litt le to say outside of thei r need to expound thei r own e~o and a bullshir lin e of rhet or ic. Ubi is an a rt iculate . perceptive a nd eccent ric m usicia n . Th e following sn ip pets of conversa t ion we re recorded at art ist Michael Keane ' s studio . " I p layed up in Mont real rece ntl y and people JUSt loved it. Th e y reall y wen t wild . So I'm th ink in ' now I wa nt to go DISC DAWTA BY MA LIKA LEE W HITNEY n now me foo t dem nah touch grou n' . I' n 'l get fe enjoy me likkle regular II· u vus (as opposed to hiatus) inna J ah mekya. de mist of de mountain and de su n fe 1 sou l and one angel fe rek care of I 'ean . I wan tell de I dem , it d id more den' irie- Muaikwise a nd orhawise nufT rings a gwan . One of d e mos' sign ifica nt evems wuz de Rastafari a rts sym· po sium 's prC'S<'ma· lion of Inside South !tInea produced by I. J abulani Taf.ari . The docu mental)' on apan heid in act ion gives a tdl ing and ex· plosivr pictor ial history of th e insole nt system practiced in that low lying African sta te. Th e ut ilizat ion of Reggat" based message mu sic is blended wilh th e spo ke n and su ng narrat ion 46 EAST VilLAGE EYE MAY 1914 to Eu rope for a while . Since I sta rted p laying in dubs I' ve been wonde ring if I' m really bad o r so met hing beca use somet imes people walk out without even fin ish ing their dri nk , b UI p laying up there really made me feel good . A friend of mi ne told me that people he re sometimes don' t feel comfortable listen ing to me because it ' s 100 real. They' re used 10 popu lar, cu rrent mu sic which doesn 't reall y come from insid e. so what I' m do ing wh ich comes from inside makes t hem feel fun ny. But I thin k in Europe where t hey don 't have guilty feelings and such about th ese thi ngs they can JUSt appreciate it mo re. I' m learn ing to sing m y songs ha lf in German . " I call m y sou nd the peop le 's sound. because playing on t he stree t you have to grab peo ple and hol d th em , so when I sta rted p laying I'd make th is certain so und or rhar cert ain sound and I'd see pro . pic t urn around a nd listen and I' d do t ha t thing to hold th eir anent ion . It ' s not really rhe sound J' d envision ed for my have it in your voice , wh ich a lot of the cu rre nt singe rs do not . you become abo ve th e money and t ha t ' s whe n you really have so me th ing . Th e mu sic itse lf is e noug h . What I'm rryin ' to do now is get to the po int where I can love m y enemies. because if I can win ove r m y e nemies I have the best friends in the world . You r friends will always tell you you ' re grea t or th is or rhar . but to love you r enemies is t he hardest lest . "Over in Eu rope t hey know a diamond in the rough . Th ey know how to pol ish it. O ver here they wan t it po lishe d alread y and then Ihey say, ' O h yeah! ' "M y rhyt hm , you say it ' s like calypso or island rhythm. Wdl where d id it come from be fore th ,lI? It's a n African rh ythm thai you find self , it 's JUSt what I have to do everywhe re. It 's in o ld blues to make it on the street so a nd calypso a nd d isco and rhar's how m y sound (a me a bou t. It 's unique bUI I' m JUSt eve ryth in g. II goe s back to t he sa me rhin g you hear in Afr ica. start ing to realize the That 's wher e I ~Ol it . possib iliti es in my voi ce. l've " I ca n tak e a few chords and ~OI a ba nd together now and write a poe m 10 th e m a nd be I' m I!:oinl!: to really do it the sayinl!: th e sa me t h in.": way I want to . somebody else already said , so " I do n 't want to be a m ilI don't write tOO much . I ca n lion aire, I JUSt wa nt to live like ~e l my sound and what I want one. When I was pla yin l!: a 101 to say across on any good so ng . OUt on the st reet I'd make OUI oka y but I did n 't save money . I ' If You Don't Like New Yo rk JUSt spe nt it. The Ihi nl!: is 10 be C ity You Don't H ave 10 Sta y' came abou t on the street. This abov e mon ey. If yOll have a continued on 64 soul . If u's to you and you right register of old ies bu t goodies I say and ca ptu red the crowd wit h call and respon se. th e impact of which I' ve rarely seen. seen. He he he yah . Ini Kamoze. pro no unce de nam e and you have jus int roduced yourself to a new twinkle on de ho rizon . In his First t ime OUI on the stage of mu sical affa irs be de mo nstrated what a talent ed performer he 's capa ble of bei ng in his season . Sugar Minou coulda rot ya dent ures de way 'ow him d id nice u p d id area. ' Ea r me now su p' 'ear me now Stat . Hi m d id buy OUI de audience. confccrionarily spea kin\ ~O",I. Kin",'(<\\0" \~ . ni« ",und "'~'<"" . \" II1i<1" with a pene trating comMot own entry Th e Tam lins Him rek de crown fe de mos mu nicanve effect . The anisrs rocked the hou se all de way to popu lar. Now wedder one ca n whose music is featu red include Baltimore with thei r h ighl y sue- consider him lyrics .....on hy of a Muraburaka, J immy Cliff, D en . cessful cover version . New to Pulitzer prize or an yth inp: (it nis Brown , Bunny Wailer , Oku the group is Derrick Lara who more de al wid geni n' a piece) Onoora, Pete r Tosh , Miriam was an eyefu l! for de dawra and d ats anada manah . Sti ll he Makeba, Hugh Mundell and whose movement s on stage continues to baffle all I. W ilh Bob Marley & Th e Wailen. wou ld put even the most an incredibly confident stage Special mention mu st be give n earnest J ane Fonda Workout presence, excellent timing and to the H on . Mike Henry, Pet er stude nts to task. He' s not on ly a tongue th ai can' t run outta Tosh and Muia baruka who prett y, he can sing too . G ive raun chy, rh yme and reasonin': went that extra m ile and conhim a te n . And then came wha me bafe rate h im . A strong im tr ibuted [ 0 the fu nd raising ef· oh wha ch. Horace And y in t he strong . Arc you read y to srand . fen . making it possible for up and figbr in the Revolution ? Inside South A/nea to reach a D . Brown gOt de lyrics for ya wide r audience. Th e Hon . Mike d is brt"dren always me k de Hen ry. Ministe r of State in t h ~ crowd go wild . H owever . it O ffice of the Prime Min iste r, come like him mail in him pe rconde m ning t he racist re~ i m e . for mance. I check say tis t imt said : " Eve ry hum a n being with for a repenoire revision . Th e an y moral conscience or an y sets are becom ing a bil 100 par form of commitment 10 his & predictabl e. Yeah de Taxi fe llow man should fight Co nnect ion one nice show. De ceaselessly to see th at apan heid promOlahs inn a a whole hea p is d im ina tt"d ." Rastafari : a problems cos ' bo ut ' tree D c I de m kno' de Ryd im Twins tim es de am oum of pt"olt" de dem ? O onu mu s hafe kno ' place cou ld a ho ld IT)' get in . dem oSly D rum ha r and Rob bie Some all go in na de primi ng Basspear were honored for hav· bizncss and mek dem owna tix. ing the real ' righ t stuff to Slay mu ch to de d ism ay of tht" proprofessionally and creatively in de bianess for 10 years. So one show dar dem call The Taxi Connection did keep inna aren a in Kmgstone de osha day. Alia de artists dem who a bubble up de cha rts d id dc h pon it & dar have de pleasu re of be ing on Stage and inna de stud io wid Sly's big Slicks 'a nd Robbie b-a-e-d bass licks. De show feature nuff d upes. Le m me sec if me can memba alia dem o Gregory di d O Ut deh . Black Uh uru who de fence cyan hold , J~mmy Rilt"y come Wang it like a programmed com puter wid Home T·4 giving '~ morahs. So nuff bog us ling a gwan. The security tea m favor some boy SCOUIS on thei r f irst ou ting . they cou ld n ' t manage the crowd . Srill rhe production di d have something 100 many shows a re lackin.": and rhar is concept . and comi nuw of flow in the stage performances. All acts did sha n & sweet sets. all killer . no fille r. W hat a Rrea t roadshow. Hop e Riddim Promoti on s find a way to trod wid .. Footnotes: Oh me nevah - icall fe mention de surp rise ap pearance of rhe illusive Wai ler in da rker s an d J ackie Mill oo <Q~\\ibU\,d \Q 1 ~m "i\\\ \\\, Taxi Gang th at th reare nd 10 tea r t he roof off de arena. The V.O .U.C. H . ch ild ren 's benefit show featuring t he Melod y Makers too k p lace at the fam e Apo llo t heatre. Nadi ne Su the r la nd exudes so murh talent , its a certainty that with prope r a rtistic direction we"l l see her inna Bli/board wid a bullet. T hose guiding Jr. Tu cker' s career . have him slighly m issing his cue, JUSt slightly. A worthy cause indeed . The Int ernation al Reggae Awards takt" place in Chi cago May 41h & ')Ih spo nsored by Manins 100'I.Hear me now got · , ui chune into James Browne WBA I-FM " SlOrm y Mond ay" Frid ays 9am - l l : l5 . Read me. Bob Marley (E. P. Dunon ) over. Can you keep a secret? Code 809. Studio StOp . 130 We st 20lh Stree t. June 2nd . Scratch ' n ' See . T ribu te to Lee Perry fl ash II dread . Th ey're com ing . Th ey' re com ing . Th ey're here! Sted Pulse. Slc ppi ng O ut. G u id ance . I 'J~J-" How did l emm ing." com e 2oo ur ? I started working at the L:lmpoon wh l'n it firsl Sp inal Tap 's Christopher Guest A RAP WITH TAP By Richard Fan tina n yo ne w ho 'sinvo l ved i n r ock :ln d roJl should see This is Sp inal Tap . I t m ay show some p eop le w h:u asses th ey regu larly make ormemsctvcs. A r etntvety m odest film , shoe w ith a 16m m h:mdheld camera, this hilariously good+n:u ured ja b a t '1Il agi ng lu:avy metal band 's No r th American roer has become ttu: corned}; sleepe r year. This is Sp in al Tap is the cresnion of Christop hcr Guest , MidlaeJ McKean (k no w n to m:my as Lenn y i n l averne & Shi rley), /-I:frr y Shearer, and director Ro b Reiner (w ho a/so plays the director orme in a tsu c-ott on Scorsesc 's The Last Waltz). All {our w r ote, o r rather impro vised, the script. McKctut plar s lead s;nger/guicari.~t David St: Hubbins, Shearer is {be dolcish drummer, Derek Smel ls. Guest portrays co-tceagntmnst Nig el Tutncl . Sp i n:/l Tup tu vc relea sed a so undtrack album , ar e p lay i ng gigs in California, and are t hreatening CO cour. 1 first saw Chr iscop herG uest pcrtorm in 19 73 :It Village Gate in Lemmings. an off-Broa d way p roduc tion of the Na ti o n a l Lampoon, Lemmings featu red a send up o f the Woodstock Nat ion-s- " The W/oodshuck Festival ofPcace, Love and D eath , ., w here a mil/io n flo w erpeople gather co co mm i t m .1SS suicide, T hen unkno wn ,j olm Bel ushi p layed t ln: m:Jster of ceremonies suutt oc Cock er. Equal/y unknown Chevy Chasep1:J.yed a HdJ's A ngcJ3.nd John D en ver. A nd Ch riscop hcr Guest did devastating imprcssions o f a m oney -grubbing Bob D ylan and aj unked -oul Jam es Tay lo r. Tony n cndra . w ho plays Sp inal Tap's man3gcr, atreaca Lemmings, After Belushi :m d Chaseg:,incd their massive fam e I often wo ndered w tuu C/J r iscop he r Guest W3S up 10. While speak ing wit h h im I learned ttuu he 's remained busy with a number of diverse but reJ3t b'cly low-profile p rojects. me beeps. wh ich Alan Arkush dirt.'l"led . 1played j cb Magruder in Wi nd Amb ;· ( j o n . I played on two alstarte d in NYin 1970 and hums wirh l oudon Wainthen I did a record alhum, w r i~ h l and helped him p ro R:,dio D inner , w ith Tnn y du ct.' a co uple o f [he eUIS Hcnd ra. I did ma ny of the and I toured with him for a votceson it- Bob D ylan . while . So I haven', exactly Rod Serling-and I wrote been re nred.t've been the musk (or it. Then we quill' busy, I' ve becn Iortudecided to do a show and Tony and Shaun Kdl )' and 1 nate in being able 10 pick and choose what I wa nr rc s ta rted 10 PUI Ihis show (0 gerh er and th at's ho w t.an- do. t've been offered a lot of lhtngs thai wcu td seem min}j's sl:lrtcd . I hi red 10 be more app aren t to peoChe vy Chase, whom I had go ne 10 school wuh at nard ple in th e sense ora highpro file job on tctevt ston but College, and we cast the rest of the sho w togeth er. 1 I chose no t 10 do t hose Ihings because they hired another friend of we ren't rigl u for va rious mine , e autjacobs . to write th e music with me . The last reasons. I heard of Paul. he was playing piano wuh I\.ld lloaf. Kids, He rb ie Duncan and dozens of Ol he r m ysleriou s rock ' n ' roll legends and non · m usic rock' n 'roll raming aboul literalure (an interview wilh king of the J D novel Hal Elison ), W h ile Casde( !) , hOI dogs, bad d iners and more. • Hop Wilson- " Rockin ' In# A Coco nut To p" (Gold band ) Cliff C a rl is l~- "Tha i NaslY Swing " , " Mouse Ear Blues" (Old T;m<y) G id Tann er & The Skillel Lickers- Here Theil' N l' W GUliur and Fiddle RecOrdl (Rounde r) Bob b)' Lc:e 1'rammel- " Arkansas Sto mp" (Atla nta) Blowfly- " Th c Gi rl W am s To Fuck" n'K) Lc:fty Frinel- On e and Only (Colum bia), Counlry Favon'tel (Harm on y) Blind Bo}' Fuller- Wit h Sonny Terry and Bull Cily Red (Blues Classics) D«k &ggs- "CoUllIry Blues" (COUnty ) Neil Young- ReactoT (Rep rise) Saxons- " Camel W a.lk" (Mad ison) Sho rt b u ckl~ O 'R"urke & Famil)'- " I Truly Understand Th at You Love Anulhe r Man " (Nt' w \'<'o rld) How did rou ma Michael McK e-:Jn g('r wge-tJu:r? Mich ael Mckean and I wen t logethe r:1I NYU around 1967, We form ed a part nership then and started wrt rtng songs th at long ago . We we re in acting school toge ther. Michael m o ved to l.A . and joined Ihe Crnlihililr Gap whic h was me group that Harry Shea rer was in. The y'd done a 101 of COOled )' rec - ( o rc s. A gu), in rhe Crcdibili-' Iy Gap knew Roh Reiner, so that' s ho w rhe con nection W:IS made wi rh Rob . Ho w d id This is Spmal Tap 10 school ... COOIC :lboUf ? We we re doing a TV special th at we all w rote for ABC continued on 64 j ohn IkJushi :lnd Chevy Chase w ('m o n ro Sam rday Nigtu Li vc. U 'erc you considc rt"d fo r rh:u sho w or wcr cj-o u ronsidc rinll ir? No, I wasn't considering it. n W:IS a fairly co mpuca tcd snuano n at rhat nm c in- volving persooau ncs. O /<'·OUf"S(', th ose t wo gur s w ent on to huge success. I d idn 'f sec or hC"2r much of rou from th e rimC" oftemmings unril This is Spinal Ta p. In bcr wccn t was wor king in sho ws in New York . I wrote abo ut seven rctcvt sia n shows-Chevy Chase 's spec tat. two Davld Frost specta ts and various comedy sho ws, some of which neve r sho wed up, I wo n an Emmy for-the til)' Tom!in Sped :d in 1975.1 co-produced and directed a sho w calle d Likely Stories. 1 was in tbe film Gir l friends which Claudia Weill direct- THE REAL AMERICAN UNDER et Your Kicks- T he latest issue of Kicks magazin e , t hree years in th e making is withou t a doubt one of the Finest rock' n ' roll magazines ever published . Edit ed by Zantees singer and drummer Billy Miller and Miriam Linn a , its seventyfive page s encom· pass an entire world of rock' n ' roll histor y and irreverem fun wilh a scope th at ' s almost got h ic. Amo ng t he fealures are an inte rview with Esque rila . Link Weay , the Phantom (" Earth 's answe r 10 God !") , Beach Bo}'s. Collins ed. I was in the film Ht'arc· thi nking ir was t he new Alice Cooper reco rd) , anyway, h is latest LP Let 'J Get FlInli.y ~ (New Rose) is a ge nu ine good 'u n (bad titl e thou gh) with a nice version of Hound Dog Taylor' s " Let' s Get Fun ky," and bet ter yet. hop pin ' versions of on the Bell -Notes' " I' ve Had It " and Jim my Dec 's " He nr iett a" . O ne Reason W hy Jerry Lc:e Lc:wis is Inn ocene- Because if the Killer'd mu rd ered his wife the body would have had 28 bu llel holcs in it. I mean reall y- a meth ad one overdose ? You can pro bab ly find it at Career Probl ems: Calling ben er reco rd slores in Man · MCA records for a promo copy hall an or by send ing $3.00 to of the new Jerry Lee Lewis Kicks PO Box 646 Cooper StaLP I Am !l?'hul I Am I was lion. NYC , 10003 . to ld "the reco rd is dead , it does n 't exist:' But it' s in the By th e way, [he Z2mecs' new EP featu res tWO p reviously slores I la id said p romo pe rson and non · released cuts, lhe eer;e who asked nOl to be idemi · " Broken Hean " and a rocki n ' fied . " As far as we ' re conversion of Palsy Cline 's " SlOP cern cd it never ('ame Out, it Look & Lislen " , doesn't exist and we won ' t Roc.kin' Round wilh Cubacknow ledg e it. " Can I qu ole master- C ub Kod a is [he kind you o n that ? " No, we won 'l of gu y whose em ire life is lived mah an y com me nts concernfor the pu rpose of spread ing ing Jerry Ltt Lewis" Is Iht're the word on greal music be il some kind of \Onsp iracy in h is ('olum n in Go ld m ine againsl J erry Lee? Arc the IRS, mag (Vmyl } 11fIli.ie) or his the record industry, Stud io 54 . dozens of records (my person al • and Ge raldo Rivera all in this fave is his fitst- " Pap a Doh ... ~ logt'lher? Arc t hese di reC! Mow Mow" by lhe DeI-,: orders from Ron ald ReaRan? 1'inos, his highschoo l ba nd , Jann Wenner? Prett y fuckin g although I rememb<-r rushing weird if you :ISk me . OUt 10 the record Sio re at age Liute Buckaroos- Anybod }" s 12 loo king for " Smo kin ' In ",host" been read ing t his ('01. The Boysroom " by Brownsville umn for the last year o r SO has Slatio n, Cu b 's bigge st h it. heard me raving abo ut th e m l- • Iy wonde rful and offensive songs of Tchan g & Chandler, W ell now t he aforementione d duo along wit h Vince "rhe An ima l" Brvichevic (d ru ms), George Sulley (bass) and Michael Maracon da (slide gunar) ,ICc known collect ively as th e Raunch Hands and are a killer rh ythm combo with a big bea t. honky· to nk menrali(y and good, greasy southe rn sou nd , From o rig inal t unes like " A Man Nttds A W oman ,,. and "She Sp il It O n Th e Floo r" to an inept cover of Ihe Madd ox Brothers' "Death Of Rock'n 'Roll " (itself an inep t cover of Elvis' " I GOt A Wom an " ) and some hot inst ru ment als like Elmore Ja mcs' im mo rta l " Hawaiian Boogie " these boys know what il means to shake it. This Month 's Quote: " Do n' l wo rry abou t anyt h ing , no th ing' s gonna be aw-righl anyhow ." - Hank W illiam s. MAT 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 47 arid the flashing of sep ia-toned portra its of a young Btu-look woma n wande ring t he neigh bor hood to t he strains of a you ng Brit-look woman . '-i.wa nde ring t he neighbo rhood _... to th e strains of " Every Breath YOLI Take." (Thi s drew a sym pat hetic lau gh from th e Thurs. da y n ight aud ien ce). Ent er: a leather-jacketed yout h seen in silhouett e as he gazes ar the scree n-sized m yste ry woman. Rick Stuart as Joe. te lls the sto ry of hs brief relat ionshi p with rhe elu sive J esse . who. as W (' begin to suspect. has since com m itte d su icid e. Then . it ' s a stro be-lit . arm fla pp ing chase sce ne . some thi ng between the Keysto ne Cops an d MTV choreogra phy. , In anot he r mon ologue . Eliza beth Adams spins OUt a lyrical dream tale in whi ch th e ang el of dea th de sce nd s like a Fra Angeli ca cherub-c-v'he was smaller t ha n me , an d of cou rse beauriful'tc-and wraps her in a del icately erotic embr ace. T he sce nes a re cut like film fast fade -ins a nd fad e-ou rs with m usic pi ped in be h ind and arou nd th e d ialogu e a nd t he con sta nt cl icking of th e slide projector . First-datepatt e r is played with LombardTaylor screwba ll t im ing and covers growing up in t he suburbs. cars. pe ts. siblings. econo m ic class- and th e Barry Davidson and Elizabeth Adams some wha t ee rie fact th at J esse 's a pa rtme n t o n Avenue B is covered with New York POSt st¥le cl ippin gs of violent cn mes. By NANC Y SMALL A quarter of dan cers wit h dance -vid eo , and th e wh ims of an cnucs-c-u someu mes seems chairs p rovides a non -n arrati ve n th ese t imes o f srar int e rlude of dean, gracefu l 10 aspire more than an yth ing biog raphies and People moveme nt perform ed with a magazme-c-an on yrnnv IS no .d se- Io be like the movies. Barry Davison and Elizabe-th sober presenc e. St radd ling the virtue. Everyone has a Sto ry Adams' The Hearl of Things chai rs, wh ipp ing them deftly to rell. Instant - 3 m~ h i . l a y er cake of slid e . in th e air (like a less ligh trecogni zabil ity. It's srill th e projccuons. movement . mUSIc, hearted Agne s de Mille provin ce of th e movies a nd Rodej-c-ir was no netheless dial ogue . and' n ight club act t he a rrwo rld st ill trails somewhat bland a nd beside behind g lamouris preeminent ly a Lower East the poi nt. co m rnodiry -wise-c-even if Side melodrama. a mod ern Th e none-t oo -subt le su brexr romance ot neurosis and global the se day s the East Village an anxiet y. The acto rs. Rick Stuart is of desperat ion . fai led com gbcno resem bles nothing if and Eliza bet h Ada ms. have m un icat ion and su icidal im not H ollywood an d Vin e winn ing wa ys and fresh-faced pu lses. Joe' s respo nse to J esse ' s ap rowl with starry-eyed starlets increasingly num bing pre occu app eal as rbe would-be love rs looking to be di scovered . pat ion with p ublic and p rivate who meet in a bar somewhere As per for man ce an shapes in Alph aberla nd . traum a is a baffl ed lack of and reshapes itself like silly com pre he nsion o n th e side of T he piece o pens with t he pu n y to accom moda te the likes sounds of a hum an stam pede opti m ism a nd feelin g . of monologist-comedi an s. HEARTLESS TIM RIETENBACH FAN CLUB . hero (cf. . Silkwood. The Th ere are funn y bit s. as Right Stuff. etc.) . Wit h its when Ada ms , cha ngi ng in to oversized d ose-ups and th e high hee ls and slinky sequined consta nt surge of pop songs dress clim bs up o n a bar stoo l con nect ing rap id jum p to sing a to rch song: " H i, I'm cuts- Heart was at once und erJ esse. I' d like to dedicate thi s tech (by virt ue o f the lim itato an old friend of mine-c-Ioe ." t ion s an d roug h ed ges of t he Touch ing a nd thread bare . prod ucrion ) and ovcrtc ch . And by turns t his is nothin g if not like the movies. its for m se rves a reflection of cu rem mov ie to lure us into its emo tiona l cu ltu re and its glamo urizing of values a nd glossy ple asure s. t he ord inary individ ual-e-re while leaving us ho ld ing th e mam icizin g t he u nrecognized bag . Gettin ' Tired: Marathon Performance ALL NIGHi LONG By CATHERINE BUSH he ap pea l of th e unmed ia rcd is at the hea rt of perfo rmance improvisa. rion. and at the heart of the ap pea l. the risk. Unmediatcd: th at is to say'. no divisia n betwe en process and product. a performan ce Struc tured by th e real tim e it ra kes to pe rform: a man . a woman . a group OU t th ere on th e floor mo ving . talking. responding 10 a space . a set of circumstances, the un expected . testing mom en ts. solvi ng p roblem s- basic human man eu vers th at, we all use every day - tes ting each ot he r, exploring socia l tension s alt ho ug h out of a load ed social context : in parti cular respon d in g to an audi en ce . under pressure to tap th e ten sion bel wee!1 performe r and viewers. to ent e rtain or at least not to bore th em . That ' s what Bill G ord h. a ren -vear vete ran of performa nce im prov. and 27 ot he r a rt ists will face in rbe five- hou r Get/ in ' Tired o n April 29 at PS) 22. W hen improv wor ks, real tim e beco mes cha rged . W hen t he connection s sag. th ere' s nowhere to hide failur e. Eit he r way. the e a tt e mpt is irre prod ucible . lrs not easy to tal k-c-o r write-c- abour im pro vised perfor mance . Try to gene ralize about t he for m - no scr ipt, no choreog raphy. non e of t he fictionalizati on of rolepla yin g- and you ' re met on all sides by excep tio ns. Most irnp rov is not com ple te lv unstru ctur ed. It 's JUSt as hard to d escribe a particular event since th e poi nt is not so m uch what actu ally happens as th e momen t-to-moment d ynam ics exchan ged : a nyth ing else is JUSt a trace . And t hen John climbed on a cha ir. O ut of context. it doesn 't mean very much. You have 10 be the re. So in th e case of Get/in ' Tired-gett ing t ired , while creating a piece for that long , is essent ial to t he who le performance . In part . it ' s th e d ifficu ltv of rralking about improvised Per formance that makes it hard to d raw audiences. Th en there 's also the tendency. whe n a perfor ma nce doesn't work . 10 discred it th e form itself: imPrc v is boring and unfocu sed , not just thi s or tha t p ract itio ne r. It see ms stra nge to di scred it improv. Gord h points a m . whe n you contra st pe rfo rmance with jazz . whe re improv is no t just acce pted . but expeered . Ca n ' t be a jazz mu sician and not improvise. Per ha ps jaz z im prov is (h at THE WEDDING SHOW - Artl Drama " LIVE" MARRIAGE CEREMONY OVER f'UIILlC ACCESS TV Bo x 1591 Murray Hili St NY. NY 10156 r it E rIt E i< I (t: ., ~1{ W.s ~U<:fIO" ., - inroads galleryl50mercerst. may 9-26 opening maylO;6-Spm APRIL 3O;MAY1,l\8,14 ,1 5 / 6 2 EAsT 4 th mondayJ uesday series- . . .,-_ --_.... -__........_. _..- ...,-......,_ ...~ ."!.-.:f!JI1!~~ w;o _ _ ._~ .' . L A W O M IR M I'iDZ.KW _~~ <;; •••-....-· ....11• is~a~~~r!!d . . . on live TV. Come and Wo{(h at McGovern's Tavern! Mitch Corber Rl"Ildr 51,"1 _ ... l'Of Al O W O ~F P1l.0OUCTKl" 41 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 , S.IIy White mu ch more accessible , good or ba d , becau se it' s at once a more and a less medi ated expe rience . Vocal and insrrumental to nes ma y go stra igh t to the heart bUI remain disranced : aud iences know onl y expe rienced muscians can really "play," W ilh pe rformance , however. it 's easy to judge and think . he y, I cou ld do th at myself. since un scripted movement and speech colla pse int o common ground . T he n again . th ere' s a lot of u ninsp ired improv arou nd . Reall y good stuff is hard ro find . And whe n th e de ma nd s of th e form aren' t met , it' s th at m uch harde r to valo rize t hem . o r for audiences to com e to term s with th e different kind of d emand s th e form places on them . too . I' ve heard peopl e laun ch int o a ·run n ing commentary as if at a spa ns event in order (0 hold the experience together: t hat look ed good . th at d id n' t . Ideall y. spec tato rs' private acti vity m irrors the performe rs' p ub lic o ne -accum ulat ing and juxtaposing e ~ I is sud den . new gest u re: take Isadora Duncan . or t he Surrealists. for instance . These days. cont act im provisa rion con tinues to develop. Bill Gord h has got 27 performers read )' to take the risk . Th at ' s no mean number. out , to be acco mmodating and not to call on peop le or explore ten sion s." If you ' re try· ing to p rove that imp rov's a ppea l is in risk-taking , you have to take risks. Gcrdh hopes Cellin ' Tired will not jusl be a " neat afternoo n " but an oppcrt un h y for pe rformers to think abo u t t heir com m it ment to the- form . Th e fact t hat e-ach art ist has sa t down and written a state-ment about im prov me-an s " t he-y'veall spe nt ti me with t he- p iece othe-r t han sa)'ing yes." Th ecollectio n of art ists' inpur, springboardi ng stateme-nts. in tu rn , sho uld of. anywhere . "Sitt ing in a crowd fer a bridge for t he aud ie-nce. a at Jon es Beach." says G ordh . way of creating a co ntext for " is an improv situ at ion ." At im provised performance . In the same rime. the aud ience add ition . G ordh has h is cowatch es performers make pe rformers ent er an d leave choices. neither parry knowing when ever they like-bu t on ly what will ha pp en next . both en- on ce , " so th ey're o nly t here gaged by sus pense. when th ey really want to be Still. the comp laint s are legi- th ere ." Th e audience , like th e tim at e. Im prov is not give n to J on es Beach crowd , can leave com m unicati ng ideas or starand return when th ey wan t. rling vision . altho ugh . to Sure. improv sta nds in concounter that , an event can be trast to the current move in pe rth em at icall y strucruredc-- ralk fo rmance an towards high ly a bo ut Love and Roman ce. or smmured. theatr ical, sharp ly G entrificati on , for th at rnancr. pol ished events. an d l or events " Focus," says Gord h, "is not th at are bidding for and bein g th e po int. " But t hen improv is swallowed u p by wider. often bo ring , or lazy, th e vehimainstream accepta nce. So cle for self-a bsorbe d . egou srical pe rforma nce im prov won 't pe rform ing th at d oesn 't bother ma ke it to BAM; by natu re , its to acknowledge the audi ence . d ynamics would not succeed in G ord h sees the p rob lem as a large hou se . anyway. No cu rone of com m itm ent : being rent an isrs h ave th e influe nce completely keyed into rhe siror tile audiences of Grand uarion at hand . " You can be Union. a grou p which had its comm itt ed to sin ing in a cha ir heyday in the [ate 60s and earand saying no th ing the whole ly 70s when looser structure tim e ," Gord h says, "but don ' t was in more of a cu ltural just do it becau se you're tired up swing ; but Grand U nion and you ' ve had a ba d da y." also happened to gat he r rogcrher some prett y amazing " Especially wit h ot he r people . th ere 's also a tend en cy to performers. Even t hen , improvisaricn d id not represent a get mu sh)', to smOOlh I h i n ~s Komar and Me/amid VODKA· INDUCED POLITICAL TOASTS By CRAIG BROMBERG Cit izens , co mrades : Another d rink to t hose witt y em igre artists from t he Peopl e 's fath erland . t he Un ion of Soviet Socialist Repu blics. Here' s to Co mrades Kom ar and Melamid . Here's to rheir scat hing att empt 10 te-ach . for t he be nefit of an aud ience . four soviet emigres how to mak e a " socialist real ist" paint ing of Co mrade Presid ent Ron ald Reagan ' s near assassinat ion at th e hand of t ha t I hoo ligan . J ohn Hink ley. Na zdarovva! (At t his po int . th e auI dience d rin ks to t he rranslaror.I Co m rades . as th e sweet, cold vod ka ran down our giddy little t hroats Co mrade Critic Jamey Gambrell winili y tran slated Co mra des Koman and Melamid's incisive d issert at io ns on an h istory. Vod ka flowed in th at ep icent er of t he peop le's an . Th e- Kitche n . right int o t he audie nce . In slides of examp les drawn from t he "rccne t past " by Co mrades K and M, we saw decaying works by those ancient art ist whom h isto ry had left beh ind : Jo hn s. Lichten stei n - you naem 'em, th ey' re in K & M's archeolo gical ru ins. O nly Soviet Socialist pai nting has su rvived . the)' tell us. Why loo k, Ihey say. po inti ng 10 t he red curtain 1_ & . ...MilI, Ncrcsbc w ilh BU$t of Sto li n, 191' ·13 in a David. even he painted in t he socialist re-a list style. (W e toast again he re in praise o f that reactionary Fren chm an . David .) Unfo rtunately. our four Soviet emig res were not SO easily tu tored in th e mysteri es of pa inting Co mra de Reagan 's near-d emise. Co mra des K & M ke pt yelling through bullh o rns for more expression . more bean . but the comrades onsrage seemed to ~ a littl e under the spirits (K & M almost seemed undcr th e ta b le). Even with add itio na l help th rou gh lectures on color th eory and the like , Sesha. Misha et 01 never even got dose to th e desired end . W h)' th is should be so is under exam inati on cu rrcudv by NEW THEATER PRESENTS ...-. The Inaugural Season of 3 One Act Plays THE CITY THEATER FESTIVAL INC, NEW PLAYS IN MAY THI SUI! THUTIlI WO.LDpny f f LITIER • 1RI PARTY " American TIieatre of Aden 31' We.! SA'" Shoot, NYC APIlIL 25-MAY 19 8:00 .... .1hN Sat . It.. ...... 580-2350 $5. Of TOF e~-n9~l'\~ Ind ia's Mast er Voca list W it h K. Paramjyot i- Tabla A Repertoire of New American Plays May 3-27 May 9-28 John Morrison 's Anson Campbell's DIVINE RIGHT VICTORY BONOS W. - and o;no<to<l by J&FERY S. SUO a people 's comm issar. Th us far . the com misa r knows tha t Co mrad es Kom ar and Melamid are ext remely wise anisrs with both feet in the air. (Scream he re: Down with the po litics of com mirment l) Fo r t he m . life is as wacky here as it is there . Th e a n i)' d ifference for th em is rhar there's no di fference: th e system of pen alt ies im posed by the Leadrs on those in either cou nt ry who either will ingly or unwitti ngly worsh ip them o nly hel ps to insu re cont inuat ion of the system . We toast agai n : Three Cheers For rhe Conrinuarion of Things-As-TheyArc! Here's to Cap italism . Herr ' s to Socialism. and Here's to th e- Status Q uo ! As rhe vod ka slips down our th roa ts we ap plaud heart ily. PERFORMANCES AT TH E NEW THEATER 63 E 41h STREET RESERVATIONS and INFO ' 870-0887 ,; 56 - or TDF Voucher THIS PRODUCTION PRf Sl Nl f-O lINffi R I Hf or TH[ NEW THfATfR GmST AI I S P l n ~ ARTISI S PROt~RA M Morn ing Ragas-Sund ay. May 6. 11:0 0 AM Afternoo n Ragas- S und ay, May 20, 3:00 PM Su nset Ragas- Sund ay, J une 3, 7:0 0 PM Nig ht Ragas- S atu rday , J un e 16, 9 :0 0 PM 1984 Dia Art Fou nd ai ion 6 H" rn so n Street l eorner Hud $o n) New Yo rk Cily 212 -9 25 -8270 l ,rn'l&<! Sealing SU'i!'iIuted Con l" bul ,on S8.00 MAT 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 49 · An interview with Penelope Spheeris By Mindy Stevenson with Robert Legault Penelope Spheeris has been a chronicler of the punk rock scene since 1981, when her documentary of l.A. herd core, The Decline of Western Civilization. mixed live band footage and off-stoqe interviews to bring a now-classic set of looks , att itudes and music out of 0 smell cliquish segment of SoCol to tile rest of the world. Its series of stone block and white interviews with alienated teenogers hod the stripped-naked power of Richard Avedon photographs contrasted with the rest of the film's lush color. Spheeris' fascination with the punk lifestyle hos blossomed into a more detailed examination in Suburbia, her new narrative film about a group of alienated kids who comp out in on abandoned suburban housing project on the outskirts of l.A. Colling themselves The Rejected, the punks live constantly on the edge of survival ond society like 0 pock of wild dogs , f~et ing through the gorbage of the rich ond surfing on 0 wave of rebellion. When the wove b-ecks against the segments of society they obhor, the resultant tragedy is violent . ghostly, ond ultimotely. predictable. The Eye hod a chonce to speak with Spheeris and Bert Dragin, her producer, in Roger Corman's opartment in the MoMA Towers. (Corman co-produced). EY E: What attracted you to p unks ? PS: I'd just never seen an ything like th at before -all of a sudden a group of people who were inspired for a m illion different reasons who were so really weird lookin g. and I was JUSt interested in them . How did you and Bert Drogin work together? BD: I put in a 10[ of ideas. PS: I spent ten months writing th e script and t he n Bert said . " Listen. Babe. if you want my money you ' lI have to cha nge some things." I was very surprised . he had a lot of imp rovements for the script . I think J know everything . but he .had some grat suggesuons. like he told me to change the end ing and it was much bett er. What was the onginal ending ? PS: A lot of the stuff from the film was taken from the news. I' m kind of a chro nic news watcher . and the re was a Story on th e news about th is guy who was driving along in his picku p and he saw a coup le of littl e girls and he sho t them both in th e head . So the end ing of the film was that the TWO red necks come OUt to the house and fin~ th e linle boyan his tricycle and take h im to the ~rage and JUSt shoot h im . An d Ben said. " Now Pen elope . Do you want these gu ys to be average Ame ricans or do you warn them to be: bizarros. psychokillers?" And J said . " No. I want them to be: average Americans:' and he said. " Well. then . get it togethe r. " Who came up wlih IlIlthe IIitle strokes, like the muzak in the punk club? PS: Well, I saw that hap pen in a club one time . Most of the stuff in th e film comes from actual QCcu rences. As well (lJ the kids shack ing out in a suburban boarded up home? Yah . that was a place in Los Angeles. Th ere was a group of kids that called themselves TC. which stood for The Connected . Just the oppo site. in a way, of The Rej ected. Yeah . I guess it' s JUSt talking about some differem connections. Some of the kids in my movie are from TC and they've got TC ran oed on th eir han ds. One question obout the movie - the WOlJ J figured it. lhe kids were o lot like the POlek of w,ld dogl, like when they were cute andyoung, it WOI ok, but when there wasn't room f or them onym ore or whotever, they were left to ron WIld. But then on Ihe other hand it seemed like the dogs were Izke the · SO EAST Vil LAGE EYE MAT 1914 rednecks in a woy becouse in the op ening scene the dog kdls an innocent kid ond in the fintZl scene the rednecks 11I11 on innocent kid. It was not my intention tc make an yon e right or wrong in the total sense. J like to loo k at it such that the kids have a reason for being th e way that th ey are. and the rednecks have a reason for being the way that they arc . na mely being frustra ted by not being ab le to fu lfill th eir Ame rican Dream . By th e way. the do gs are from the news too. A guard dog firm let their killer dogs loose when th ey went bankrupt in Californ ia, and the y' re running around this housing tract. I'm JUSt interested in that pack of wild dogs because t hey rep resent to me the raw su rvival element . which is the bottom line in all of us. JUSt survival. Tbat seems Izke one of the main things you brought up in the kids in Decline. too. Yeah . they' re good at it. Street su rvival. between you and them? No . noth ing to my face. I've heard criticism . That you 're ripping them offfo r their lifestyle? Yeah . the word exploitation comes into it. You ' can ' t deal with the su bject withou t be ing exploitative. J read a qu ote from Casey. who 's in the ba nd OJ .. which is in the film . He said the film is 100 % Hollywood bull shit . I would say that most of the kids in th e film arc real proud of it . and woul d say forthright that. yes, this does represent ou r life in a real way. Do they have ony wish 10 be explained to the rest of the world? · I th ink everybod y does. They do . They'd probably never adm it it . Th ey have an attitude of I don ' t care. Bur they are rcallyBD:People . PS:J USf like everybody . On e th ingI' m trying not to do is be a punk-rockspokesperson . If! wasthem J wouldn 't want someold f~rt l i~ e me explain ing my snuanon. DoJOU think thilfilm u es retZlasyou'd hoped itwould How did you get the kids be? to trust you? Realistic?Yeah . but I' IItell I pa id ' em a hundred you ooe thing rbar may bucks a da y. This was like have been a mistake. II is the most money t hey'd real, because asIsay. most ever had . " You don ' t everything t hat happens come to work, you do n ' t comes from actual situ aget paid ." So the y were tions . But I think Itried to the re. pu t too mu ch into as he n Wos there any host,lity period of time. to make it ime resring. Ig uess. But it 's a lot of differem weird ness to be packed into an hour and a hal£. Alllheparentsarep relly awfu l. Doy ou thinJahat 'l relll,ondifso. wbat 's wrong ? J have thisida th at a parent makesa cbild . can crate a child . Andvery few ofrhem rake respon sibilityfortha t. If you Stop and loo k at it . th e parent iswhar the child has spent the most time with , th at is rhe single most effecriveforce. Tberewam 't one set of pOlrents thot were actUOl" y Good folks. I think if they would have been . they wou ldn 't have had a pu nk for a kid . I man there are kids who are in the scene who like their parents . Still. it 's JUSt a movie. With my fam ily situation, I could relate to it. because I had an alcoholic mot he r who was ma rried nin e times. W ho used to throw dishes at me. BD: And ketchu p bott les. PS: Umhum . W hen my moth er saw th is movie she said , to my friend . " Do you know why she mad e th is movie? Because I beat her all her life." My moth er has been so nice to me since she's seen this 'movie . She keeps trying to give me money. I really love m y mot her. We 'r e real. real tight. I've got to ask her if it' s ok if I tell th is Sto ry. It 's not to say that every pu nk has a hippie doper fath er and tha t' s wh y he' s like t hat. In fact there arc a lot of kids who respect their parents and everythi ng 's fine . It JUSt makes for an interestin g film . Did you find ony conflict penonlllly in bei"g 0 woman, in the punk scene, and also on older medio penon ? They 're both 10 Olnttiheticalto whot J lee as punk . Well. J am gett ing a sex chan ge. I know what you 're saying . You know, how t hey'd relate to me is like a moth er. And that 's how I related to them . And so th erefore it was good th at I was olde r. I treated t hem like th ese arc all my child ren and ch ildren must be: good and do what I say. You said that none ofthe pe ople in the film were bad. they were just humon. But it did seem continued on V THINK GLOBAL FILM LOCAL By SHAWN CUNN ING HAM ach year , an advenisement appears in th e Tim es and Voice and ot he r papers ann ou ncing t he selections to be presen ted at th e New D irectors/New Films series put o n by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and Ma MA . Withou t fail. the ad rem ind s jealous film goers t hat in years past others who au ended the series " discovered " the likes of Steven Spielberg. Wim We nd ers. Alain Tanne r. an d John Sayles. and tha t a su bscrip tion to t he eighteen featu re film s means seeing tomorrow's talk of the town today! Although last year's "clinker fesr" took some of the anticipation OUt of th e eighteen screen ings . happily, thi s year' s series was notab le both for its low percen tage of dogs. and for its several real winners-cperhaps even a d iscovery or two. Herewith . a walkin g tou r. Three well-i ntentioned bu t failed featu res qualify fo r t he cellar in th is grou p. KueuranIlIflli (t he titl e means " t he place where everyth ing is tOO heavy ro pick up " and refers to a village in Ghana) is the Fi rst feature of King Ampaw , a Gh an a-born . Ge rman ed ucated di rector. Th e film invo lves t he emrepren euriea l first steps o f a jitn ey d river who h as bee n fired by h is boss. and th e p roblem s be causes for h is wife and dau gh ter. Th is relatively sho rr fi lm seems to miss every beat , beco mi ng a ted ious succession of fam ily figh ts, truck driving and hu stling in Accra, most of wh ich is poo rly written . acted and shot . Alth ou gh b lessed with bc u er acting and production values, B rigitt e Sau riol' s} IIS1 0 Gam e isn't mu ch bette r. We learn t ha t th e gam e is incest when a young girl' s sleazy father parks th e fam ily wagon JUSt off th e road , pu lls h is pants down to his kness and tells the t hirteen year old, "C' moo. get to it." He leches afte r h is ten year o ld and his wife also. but th e latter has bee n clever enough to keep the swine OUt of her pants for t he past year. Difficult as it may be to explain . we are expected to believe that rbjs narcissistic mother, who wo n 't even let he r husband kiss her. and who catches him teaching her youngest how to rn asturbate him, refu ses to believe ' th at th e man in her life con tinu es to use th eir daughters afte r he has prom ised to Stop. In the end , good o ld mom tells the sexually molested thirteen year o ld th at she started it by sed ucing he r fath er at age eight.}II.u a Game is jusr insu lt ing , Th e best of th e three clun kers. My Brother's Wedding, is th e Story of a young ghetto dweller (pierce Mun d y) who is caught between his loyalty to his frien d and the street, and to his famil y and a ben er life. Wri ter/d irector I prod ucer I camerama n C harles Burn ett captures an affect ionate portrait of decem , loving parents and a warm fam ily life , but poor framin g (heads cut off. erc.). a stilted formal sou nd ing script , and poor d elivery by most of t he actors take their to ll. J essk Holmes and Denn is Kem per are head and shou lders above th e rest of th e cast as Pierce' s mat he r and fath er . From Hong Kon g comes Ah Ying, th e sto ry of a you ng wom an who wo rks in t he fami ly fish stall but who longs for bette r and finds it in th e acting classes of a ga me-legged movie d irector at th e local film insriu n e. Allen Pong's film sta rred so well, it look ed like it might be one of th is year' s goodies: bu r afte r th e wel lpaced . colorful fish mar ket scenes which introduce Ah Yin g . showing he r tedious work and d issat isfaction , the film d egen erates from an imag inat ive , soph isticated narra[ion to clumsy. slo ppy and lazy scenes of her en lighten ment . Before th e end of t he film (wh ich recovers some of th e style of its openi ng) her reacherr di recror interviews her fam ily and friends in her presence. Th ese: sessions. plus wheelbarrows of psychobabble'. help her to see life clearly an d to take it by t he horn s instea d of t he gills. TIIJum a. Ch ris Owen ' s featu re made as a d iscussion of New Directors/ New Films changing econo mic and social cond itions in Papua. New Gu inea . is an interesting loo k at t he effects of th e modern world on th e you ng of th e island . On ly th e overabu ndance of repetit ive material (scenes dea ling wit h alcoho lism , slot h. and the de cline of t rad ition al marriage) flaws th is film . Th e same judi cio.. . s pru ning which migh t help ma ke Tukuno a more com pelling film , could help The Ballad 0/ N017lyamo, last yea r' s golden palm winn er at the Cannes film festival. Zappa: the sweet warm lush days of smmer vacation hide the stench of evil. At rwo hou rs and nin e minutes. The 8ol!od 0/ Narayama (t he lon gest film in th e series) conc erns a family in a remot e J ap an ese village where th e ancient law mandated t hat those who reach seventy years must go to Mount Na rayama ro di e. The story beg ins a year before Orin must make her trip ro the moun tains. As O rin 's fin al seasons pass and she makes certain th at her family is provided for. Imamura juxtaposes scenes of an ima ls devour ing each ot her. copulating an d raising you ng. with t he acti vities of the villagers. Afte r an hou r of such scenes: Imamura fina lly set tles into the story invo lving Orin ' s tri p and her sent ime ntal son 's o bjections to her leaving . W h ile th e first half demonstrates t he harsh ness of living in bot h the an imal kingdom and in p rimit ive society. t he second (plot -filled) hour shows com- passion as a luxury in th e hand -to-mou th life of th e peasant farmers. Georges Rouquier is a not .. so-new di rector whose Bi- ..' qlle/a" e (an u pd ate of his classic 1946 work. Fa"ehique, abo ut French peasant life) tcexp lores the pro blems and solutions which moderni zation was br inging to th e peasa nt farmers 37 years ago . Many of th e characters (relatives an d ne ighbors of the dir ecto r) appeared as chi ldren in th e 1946 film and arc now runn ing their own farms. They mu st wrestle with th e d ifficulties of acqu iring more land to produce eno ugh crops to pay for t heir mod ern equ ipme nt . The result shows that in only one generalion an ent ire ru ral way of life has vani shed , taking family ties and a relaxed social life with it. A more st raight forward. con ventional document ary is Ked. diJh. Hu ngarian Zo lran Klein escaped dea th at the han ds of the Nazis. and made." sure that th e son he raised in Boro Park, New Yo rk, understood what the Holocaust was and that J ews mu st be watchfu l for its return . Using int erviews, television clips, voice overs and news foot age , t he story of Zoha n Klein' s influence over his son is told from his first Holoc aust bedt ime sto ries to the son reciting Kaddish (the mourn er's prayer and slang fo r "son") over his father' s grave in Israel. Along the same lines. Euzban Paley in her flr-r featur e film tells th e Sto ry of parent al concern and guida nce among th e suga r cane wor kers of Martinique. who , ah hough freed from slavery. arc as bad off econ om ically, and as poo r of opport un ity as befo re . In Sugar Cane A lley, a you ng o rph an is help ed by his grandmother and ot he rs to make th e most of his ed ucat ion and of th e op port un ities it coul d bring. In a rearjerking end . t h is effectively mad e, p rofessiona l film does not pander a 101 Tum ors of Bndeermem. but celeb rates the d igni ty of human life. human striving . and hu man fai th , At the ot he r end of the psych ic spectru m is the Terence Davies Tn/ag] , a grim set of black and whi te sbon s th at build th e bette r mou setrap add ing hom osexuality and Oe d ipus com p lex to neu rotic English Cat ho lic sex guilt. Davies' almost clin ical concentration on h is subject , Robert Tu cker . from boyhoo d to death . pushes' and pulls the viewer, manipu lating em otion s from p ity to revulsion at every opportu nity . lr's a powerful effan . bu t don ' t sce ir if you ' re de p ressed . Skyline is an am using film abo u t an almost ch ild -like Spanish phot ogra ph er who comes to New York to establish h imself as an int ernatio nal photo journa list by work ing fo r Lift magazine. His innocence and naivete in dealing with mag azin es. agents . " contacts" . women , and the rest of New Yor k City is funn y and touch ing . The dire ctor . Fern an do Co lomo , has mad e a sma ll. natu ral and eruen ain ing film with no pretensions. a real pleasure. Amon g the real winn ers in th e field was Pal Erdoss' The Princess. Th e Hungarian pro, d uction filmed in very gra iny b lack and wh ite was remin iscent of Milos Forman ' s Loves 0/ (J Blonde. an impressio n confirmed by Erdoss' use of clips fro m the Czech classic. Th e titl e is an iron ic referen ce ro j urka. a young girl abando ned by her moth er. orph aned by th e dea th of foster parent s, and moved frm th e q uiet. backward coum yside to work in a factory in bu sdin g Budapest. She learns th rough exposu re to loving prospectiv e in-laws. through su rrogate motherh ood and th rough the kindness of an olde r cou ple what happ iness th ere is in fam ily life . But in the end j utka find s herself alone. raped. aborted . and crushed . The film richl y deserves rheanical d istributio n. Anot he r very good film which will get a commercial release th rou gh Intern ational Speci rafilm . is Billie August'S Zoppa , Th e sweet. warm . lush days of sum mer vacat ion of 1963 in a Danish resident ial district h ide the stench of evil. Mullc. the son of a laborer and Bjorn , th e offsp ring of more m idd le class paren ts. fall und er t he infl uen ce of Sren (t he son of rich u ne mot io nal. uncaring parent s) who is only capa ble of love for h is pet predatory fish: Zappa. Alth ough th e class aspen of the film is rath er blunt ly and sim plistically pur . (the most concerned . caring fat he r is the one wit h a large portrait of Marx on the d in ing roo m wall wh ile the least caring fat her is wea lth y and han dsome and slick) t he film scores its point fer juxtaposin g happy peacefu l scenes of ch ild hood with scenes of the magnetic Sten dr awing the boys into trou ble . gu ilt and pain . It is a harrowing film . Among t he h ighl igh ts of th e series were the sellou t screenings of Improper Conduct, a film co-d irected by Nesto r Alemen d ros and O rlando Ji men ez Leal. Improper Concontinlled on 64 MAT 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 51 L -_.--- ........,.. ., SLOW SCAN By ANN-SARGENT WOOSTER 'v e been seeing a lot of movies and Star 80 made me particularly mad . I' m tired of women being penal ized for being sexua l {notice the brouhaha agai nst the Ca rnival Knowledge show al Franklin Furn ace , with the Mora l Majority trying to den y funding to the Furn ace because of th e sexual content of the show). I'm rired of women as victi ms moving like som nam bulists to their de ath s at the hands o f vio lent boyfriend s. Cecilia Co nd it ' s Pow "bly in Michigan (Am ho logy Film Archives. Ap ril 12 and G lobal Village , April 13) turns th e tabl es o n the usual danIe macabre and he re it is th e ~ women who kill and eat th e man . Picking up where he r earlier tape , Benea/h the Skin lefl off, we me et tWO fem ale cha racters in a sho ppin g ma ll who share a taste for perfume an d violence. Th ey have a tagalong male co hort. wit h a mo uth like a black hole. wirh sim ilar interests. The deccn stru ctcd narranv c set to music hap pens in a colorized slo-mo tra nce. Men in animal masks, a prin ce cha rmi ng. a greed y dog , a woman running in a ga rde n and Sleepi ng Beauty pose d with a lust y vampire and a skeleton appear. Th e women en d u p in a su burban project s to date . O ursler . specializes in low-tech arumal ion of adolescent tales of an gst and bod ily flu ids. He se t up th ree scu lp tural islands; each with a mon ito r wit hin t he broken glass walls of a tOy house a middle-aged woman fami liar with UFOs talk s abo ut her life wh ile we see he r hand d rawing (she refused 10 be photograph ed ); in one corne r, flesh and green banners symbo lizing the middle and under classes fly above a monitor showing sto ries acted OUI by an imated clay figures: in another co rner, a simply co nsrrucred skyscraper cit y like a 3· 0 line drawing is lit by the fl ickering , hearth- like ligh t of a 1V set with its face t urned to rhe wall and from a black box come ch ild ren's voices talk ing abo ut sex ro les. Alth ou gh villa practicing a domestic vcrsion of t he Chai n Saw Massacres, killing , but chering and cooking their victim with t he glee of the witches in Macbeth and the ap lomb of J ul ia Ch ild . In a prosy finale fu ll of iron y. the remains of thei r crime are packed into two Hefty ga rbage bags and picked up by a garbage truck trolling th e streets of su bu rbia. Cleveland based COnd it has evolved a personal style id ea lly sui ted for sugar coat ing the perennial violence of fairy tales, especially her own. Tony Oursl er's installation (in t he dark) L7-U at the Kitchen (March 3-31) is (h e most com p lex and sat isfying of hi~ s . . . .III!'.~ ,"", I KITCHEN SINK PRESS No.2 S. .m p Roe<! _ PTincfton, Wisconsin 5-4968 _ 14 14 , 29 5·6922 NEWS RELEASE COMING SOON! At St. Marks Comix Shoppe 11 Sa int Marks PI•• E. Village, New Yor k 100 03 on 8th S t . Tel . (2 12 ) 598-9439 HIRVEY KURTZMIN I WILL ELDER o 0 D KIfCH EN {~ d 'RE:Ss Color ALSO: GUi" EfSNe~S SpiritQUARTERLY and Comic UNDERGROUNDS! Book/ New Comics Firs t! Ec:tlpn Pa c:lnc: DCComlc:s "' .~ I Comics Back Iss ue s Fa nz ines For The Comic Collector 52 EAST VilLAGE EYE MAY 1'14 2). there was an ot her of th e yearly exhib ition cum 'hands-on trade shows a bo ut iImage- pro,cessing (rh is o ne orga nized by Neil Zu sman) where th e variou s mach ines that mak e somet h ing of an information th is genre possible were soup . O ursler's installation is dem on strat ed . Many of the h is most accessib le work to tapes ha ve been d iscussed in date. argia Kramer's Pro- previous colum ns. bu t two tap es cha rted new gro und . gress (ltftmoTJ) at Hank Linh art 's The Insurance th e Whitney a tale of ma le anx iety Mon1eyJ. (March 13-Apr il 8) the Peter Pan Principle , and sets up an electronic cottage . a kind of home of th e future like you m ight find at a World 's.Fair. A . mon nor resllng on a braid rug alternatel y di splayed a baby and th e words. " USER FRIENDLY." If you ped alled an exer-cycle hard . a man ap pea red o n a moni tor set in front of the cycle and explam ed how he used a home computer as a high -tech version of lists taped to the frid ge. If you sat in th e right spo t o n a piano bench . the mon itor o n top of th e piano de monstra ted a music compositio n program . Kramer 's'ca rl ier j ean Sebeig t Tbe FBI/Th e Media in its various forms was an analysis of th e governme ur's role in Sebcrg's life and de ath . By cont rast, thi s elegant environmer u seems less po litical t hough it docs have omi nous overto nes for th e fu ture of domestic life. Uptown at City Co llege 's Aaron Davis Hall (Ap ril 1 and used a compu ter frame buffer animate line dra wings in a new approach to animation. The slow actio n of the machin e impeded th e narrative a bit. In Jon Burris' s Lit erary Historyfo r Mac,hineJ, he spe lls OUt a passage from Flaubert . len er by len er . to the accom pani me nt of an elect ronic voice. Th e glowing let ters arc very beaut ifu l bu t the ir slow glowing progress is only p leasurable for abo u t two minutes. to .........,..'" j I , . ., •• , I . ·.~ JOHN JESURUN ' By WilLIAM GIBBONS o his own su rprise Joh n ) esurun has go ne from a relatively unk nown filmmaker to one of th e mo st excit ing inno vato rs in New York t heatr e. Lack- ing fun ds to produce his films- he \ \ became interested in the medi u m \ while a fine arts gradu ate st udent at [Yale-s-he set OUI to have eight o r n ine oflh is short " fi lms" produced live at t he Pyramid Club . What resu lted was 36 ep isodes of Chang in II Void • ".'..... THE CONTINUING STORY and often staged in Stren uou s positions. Acto rs have been hoisted from trap doors,laid o n t heir sides and backs (to create an aerial view) . and walked th e plank during blackouts. In Chang, bom bings, smuggling , plane: crashes . art d estruction . and drug addic[ion lake place in mu lt iple time frames and various settings (including Berlin 194 5, Londo n du ring t he 1960s and New York in 1955) . j esurun's m u ltinat iona l cast occasio na lly slip int o their na tive tong ues. includi ng Spa nish , Polish , French , and Germ an . D ialogue StOpS in t he mid d le and con ti nues later, 'is repeated , and becom e su pe r-real. Peo ple can perceive a great deal with very littl e information , It' s no t an illusion I'm prese nting . but small signals. It' s not romant ic. luxur ious, or thea trical. In t he back of t he aud ience's mind , they know it 's a p iece of board , but for the momen t it 's a table to th em ." " It i~ a mistake to view my pieces in theatrica l time ," he conti nues. " It's closer to cinema tic tim e. I don 't necessarily want to determ ine space and time bu t rather focus attent ion on what is hap pen ing rather t ha n when and where . I want the au dience to th ink , but not to try to figure OUt t he next part of t he plot . The re is no map to follow in viewing my wor k. " I never stud ied t heate r. J like to be su rprised, pro voked. continued on 64 • PLEASE GO SEE heareFr performan ces to check o ut this monrh . O an roo t L . Iy present ed the n: '. ' wno prevtous ~rll 1Ja,/ ~" A llack on/ a/Loneliness in which e coo e. and served d inner to th e asscm . the kitchen agai n . lartmg May 26 and continuing o n May 28 J une 2 . 3. 9 . 10. 15. and 17, Froot will d ish Our A n~ A no~her. a fun her exp loration of th e relationship bet ween flo od I' 1" ' Th ' sexua rrv and po Itl~s . nes~ perfor mancelluncheons 'a~e at noo n rn. From s apanmem (6 1 E. 3rd S) d reSC'rvallo t . an ns arc a mu st. He 's on ly se:lring 12 peop le at each show. Call 228-5433 h Shared Fon~s Theat re , whose wit;y work I a~d enJoycd .m the past, is cur ren tly in res. cnce unnl May 13 ~t Commo n Ground . ~9 ~~ost('r present mg e lllti"ating aTO ae. This prece is abou t garde n ing a me taphor. perh aps, for our collective d~sirc Thu d S fodreturn to Eden . Performances are rs ay- un ay at 8 p Ti k nons c~n be mad e by cai,%'g ~~9~;~~~~ $7 and rcserva. . Don [ forget to Stop by the P ram id 0 M ntgh.ts lh ~oughout May. Lydi a L~ nch will ~e fv7 d ay n=ad'~gs In the basem ent . followed by Holly ~ugng , o.ngo mg senes of o ff-beat a d I e~ til led Well 0/ Homin I' n o - co or pla~s . coliecrively has been de scribed b/~s~e aVffin.evericen t hIS work. but it ~Ied .aud Jence . IS back in s.. « Peb~n::ace and Beyond the ~~lle~ ~/:h~ 'l>~/;s~etween . .y 3. at 9 p.m . and aga in at 11 m h ;~;::'d IS p resenting th e first performa~e ~f ~ ~ew Tho' r comp any, the Progrt'ssive O pe ra of Ne w Y k IS trou pe IS actually sra j h " or . sion of Brecht and W T ~nght c c rtgmal one -an ver15 ' 'h er s (J agony. complete with -p tcce ore e~t ra and six singers. Call 420- 1590 r more mform au on . lor ' MI~;Ta~~~;i:~:~~';~i i~ ~ ::;USI4~hc performi?~ is lad y is one f h . ay -o at 9 p.m . ThIS York Sh 0 I c most umque lh catt"r talcOls in Ne w of ' if~ an~ dPr~achcs p:rfo rmance as if if were a m att er Ca ll 477_5 28c8a~ . Raw. In.ren se and incredi bly powerfu l. lor re5ervalloflS. - Wi lliam Harris Moon in 1983, a th ree week run of Dog 's Eye View at occasionally moves toward word ba ttles of rh ythm and conLaMam a in J an uary. and fou r sona nce, " a son of verbal add itiona l insta llments of short ha nd. ' , Chang last mont h . T he sets, minimalist and Now ccmes j esuru n' s latest disorienti ng . use space an d th eatre piece . N umber Minus pe rspect ive ingeniously. W ith . One, wh ich beg ins perforcarefu lly placed pl anes and by ma nces at th e Performi ng toying with th e size and shape Ga rage on May 5. Accord ing o f SCt pieces and props. j esurun to j esurun . Numbu Minus redefi nes th e space of th e stage One involves "an intern ati onal by g iving th e aud ience a ne w del ega tion , a swim m ing pool, or bett er po int of view. By usarid a gu itar ." In his t ypically ing places at various angles tantalizing and m ysteriou s they can become tables. beds, ma nn er he adds, " Of course , wagon trains. an d recording not in t hat ord er of imporStu d ios. A tiny window was tance . " ec nce hun g at cent er stage as a "The serial form at was very clue to a hot el sett ing. diffi cult. on myself as well as' " At first g lance, th ings may the actors. ' he exp lains. referr- not look real at all ." expla ins ing the Chang. " I was forced jesuru n . " But eventua lly th ey into writ ing on ly on e d raft and go ing with it. It requ ired a lot of mu tu al t rust' and respect for the actors , and amon g th e actors th emse lves. Th ey deserve a lor of credit . T hey were very courageous. ' , j esu ru n's winy scripts can be difficult for an actor to tac kle. They are fi lled wit h StOPS and starts. nu merous blackouts, non seq u itu rs and repetition , IlAJ 1914 EAST Vil LAGE EYE 53 LSD: ACID CULTURE BY VALER IE ELLIS sing. a d ishevelled set, hysterical o ut bursts and bellicose argui ng . Liz Lc Co mpte has " mastermined " a critiqu e of male- anxiety . The Wooster group ' s new play. LSD.. is a caricature of how anxiety's flip sid erepr ession - scapego ats, an d who it scapegoats (here prima rily women and lefties)'. Th e play begins with a scene from th e late fifties. Th ere's on ly on e set for the ent ire show; a lon g tab le at which we find Alan W altS, J ack Kerouac. Allen Ginsberg . Bill Bu rrou ghs and Timothy Leary. A rat her offbeat radio announcer serves as Dj . int erspersing her own mon ologue and top t un es of t he d ay, with t heir read ings. Next comes I"c,,,~ ' Compte 's stylized version of .~ Art hu r Miller's The Cmcibte. that famous pa rab le about th e red scare of th e fift ies recast as th e Salem witch trials. Altho ug h it follows The Crocible in ma ny respects. th e W oosler Group 's LSD places more emphasis on issues of rep ressed sexuality than on rep ressed po litics. Th e last ep isode is a retu rn to the fifo ties/ early sixties where the scene is alte rnately a rehe arsal of the pla y and a " be-in ." Le Com pt e has chosen her texts cleverl y: material from the beats. Miller' s play abo ut the red scare an d Salem itself. repr esent th ree mom ent s of " histo rical hysteri a and polit ical turmoil. Each mom ent 's hysteria become s -resolv(:d th rough some mechani sm of exclusion -e ithe r scapegoaring or ostr acism , And although th e pla y jum ps from th e tim e of the witch . hums (mirror of repression and pro hibit ion ) to t hat o f t he be-in (where sex isn ' t rep ressed . but sim ply i ~ nored ). L.5.D. keeps these d isparate moment s with in t he realm of a coherent and excit ing rbeatrical context. 1 suspect- and here' s t he double ircn y-c-thar th is is becau se woman / scapegoat is always rhe effaced cent er o r focus o f the play. . For exam ple, in Part 2. we learn that th e Salem witchhunt is be ing used as a cover to scapegoat Abigail-whose on ly offense has been to comm it ad ulte ry with j oh n Procto r-as a cap tive of th e Devil. And in Part 3. Tituba. th e African slave in Miller' s play. is shown de sperately reh earsing a faint she is su pposed to ' perform' later on . whi le three men ob liviously p lay ' wim p rock' to entice Tiruba's o rgasm /fa int. Obsessed with ge tt ing women to come . rhis also shows JUSt what an illusion th is o bsession really is: Tiruba never can corner faint and her on ly ' impetus' is rock n' rol l love songs p layed by men who ha ven ' t th e fainte st abo ut what wom an realty want s. Irony, caricat ure and bellicosity arc certai nly ind ignant gest ures. bur I wo nde r wn h all th e q uotation- from th e be ats. Miller and Salem -and for all LSD's devcm css. its nostalgic de sire to recap tur e th e pani cked pol itics of rhe 60's, whethe r some of rhc play' s anger simp ly isn 't enoug h now. ' JAAKOV KOHN cOl1/inut!dfrom 25 Aubin. they may be schmucks now - Judy: What happened to the East Village Other after Nat: Well. they were that. why did it fall apart? schmucks then too. Jaakov : Remember the perJaakov: No matter the desonals were just beginning. gree of intransience they if had never happened availed themselves of, they before -then came the sex were the linchpins. mags. then came Screw _Nat: They were simply two and then I'd made my of a set 01 clowns that the point. it had ceased being establishment media chose meaningful to run the sex as pied pipers. Establish ads. It's the norm and it ment-manufactured safety ceased being meaningful. valves. There were forces Nat: Is that what killed it? going on in America before Jaakov: Yeah. Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Judy: So the entire political paper was run from money Rubin. Jaakov : Yeah, but-where by sex ads, are they? Jaakov: Yes , Only in emer. lea , right? I mean do you Nat: They were anonyrnous. Revolutionaries stay remember the San Francisco paperanonymous, that's the name 01 the game, other, Nat: The Oracle, wise they get killed. George :Jaakov; You look at it now Brown and Buzzy McNare :and you get tears in your are in political asylum in ' eyes. I sold the urst run Paris, organizing and solid- ' page ads 'for the underifying. Not leading children ground press)lhat' s what inlo the clubs, guns and kept the Oracle going. Bemace. But then again they tween Christmas and never made the Iront page Easter they ordered eight 01 EVO. The mass full page ads right? But . movements on Washington there was something that started in '62, '62 conAlan Levy was not satisfied tinued to '64-'66, seemed with, we 're talking about to have been weakened by $7 ,000 which was an incredible amount 01 money the popularization, personali zalion and pnvauzawhich nobody had, But tlon ol lools like Hollman. they didn 't come out with Judy: It just sort of peaked the Christmas issue unlit at that point. Nat. July. They didn 'l gel the Nat: II didn 't peak -it was money, Ihey lost it and that was truly un-Amencan. lucked, sabotaged, subvenec. There 's no busiNat: Do you think you ness like show business. could do it again now? Jaakov: The maniac in me Jaakov: This was a momentary occurrence. It chooses to believe I could do it on my deathbed. I helped bring the whole thing about. There had would like to do it again been so much shit going on despite the lact that we and nobody said anything have just one chance to lor decades. Then suddenly hop upand go. Fred Hampton, the killing , Nal: I don 't recognize Ihat 01 the Panthers in Chicago. myself. it ignited something, it Jaakov: Nothing would give worked. And the fucking me more pleasure than to lrial with Halfman- again, kick up a lot 01 shit. Judy: What kind would you ,sheer luck, it worked. But that could never have been kick up? . Jaakov: Well, I would relate planned , you can't plan anything in America - can to the struggle for survival, you see silting down and I would relate to the eversaying KO Mohammed , changing values which are relevant, lor instance, video lake over the FCCon February 1st? II you examine games. That' s the wonderAmerica , there were Ihose ful thing about New York . weird things happening. There's always something going on at any time, Like nowhere else, like Marcus Garvey in his hey- Maybe it involved preconday. That wasn't happenceived plans, more ollen than not it is absolutely and inganywhere else. it happened here. completely irrelevant. Bul that's part of the American heritage, Nat: It comes down to the old saying that the press is free for the man who owns the presses. Jaakov: You wanl to talk about the press, right? OK. who was the most relevant individual in the press circle? It was Rupert Murdoch, Bul would you be surprised if I told you a Iriend 01mine who works for the Post came to me and he said, " You're probably going to hate my lucking boss." I said, " Why would I hate your boss?" He said, " l ei me tell you something, he's the only guy I've ever worked for Ihat not only knew me by first name. but who goes into the press room. rolls up his sleeves and pastes up." And you see, no malter.what people say. Rupert Murdoch responds to the tastes and the wants of the masses, what they want to see. Tits and ass, murder. gore and all that shit. and a lottery! And it wasn 't I'y accidenl lhat circulation of the stupid fucking Post doubled , within a very relatively short period of lime. Nat: In other words , a pimp finds a market. Jaakov ; If I had my choice to get close to the people's ear, hearts and minds, getting their jiggles, tits and ass or any other aberrations. including lotterles. . crossword puzzles and all thai other shit, I would say it's worth il . The tragedy is that he is a righi-winger and he doesn't see things our way . Nat: Jaakev. I respect you 100 much 10 accept this ends justify the means bullshit, Do you really mean it? Jaakov: I really mean it. I would say I'm pretty close to believing it. I tell you, mine would be an ass -kicking rag without great verification, no time spent on verification . II would be a broadside. Judy: No sex ads. Jaakov : ves, of course not. jhey're so corny . Nat: Tits and ass? Jaakov: I like tits and ass, but politically it's absolutely meaningless. It denigrates. The miracle was that in the sixties it didn't qenigrate. it drew an awful lot of people to a totally different consciousness. Nat: Would you sayan one hand. it had kids out in the streets marchingand on the other hand it had peN OS in the bathroom jerking off? Jaakov: No, I . , . Nat: Kid in the bathroom jerking olf and pervos in the street marching? Jaakov : The kids were trying to perform ritual parts with Tuli Kuplerberg in front of the Pentagon. The thIng is, lei me give you another example ot change -tor instance you walk into 'he fanciest 01 offices in New York and do you know what the uniform was? Nat. you weren 't here. Dungarees. Nat: So what? Judy: The relaxation 01 the dress code in schools and business made an unbelievable change in the ' 70s. Jaakov : Everybody 's starting 10 get Ihese bobbed hairdos and it's ridiculous. But there were steps that happened thai were incredibly meanlnqfu! I read a couple of weeks ago where this kid asked his father il he could go up to the trunk in the attic because they were having a 1960s party, he had forgoUen what he had put in them along time ago. Then his kid appears in this fringed vest. right? And he couldn't contain himself, I am not a sentim~nta ' person. he said. but I burst into tears. And when the kid came home, the old man look the clothes and tried them on himself , right? That was very wrong, he wasn't ready lor it- that backdrop to fall back on . even for a minute, is worth it. GOOD OLD DAYS continued fro m 24 Botany on 6ih Ave and 28th? And one also found time 10 go to Leviticus (a black disco), " X" at the old Gotham Hotel, some occasional event at NVNY , gigs at the Rocker Room, etc. Plus, there were the ' bars. places where one simply had to stop by to investigate who was there: I ANTH O LOG Y FI LM AR C HI VE S V. D E 0 5 E RIE5 MAY .,.:. <II' . Zl 3 AL ROBINS . " Realities (two 01 a set)" installation and tape 10 EARLY VIOEO HISTORY Panel Discussion Russel Conner, Davidson Gigliotti. Jim Harithas, Joyce Nereaux, 17 PIER MARTON " We Shall Not Be Moved Movies and Videos" - lectures and tapes 24 ERNEST GUSELLA " What Under The S.un?" Gerald O'Grady, 0110 Piene , Howard Wise Artists Present all screenings,Thursdayeveni~gsat 8pmat MILLENNIUM FILM WORKSHOP 66 E. 4th sr. -'.; Admission: $3 Inl",mation: 226-0010 Supported in part by NYSCA & NEA 54 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 Puffy' s. Ba rnabus Rex. tu. Max's, Park Inn. and , of course, the St. Mark 's Bar and Grill. A lot 01 these places still exist and, many a nighl one can pop in and . . see some faces from the past! Alive! Glimpses 01 great moments flashback! And one starts to remember how Ihings used to be then . . . It was such a short lime ago! Only five years! A/ready live years! How much or how lillie can eve rything change in such a period of time? One tries 10 ligure if things got better or not. Was it really so wondertul tnen? Were we more naive? Can 1979 be already a nostalgia item? SPHEERIS " We have to tell you that we th ink )'OU di ~ not rep resent a cenam group of pu nks very wei I." I said, " Well. what grou p is that ?" and they said , " The peace punks ." " Fucking love and p eace, f ucking have a nice day, asshole. " So the p(llce punks , I didn 't rep resent them . h's hard to get it right . I th ink th at' s one of th e interesting thin gs abo ut it , the cultural ferment . It's not JUSt the party line or anything. Something th at makes me uncomfortable abo ut all of this, is that to analyze it somehow seems to be a blasphemy, you . know. lt bothers me . That 's why I said , I don ' t want to be the punk spokesperson. I'd mu ch rather talk abo ut making a movie, you know what I mean . It just happe-ns that I made a movie th at had punks in it. Two mo vies, I did something I do n't usually do, and th at's to sit here and talk abo ut the whole ph ilosophy of the pu nk th ing , I really fed uncom fort able with it, I don 't want to do it. I d id it, and now I' m kick~n g myself in the ass for continued [ro m jO like a f ace-offbetween these good, m isunderstood kids and the rat of Ihe world. which was cal/ous, sleazy, cOrnJp t. decadenl. The kids had aI/ Ihe eam/arlu of being aI/ of those tbmgs. bUI in facllhey weren 't. Well, that 's what 1 tried , Ol . to do. You know, looks O'.y. are deceiving , " She d id it anyway bu t In the world ofIuburbia she d id n' t want to ," {suburb / ulopia}. violence Whal 'S going 10 happen breed violence breeds an10 Ihese kids when Ihey 're nihilation. How can anarthirty -five or fo rty? chy and honesty breed They' ll be veterinarians. I non -violence? don 't know. The y'll JUSt Hmm. Make all the pro be average folks. I' ll tell pie involved with it hipyou one thing, though , pies, I made the film to )'OU always rebel against be a kind of wa rning your parents. All rhose against people letting their anger get out of con - hard core pu nks, if th ey ever have kids, which tro l. Because I know th at I've not iced that they' re some people JUSt look for really repulsed by babies. take their something to It's like, "Ooh. a baby. anger out on. I hate to have to represent so much how gross." I've seen that a bu nch of differ ent violence. bu t it's there. And I'd like it if we could times. Like, "Oh. look, ; it's d rooling , look , it 's solve ou r problems in a flop ping around ." So I non -violent way, and I don't know if they will thin k that the laid off rep rodu ce, but if they do, GM workers and the then I think it will propunks would too. bably be the ult imate love O h God, I was at the generation , Because you Santa Cruz film festival always go against what and these two hardcore parents th ink . you r looking punks came u p to I'll bet the eleven year me , I mean they had olds are sitting aroun d mchawks. they had iron right now th inking up crosses, they had spikes up to here. and they said . some weird n ip. ,. .' 4 ' By SALLY RANDALL wirh MICHAEL SCHMIDT Sally: How did you get involved with Island magazine? Gary: J hadJ UI/ return ed fro m Japan and met Steve ( Neumann, Island publisher). I had a heavy f ashion background in Japan and Caltf om ia and flolu nteered to work with Steve and Arnold {Bark us, Islan d publisher} to find f ame and f ortune. Michael: W hat were you doing in Caltf orn;a? Gary: Not much {laughs). J ran the gamut fro m styling to choreography to retaIl to modeling . I ended up hanging around with Gil Gilbert in Honolulu who hooked me up with all the hap pening places there and then went to Tokyo. Sally : Where did you meet Steve? Gary: At a Scavullo party . at Piorecci's. Let 's drop all the names. {Gennaro Palermo walks into the Island office.] Is that a Westwood? Gennaro: Everything is W estwood. spectacu lar shows that weren 't representative of the lin es being sold . G immickry for gi m mickry' s sake . Now . Claude Montan a -he' s grea t. He does these glov es a nd th ese wild and wacky ha ts a nd th at 's fin e a nd everybody knows th at , bu t whe n you' do a whole collection based on lin es of spectacu lar ite ms th at are d on e fo r gimmick ' s sake - well , th e y're never sold . They do a lot of these shows for inre rna- , rion al press where they put together clot hes rhar are fo r white women . I saw th ings with Chiffon tra ins of 7 or 8 fee t. Sally : What fI:ill we see in Spring clothing? w ry: Patent leather shoes and white linen. Everything is pa te n t leather sho es. It may have so meth ing to do with m y first pair of Brooks Brothers rusedc p umps. Sally: What else? Gary : Sho rts, suits, th rowbac ks to other eras . . . Be it pe rfect 20s to a do se of gfam -rcck . Sally: And dayglo? Gary : Of course. Michael: Why "of course " ? Gary : It ' s healthy for one 's outlook to wea r colors t ha t are b linding . I personally blame St ephen Sprouse fo r it. Sally: Not made fo r a Japanese woman. . , Sally: So it 's not fro m th e dayglo we've been seeing in art ? Gary: I don ' t lik e a rt . Michael: Wh at about the connection bet ween art andfashion ? Gary : Fash ion is a n a rt .. . I 'm looking for a new word . I' m invo lved in the fashion bu siness, (0 the degree of ha ving a job . To carry it beyond tha t is mast urbatio n . Michael: Back'to p ersonal style as an art . . . Gary: As a self-expression that needs to be reflected upo n . I still can ' t find better words. . . !tfic!Jt1el: Let 's call tbem X and Y. • Gary: . .. nOt eve n for an American woman who's gor to get OUt of a car a nd a revol ving door. I like functional fashio n . Wit h a lot of t he clothes that I wear, it 's somet hing I can fall asleep in a nd roll out of bed the nex t day in . I like the idea of havin g t hings that aren ' t a rou nd a nywhere as well, a nd even if someone tries to ma ke it aga in , it won 't be the same. But I'm not th at territori al about m y look: Sally : Would )·OU Illy IIJt1t most people are? It seems tbat some people ar~ quile concerned with their look . Gary: Reduce the m to algebraic expressions! Gary: It 's TOO goddamn serious! Sitlly: Whal would you like 10 see happen in fashion ? Gary: For people co SitUy: Sprouse isn 't $0 sm ous . . . "ayglo iIn '1 real serious . . . become not so drop dead serio us about it . Michael: Sp eaking Westwood. . . ~ry : I' m no big fan of Westwood 's , but I' m not ' as d ose to the p ulsebeat of W est wood in New York . I see it as ba d ly shaped ga rments t ha t do n 't flatter . !tfic/Jt1el: We~e )'OU in Tokyo du,;ng the u.'hole Japanese mOflem ent? Gary : Yes, but there are srill a number of desig ners t tht a re not availab le he re: Femme d u Men age, Niho n Half, Tokio .. . offs hoots ofJun Co mparry. Chariva ri has been buying the m but t hey 're not well represented he re in the States . Tokyo is very tre nd y, It's like catt le fashion; a bu nch of litt le j a pan ese girls in black wit h blu nt cut s a nd lOIS of eyeli ne r. Toko a nd Saiyoko clones -c-rhey're all very cute Inn ovation com es . . . bu t also. t hey have th e largest fashio n com panies. Most of th e d esign ers t hat we all know have a team of no less than 10 or 12 designers work ing un der them . J ap an is · ... hea vily known for re-. adaptations. I saw a lot of Ga ry: Ste p he n 's int erpretat ion of d ayglo has really grabbed a ho ld of I it t he way that no one has as a sym hesuaricn a nd a fusion of a movement t hat wasn ' t d ead . Sally: When did f ashion become a concern 10 you ? Ga ry: My parents sta rte d buying lea th e r jackets for me whe n i m ust have been abo ut 10. I can remember wanting a p urple suit. And m y mother wou ld n' t let me wea r bowries until I was 16 because I loo ked like a lit tle 'preacher. I had a cha rge card a t 16, bu t I was q uite a fashio n rebel in high school . I never conformed to a nything . Michael: What aboul mainstream fashion now taking its cue from the look of this parlicular neighborhood? _ Gary : I t hi nk ir's a good t hing . D own here people don 't have to be concemed with whet he r they a n wear hot pi nk stockings to work . Most of t he kids don 't work, a nd when you get eno ug h people tak ing it. interpreting it purring it o n a mass scale, rhat eventualIy places it in Bergdorf's windows, which mak es it accep table to wea r. Y ~ , it is t he mass marketi ng ofan idea . But the n if these kids are sma n enou gh 10 wea r it th ey sho u ld be sma rt e no ug h to sell it . Sally: What do you ultimalely wanl 10 do ? ~ry : Th at ' s a d ifficu lt questio n because I ~ m yself as between e ndeavors . .. whac I' m a tte m pt ing to do now is art d irect ion in videos. so me th in g that appeals to me . I proba bly could be a m uch more ma jor success if I could cha nnel myself bu t I like everything rhar I' m doing now, even if it does fill up m y book too q uickly an d I ' m run ni ng around like a man iac. Sally: Do you f iflJ that il diffuses your energy? Gary : I don ' t think th at it 's po ssible. I' ve got too m uch . The th ing is th at I don ' t want to come off as a n a utho rity on a nyt'i ng . AU I really want co d o is just say t hat I thi nk t hat I've go t enoug h of a sen sib ility th at I can take what I ~ as interesting an d edi t ir a nd reinterpret il a nd presen t it so t hat more people can see it. In effecr. peop le are seeing th ese th ings t hroug h my eyes. Sally: I' m Irying to remember u:ho it "'as who told me in 1979 lhat tb e '80s teas th e era of editi"g. . . MAl I' " EAST VILLAGE EYE 55 I • \ \ • ) J ., THE E{ROT)IC POTATO PART III: A GULAG OF THE MIND By PATIUCK MCGRATII TIlE STORY SO FAR , Deep in My reminiscences were rudely the festering innards of the disturbed by a froggy croak. , E(R01)IC POTATO, by the tolling my knell. I retu rned to sultry orange glow of reality. and the certainty of my posrapocalypuc moonlight. own death . A strange peace Gilbert the fly has been descended upon me then , a deflowered . He falls deeply in transcendent calm in which I lov e with his seducer. an older accepted death , yes I did. I insect from another species . c peoed myself to death . How " named Ariadne . and rejects SWeet in that last moment Lucretia, the mate selected for seemed the deep froggy silence him by his father . He then that awaited me. Sic transit takes off impulsively into me gloritz mundi, I reflected storm. intendin g to return to blissfully. Adieu, mortal coil! Ariadne . But he soon finds CRUMP. himself flying om of conuol An immense blow sent be straight toward a lilypad upon hunling sideways and I rumb lwhich lurks a huge frog (Rona ed end over end to land flat on £Sclilen/a)! NOW READ ON. my upper tergum on a beercan bobbing upright in the stormt was all up with me . I tossed waters of the pond nearflapped and I flapped. by. I had been rammed by a fly bur to no avail: I was loswho had swept in from nowhere ing altitude too fast. As and was now climbing steeply the slimy leviathan 100m· back into the rain as the frog ed up through the driving rounded on him. rain ahead I saw its long A second fly suddenly came flat underjaw fall open in in low over the slime, drew the a ghastly grin, and I could frog's attention the other way, imagine all tOO well the then peeled off with swept back sticky tongue coiled wings over the reeds. The conwithin those cavernous. fused beast grunted in fury, and maws . Ha! This is what it hopped about on the lilypad. had all come to, then. the long sticky tongue flickering We live like immortals. uselessly at its fast-moving litt le think ing how close tormentors. who soared up and death stalks us. Soon my away in opposite directions, existence would be as raindrops screaming gloriously nothing - snuffed out, from their abdomens. The first extinguished-and who fly had gained altitude and would care?-Ariadne? A few now. levelling out. circled high ...: : rears . maybe, but then she over the lilypad while the sewould find another Insect and cond fly came in fast and low : be happy. She was still young. behind me frog, further enrag.I:; What V2J1icy is life.l chuckled, ing it. before climbing steeply ;~:') rather bitterly. as the frog shufand flapping out of range. The ~ fled round to anticipate the frog bellowed once in croaky precise angle: of my plummeting frust~ tio n . then flopped heavitrajectory. ly into the rain-spattered water It was then that my life flash- and sank OUt of sight. ThC' (WO ed before my eyes. Now, there' s flies landed on the beercan and been some dispute about the taxied over to me. The rain life cycle of the common pond- began to ease off and the (WO. fly, and I'd like set the record shaking the drops from their straight. First, if you think that wings. glared at me sternly. ' Are you alright, Gilbert ?' all the nymphal stages of the said my father. exopterygores are the equivalent I managed to nod my head. of the endoprerygote pupa . and s!Jddenly drained of all emothat the endoptetygore larvae "90 · are equivalent to the late ern'This is Lucretia's fathe r, bryonic stages found in the exGilbert,' he went on. catching opterygore egg, you're dead his breath. 'You can thank him wrong. In fan . it seemed like for distracting the frog.' only yesterdayThe second fly, an insect my 'Gurk.' . father's age with distinguished ~ silver flecks in his snout whiskers. s imly at me. t. 'Yo' Gil ful yo m ,h of '0 I we'll I glan 109 heavens and struggled to my legs. ' No.' J said quic.d y. 'Nothing has changed. I still intend to follow my h eart. ' My father froze rigid and the color mour ned to his head. 'Oh you do. do you?' he finally exploded . 'Well. Gilbert , in that case there's no more I can do! I've tried to reason with you:' but you' re dearly not matu re enough to grasp the point. Very well. So be it. I have no choice but to seek' - and here his compound eyes blazed at me with a fury that would once have reduced me to instant and obsequious submission, but now-'professional help!' - \Vou mean- t ' I faltered. 'Yes!' he roared. 'I'm taking you to Stt a .psychiatrist!· eep in the waxy core of a dead tree I stood with my farber and a custodial drone on the other. I had been flown ovt r.the mud and through thC' glistening. dripping trees unti l we had reached l his place. Having slipped in through a black hole in the trunk, we had been led by a languid drone deep into the . bowels of the hive. It had been a nightmare trek across honeycombs abuzz with workers and fat queens. and hordes of preening drones. who gossiped about us with bitchy malice as WC' passed. Finally though we had fetched up outside a large cell. where we were told to wait while the doctor was informed of our arrival. My father . looking.very serious indeed. murmured someth ing to Lucretia's father. and then to me; 'I'm sorry it's come to this. Gilbert. I wish we- ' He was interrupted by the mellifluous tones of a well-fed queen . 'Come! Enter! Proceed! Advance! ' and a moment later I found myself in the psychiatrist' s consulting room. a well-appointed cell of wax tilted at an angle of 13° and caulked with bud resin. 'W hat.appears to be the problem?' cried the que en. ' Narrate th e particulars. if you please! Delineate the knott y point!' Dr. Cynthia Bornbus. Dip. Psych.• occupied fully half of her consulting room. 'and her ' five visitors were crowded into what space remained. She was a large furry bee of immense dignitY and a son of linguistic munificence whereby-she never uttered one word when three would do. I stood scowling before her as my father explained the ' problem.' or, as Dr. Bombus would have it. ' de linea ted the knotty point,' and when he had finished she gazed off into space for a moment , composed herself to utter psychosocial truths. and then held forth . 'Society.' she declared in plummy tones, 'is like a cabbage. which as you know is a common vegetable with thick leaves compressed into a round head on a shon StOUt stalk. Gilbert here' -she lowered her gaze and directed a glance at me - 'is a pale and tender leaflet in the very middle of rhe mighty cabbage. a shoot. a frond. a p elal curled snugly in the heart of our Titan of the Soily Realms.' She paused. sniffed, and • • Two f1o~rs of books: university, trcde and · sma ll presses; • 400 scholarly periodicals. • Mail orders and speci al orde rs accepted. • Open until 11 pm seven da ys. JOlEfOfflE IEJscrlEf jJIilgtI May 27 II.fIII mICEIMA. 6Z0·5941 ., r 01 111 1. I ll . 15 11 SI . " 11In! 1I0 1 1 1l ~ S' EAST VILlAGE EYE MAT . , .. belched: then resumed her flowery discourse. 'Gi lbert's father.' she mellifluated . 'a good fly. is very properly alarmed at what h~ suspects to be deviant tendencies in his offspring. He suspects. that should this tender frond go bad. then the whole cabbage will eventually rot. And he is right !' Again Dr. Bombus paused to belch, and a SWC'et waft of warm honey briefly washed over us. 'The callow youth. however. insists upon maintaining his transgression. apparent ly in the belief that any vegeta ble wonh its salt can afford a few maggors. Gilbert the fly' - and here she frowned most seriously-c. 'has little regard for the consequencesof his actions on the social body. Am 1 right?' Now, never having known my mother, I'm always uneasy in the presence of strong females. and th is baroque dominatrix was no except ion. Nevertheless . I blurred OUt my defense. '1 love Ariadne .' I cried . land I don 't care what -her politics are or what species she belongs to. Love transcends all that! Love- ' 'Gi lbert. you young fool.' hissed my fathe r.. 'Shutup!' 'Love. ' I continued. ' is not a crime! It is a gift, a gift of the spirit! Love is a flame and lives beyond j he grave! Yes. and love is a city! Love is an emperor!' Dr, Bombus was not happy that another insect should dare to wax rhetorical in her consulting room, and she raised a plump and furry tarsus to silence me. But it was tOO late for that. 'If society cannot tolerate the fact of love.' I roared. inspired as never before, 'then it is scciety must change. not I!' 'Anarchy!' gasped Lucretia's father, shocked . My father laid a restraining foreleg on my thorax. but I threw him off. 'Cast me OUt if you will.' 1 cried, 'my love will only bum the stronger! I know no law but her law! Ariadne- ' At that point I became aware of the menacing drones either side of me. 'Ariadne -c. ' My impassioned mind had returned to the steamy depths of the E(R01)I C POTATO and I cast all caution to the winds. 'Ariadne- ' Then I felt the sharp sting of a needle in my abdomen and everything began to go-yellow. 'Ar iadne - ' ' 0 Ward . I think: were the last words I heard , and then I passed OUt. LAND ch ild o f proper yet p rogressive pa rents. Becker fought to be WITHOUT LIGHT ByJOSH GOSCIAK In the Land of NJx. byJohn Bowers. Ancho r/Doubleday . $13.9) cloth . 1984. his is th e kind of writing that you 'd wan! to read at night - between passing n ight s of fancy. arduous rewriting, pu rring pain t to a canva s o r an y num ber o f solem n inventions we use to fill th e night po rtal. It makes good read ing bet ween fitful drug sprees- or caffeine overdoses c- the prose meandering . bum ping . slipp ing into a velvet y celebral haze , o ut onto the: early morn ing streets and the people and occu parior a that inhab it this realm of Nyx. N)'x is the G reek god de ss of night and in this land of waiting and silence anyth ing is possib le. Especially crcanvi ry. John Bowers. a novelist , former cab d river and invet erate nig ht explorer. takes us on a factu al journey from truckers in Juarez. Mexico , to h is hometown in Te nnessee . to lowlife in T imes Square - the faceless peopl e who work. drink and flo urish in t his nether domain . Bowers is a superb writer who knows how to tell a sto ry and brin g in terest to rhe common place - as well as espo use on the financial im practicali ties of nigh rlife and wrning . He wind s u p writing for skin mags and C OSln O (h is " Men In Bed " anide rejected as tOO honest) and living hand ro mo uth . tryinf!; 10 sup po n a family and career. But in bet ween assignment s and novels he inhabits h is favor ite waterhole , The Lion ' s Head . the hot spot for all those asp iring young writers coming to the ('it)' to be th e nest Farrell . Dylan Th om as' or Del more Schwanz , An y on e who's been to T he Head k no ws the kind who make t his their place of last resort - they are the J immy O ISt'n variety of working slugs, or bu rnt-ou t semi-p rofessio na l write rs. working on that Great American Novel. o r edito rs who can 't SC'e through t he hue and fog or the Cit y Desk . The writing at rhis poi nt goes [lat . like a destab ilized head of Bud . an d moans and groans th roug h endl ess dr in king cama rade rie. wet-eyed eu lof!;ies for writers . alon g the typographic trail and snid e asides about women and hom oSt'xuals, Ye't following d ose on the heels of Bowers' smoking insom nia along Christophe r Street and t he Village we learn some interesting bits of info . O ne OUt o f five peopl e work at night ; n ight work has increased since 1970 by 10 percent ; there ' are fifl )' thousand people ridi ng on rhe su bway at 4 a.m. : and at midnigh t o n W all SHeet during nig ht shift. it' s like rush hour in midt own . We arc ge nerica lly att u ned to nigh t . says Bowers - GO percent of th e anima l kingdom su rvives by n ight . But there are pro blems night folk s inher it: ulcers. lilli e or no social life and d iabet es. althou gh that 's probably because they try 10 live in bot h worlds. which is im possib le . To his cred it Bowers blows t he myrh of early-to- bed earlyto-rise and especially here in T he City. rhe 24- ho ur supermarket of t he wo rld . night ana itS more slothfu l inhabi tants can no lon ger be looked on as a quirky dera nge ment in need of social adj ustme nt . Give us a 24· hou r ha rdware - with elecericaf and p lu mbing needs at ten~ed to . we 'll ne ver see light agam . EXILE OF THE rJIIND ByJOH N MOTAVALLI Married 10 a Stranger. by Na hid Rachlin . E. P, Du u on . Inc.. NYC 1983, 220 pages. S I3 . 9 ~ hardcover. ran 's r"crnt history is Iragic in so man y ways. it ' s'hard to know where to begi n , A COUnt ry Ihat for so long had suffrred . politically and cu lturally. u ndrr the we i~ h t of a sl ifling mon arch y. now slaggers u nde r a med ival th eocracy. a rrgime so backwa rd Ihat women can br am:srrd for wearing lipst ick an d men can be executed fo r smo king American cigare ttes . Iran is a cou nt ry t ha t has defied the effons of th ou sands of well-pa id media pund its to explain it , and such failu res make the wor k of Nahid Rachli n . an Irani an -born novelist who now lives in New York. atl rhe more important . As in her previous novel Foreigner (Norton 1978). AfaTried 10 a Stranger is about the paradox facing the exile. about th e agony of having no coun try one can feel at horne in . She d epic ts th e sad attem pts of an Irani an wom an , Minou. to oblain some form. of literary recog n i ~i o n i';'l a COUOl ry rhar has d ecided lon g ago thai women weer not cut out for such pu rsui ts. ~Wi l h spare. ad. mirably evocative prose, she: shows how th e st vr rt moral strict ures of Islam can preven t int imacy between rhe sexes. foresta ll the creative im pulse in the most de term ined and mod em woman : and create a cu ltu ral void t hat becomes selfJ>('rpetuaung . . The novel is. set in a sout he rn i f-an'iin city JUSt before and just-after the 1979 revolution . arid' Rachlin is pa rticu larly ad ept'. here at depicting how Iran ians, who made their revolution in t he name of freedom. only~iraded on e for m of opp ressi0l"! f9i another. in wha t surely "!4s.t be one of t he world ' s first reaCtionary revolut ions. As Iranian wom en cha nted in .197·9 . " At the dawn of frctdom . th ere is no freed om ." Ml nou 's only rt course is ro 'itave Iran . but she soon realize.s Ihe special pain of the rxi!t . the lo nging " for he r cou ndy th ar wtnt on breathing. living in her . " Rachl in , who' now leaches creative writing at Ne w York Univers ity. has a uniqur style. which novelisl and scfr enwrilr r Rulll Prawer J habvala has •.,'" likened 10 " t he d arit), and ..' spare sensuo usness of Persian poe tt')' or mini alUre pai nti ng ." and An ne Tyler has called " coo l and pu re, " She's cu r- rem ly at work on a th ird novel. wh ich thi s reviewer for one is eage rly await ing, because Nahid Rachlin ' s work has a special poig na ncy for all those who de spair at th e sorry junet ureIra n has reached . PAINTING FEMALE By ANN-SARGENT WOOSTER Pallia Modenohn-Beder: The Letters and} ollmalJ , edi ted by Gunte r Busch and Liselone von Reinken . edited and translated by Arthur S. Wensi nger and Caro le C lew Hoey, New York : Tapl inger Press Publishi ng Co. $29 .9 1 au la Mcd erschn-Becker has bee n a cuh he ro or fem inist heroine for a grne ration of wom en. tsperially anists. Htr life told in her Iwtrs and jou rna ls (t his is th e most com plete ·English langu agt ed ition to d at t ) combints elem eOls of t he carrtrs of Eve Ht sse and Sylvia Plath in its po igna ncy and Iittrari ness (bo th Hessr and Plat h an icu lately chan ed rhtir rocky roads). Mod ersohnBecker' s life also rtminds me of a number o f ninetct:OIh cenlUry womrn ' s- she st ruggled .against societal expectations to ach ieve a career jusl to bc felled b)· ch ildbinh - Mary W olistone craft and Em ily BrOlllr are two prom inrO[ rxam plts. Born in Drt sdl'n in 1876 , a I allowed to become an artist (alt ho ug h her parents value d education they rhoughr cooking lessons were as . If not more. importa nt th an painting classes). She st ud ied at W orp . swede , an artist colony near her home whe re she me t her fu t ure hu sband . One Moderscbn. a teache r there. An inh erit ance let ber go to Paris to further he r ed ucat ion . She moved in avant garde an circles and knew the work of Gauguin . Cezanne. Rod in and Maillo l. When Mod ersohn ' s wife di ed t hey marr ied . From t he begi nning of t he ir marriage she was afflicted with real and imagin ary problems in th e axis between marriage and career. She is high ly articulate and convincing in her journal on th ese points. After five years of marriage she left her husban d to return to Paris and pursue her career. Una b le to su rvive fin an cially. she retu rned to her husband , beca me pregn ant an d died at th e age of 3 1. shon ly after th e birth of her daught er. Math ilde. Wh en I loo k at ModersohnBecker's confrontational pain t ings - man y self port raits in the nude done in rhe Die Brucke st yle. th ey rad iate a feeli ng of Strength . as if she is inventing and giving b irth to herself. somet hing necessary for women at rhis time, Unfortunately. t he reproduct ions in th e book arc ext rem ely dark and o nly in black and white. Th e writing , in contrast. is more mu lti-valent and raises more questions. Wh at was th e exact nature of her friendsh ip with Rilke and Clai re W esthoff. anot he r m alwelher (ma le ani sr slang for painting female). Modersobn-Becker's let ters to her hu sband arc optim istic, loving and ap peasing . The journal entries by bo t h hu sban d and wife represent a darker reality, more ambivalence and fina lly. a power struggle between m an and woman . th at is m irrored to t his day in many two-care('r . household s, especially whe n the part ners share a profession . , P:.tula Modt ~h n - Btdtr's journal F,:.tSltr Sund:.ty, M:.tl't'h j O. 190 2 My t'X pc1'itnrt It l15 me th:.t l ma rri:.t ~e dot'S rtOt make- one happier. It l ak~ away Iht illusion that h:.td sustained a. d« p bdirf in lhe possibility of a kindred soul. in man ia.Rr one feds doubl ~' misursder~ood . " Ouo Modc:rdIn joumal . Fdxuuy 29, '90' ... Pau la's 1rod mv ttile'S in 1n islir ma ttcn 1rt' r los.rly rt'1a'tcd , Wt bot h love the primil ivt:' and imi mllC. thc unusu 11 1nd the pan irular . . . . . . Unfon un 1tdy , P, UIa is.. ~ mUl"h infm ed b v ,hcst modero nOlioos, She is al..... qu ile'2«om plished in the rta lm nf c.ROIi!om. 1 wondc r wht1htr 'all .Riflcd womtn art' likr tha i ~ In an .· Paula is {Cfl;linh' ,Ri{lrd: 1am ulOnisht'd al hrr pm~ rn..;, But if nnly lhis wcf(' joined b~' mnrt huma n yin UN , It must lX'thc mnSI diffi rult Ihinjl: for a woma n 10 IX' h i jl: h l ~' d cyclopr d spi rilua lly and 10 hc in · l cHi Ren l . an.d sri ll hI: {o m p k l d ~' fcminine . Th r mod C' rn WOffiC O C'I nOfI\ rrall\· l(1ve . , ' 111('\· think th aI e.Ruti~m . . nde'(X'n,lC' nC'c . {~n {ei t . aIr t he bcSI I h i nR~ lhcrr arc: and no happ~· marril ~c ,ao " ,mr from lh l l. ThC' husband . ,nallllalh' is n URh t up in med iey:.tl. t~T~ (1 n lt'al appel ilC'S ifhe n p«ts his wifC' Ii'do him favors. li,'C' with him. (m rr in · t o hi. inlelffi s ... From Fr:lu Bt-ckcr 10 Mill)' Rohb ndBeck" . No.-o:mlX'r 5. 1907 1111: biTlh was d ifrKuh On Sun· ren P:.t ub kcpl '3,·rnll: . " You OlIji:hl 10 «'(' hC'f Ul thl"nudl"' . P:.tub Tn lUll" un ' n,, '" ..-huc p'lIm..·. lX'nn lh her IX'kWCll G~UI!UUl!o ~ nd Rnd ln•. Th c ...."'11'" 'Ito laul!h. Ih"'l\Jj:.h 11K' fruit ....huc tu f1l'''' "lI n :.t ; n~ MAY 1914 EAST VILLAGE EYE 59 - ... ., ~ ,..~-t,~.";o. ' "_-"'1 4/1'Sij. I wD N ~ U IF /Il ~ .G R Ii' '' U~ " ''''wb tlllIAlJ1 It , , -SO I'IlUt.H 8'lD bO, mR eill Ii'Pu. . ~DH~"O... ..~... . li -- ~ •• • u W.. ~1 '''IOo. ... ~ , ..H , f.... f · tl"t F A Il.., / :, ELME A. .l I: .... tL,c j ' a H .J y f l.., f"I C"'IC. \(FltS ~ c +&. :, f l., ", vf t'- ;"J h<:l U'l, o,.;.. , t "H, t " IoITEATE ,l S ? '~':'-' -t,.y·;;>"r.,;,.~r··*+f c z ~ z -; ~ 60 EAST VILLAGE EYE MAY 1914 ' j" 'reu. ME MQRTj DID YOU TAke. (FfENSE IN OUR LAST SESSION WHEN Y SUGG6STEDT,",AT THE ORAL ~AJOENC.Y you DISPLAY TO\..JiIIl.~O YOlR INNER S WIRT l'i OlE To ~ REPRESSED 06NIAL OF A CLA~ Slc OEDIPuS COMF'U)('I 'n4AT YOUR IARATlO~L f.tVSTEP::ICAt". OUTEJuRsTs ARE A C1.£AR- ClIT PHYSICA.l i\'1ANI f:"ESTATION OF A. CASeBoOK SQ.fIZOID ~RSCNAUT Y . THAT yOUR COMPlJLS tve PUNNING IS ,'" FACT AN Al;GRESSIVE ~~il-': ' ~,'1 , §o;.·_:'::;1 Acr OF' $VM80UC CAsntATION AIMED AT 1lIOS:E WHO YOU PER:CIEVE A~ Q " ~ -e A l"WR£1O'" ... \oJ\.«) UEIGH'TEN YOUR FeARs 0 1=' SUUAl INADEQUt\CV? .... .':-: -> i1lL ~::-------------------:::>=:O;'::':--.., r.=i 1J:.ai' ., = ") '\ ' WHY? " UTTl E MIRACLE" ll GHT WEIGHT IS ONE OF DAY TO DAY CRISES. SUITABLE AS WELL FOR LARGESCALE TRAUM A. USED SAFELY BY DOZENS FOR YEARS. ALSO SCARES MONSTERS. SEND SU D & 75 COMICS TO; HELP ME! BOX 7860. WESTBURY, N.Y. 11592 PRINTCLEARLY IF POSSIBLE . I¥ISSINGI? ,~:;" C ~. ,.}; f"" :::.::.- ,'r .. _ " j ::, . ~ ... • ~ _ORAl C m w TELL Ie ll6.'I ' AL EJu2 ~~ PEOSCNI A,.,... ACT OF o o POCKETS EMOTIONAL CRUTCH , EFEFCTlV£ IN THE POSTPONEMENT 5 !; ~ -o z CJ) FORTUNE: YOU WIU SOON MAKE YOU RMARK ON THE WORLD (UNLESS YOU KEEP THOSE WINDOWS SHUT!) z .. (; • Wi )CHOW MOW TO STAND IN FRoNT OF 'N il AultilOA To AlAK5" VS LOl'l('" PUFECT IN !Io\E MIRIlOR . , , 1 fWT, wE HUD "T 60 TO ova. NOW WE" CA N 6 0 TO o uR 6 IlA" ES RE....OING 5f LF· MEL. P 6llA V&S NEvtR AA'II N" FnT COM P\.. . n:: ~Y (.OoD Alovr Oillt BooIES. TMU f NI AftlSWaR. ;r. ~ - ,- --.:.... ...... _ - ,- OOKS. \ ~ £'0'1 1 .' W~AT"s W ~ H " .. If J"io vse .. • l 51"'''''''( CANNOT fEEL. J'OYFVL ABouT" ""V eu;; 9 £"'1"'1>. , MAY 1914 EAST Vil LAGE EYE 61 PREFERRED L~~ Id"ed by Phlu"o "Preferred Listings" means that we accept notiCI. of ...nf. from .ny .nd ell ••• r•••• but re..... th. right t. run n.ting••n th. basi••f .pa•• limitati.n••nd .dit.rial pr.f.r.n•••• Pl• ••••• ndn.ti••• t. E••t Villag. Ey., . , 0 " l i. tings." 611 Broadw.y, Rm. 214. NYC 10012. ART OPENINGS A New Film by LI LIANA CAV A N I th e contro versia l d irector of " N ig h t Porter" 'om", OOMINIQUE SAND4. , ERlAND JOSEPHSON ROBERT POWELL A S ilVIO C l EMENTEl U Pre sent at io n in assoctauc e wit h $10GEF FEN & JACKIE AAYNAL STA/ITS FRI,MAYISI 2,4,6,8, 10 CARNEGIE HALL CINEMA 7th Ave,(between 56th & 57th sts) NYC · 757·2131 VARIETY AT VARIETY Directed by Belle , Gordon Produced by Renee Shatransky Written by: K.thy Acker Mu'slc : John Lurie MAY 11 & 12, MIDNIGHT Variety Theatre, 110 Third AV@, (13th St.) MAY 13, 8 PM Collective for Uving Cinema, 52' White St. 62 EAST,Vil LAGE EYE MAY 1914 " __ MAY 15TH " New Arl trom Holland" teatur __ MAY 2ND Ing various artists allnlernahOnal April Palmieri' s paintings at the With Monument. 111 E, 7th St. . Pharmacy Restaurant. 141 Ave. through June rom A. through May 31st. Art May and Charlie loreto show laura Foreman displays paintings paintings and sculptures at New and assemblages at limbo. 339 Math. 12th S1. btw Ave . A and B. E. 10th S1. , Ihrough May 6th through June aro 24 Nanve American Indian PnoWilhetm aremners paintings and lagraphers dlsplav works at the sculpture at Eaccnetu/Burk. 328 American tndlan Cammunity , E ll(h St . through June 12th aoose.aanev. 164 Mercer St " MAY 16TH tnroucn May 261h , " Black Tie unuenar: Group show The Red Spot cutcccr suoe at Sensory Evnlutlon. 443 E 61h tnearer shows works by various St.. lhrough June 15th artists Tuesday lhrough saturday " Hard. Cold and Real" group till May tam 8:00 o.m.. sreaoshaw al vntuet/eamscn. 19 2nd way and Spring. look west. Ave.. lhraugh June 10th Nighl Gallery opens With various .. MAY 17TH ernsts at 225 W. Broadway. Thomas Schindter 's palntmqs at gallery hours ' ·6 o.m Sharpe Gattery. 328 E. utn S1. " MAY 4TH through June 17th Philip rslaras disptays phatoglahs " MAY 18TH at Oggi Domam . 318E. 11th St . Tony Labat's sculplures at Mo through May 30th David Gattery . 436 E. 9th S1. . __ MAY 5TH through June 12th Trissy Callan's paintinqs and " MAY 19TH drawings at Open Studio. 155 " A Time Before Morning " group Sulfolk SI , uuoucn May 6th show ccrereo by Sneua xcoan at David Reynolds and Nancy Spero 149 2nd Ave. present works an paper al CASH " MAY 20T H 34 E, 7th S\.. thfOugh May 3rd Sue wnnems's paintings at David Wojnarowic z'Spainting and Beulah land. 162Ave A sculpture at Civrllan Warfare, " MAY 22ND 11th St. btw . Ave A and B. Marc Mancini. James Schmidt. through June 3rd and Charles Seplowins __ MAY 6TH SCUlptures at M-13 Gallery. 440 Gregory Anthon 's photographs at E 9th S\.. lhraugh June 241h Beutan l and. 162Ave . A " MAY 24TH __ MAY 7TH Conrad Vogel displays installaJane Aruns presents " Shadow tions at E. 7th Gallery. 117 E 7th Bones .,. art tar Btack light at No St.. Ihrough June 24th . Se No. 42 Rivinglon St. thrcuqh " MAY 25TH May 26th Group Show at 51X. 51 S1. " MAY 9TH Marks Ptace Artene Golllried's cnctccracns at Tod Wizon 's paintings P.P.D.W•. 21 6 E. 10th st.. through June 3ro. Taller Latino emencano. 19W Colin lee 's paintmgs at Pezo 21s1 SI.. through June 1511'1 Electric . 437 E. 61h St.. thrcuuh ~ AY 27TH June aro Thomas Schindler's palnllngs al __ MAY 11TH Sharpe Gallery . 328 E 1un St. Thierry Cheverney"s paintings at through June 17th __ MAY 29TH Pat Hearn Gallery. 94 Ave. B. Sandy Sempliner" s paintings and lhrough June Sth Group show at 301 E. Houston conaues at Beutah land . 162 Gattery Ave. A __ MAY 30TH " MAY 12TH EXTRAVAGANZA , a group show Guy GtHlllwin's paintings and ot 45 artists at Dremaus Personae drawings at Area X. 200 E. 1011'1 Gattery_25 E. 4th SI, through SI.. through-Juty 61h __ MAY 31ST June 9th __ MAY 13TH Arch Connelly's paintings and Tammy Muse's charm coaaqes at sculptures af'Fun Gallery. 254 f Beulah land . 162 Ave. A 100hS1. Arlo.. Goflfried' Yelle, Iotino • ,"""'_pi!...... ArnellCafto, 19 W opeftt Mcry 2SHe • 2 r. t, Herotlgll J un~ Itt . rSHe. DANCE ~ MAY 3RD Adrienne Altenhaus and Betsy Hulton present works at the Bessie SChonberg Theater. 219 W. 191h SI. tnroucn May 5th " MAY 4TH Rush dance companyperforms at. 392 Broadway. through May 5th Bando Tamasaburo V. Kabuki master, pertcms at Japan House. 333 E. 47th SI. lhraugh May 1111'1 "MAY 5TH DeblH"ah Carr and Lise Grllr present a joint evening 01dance at the Midtown Y. 344 E. 1411'1 SI. through lne 4th .. MAY 10TH Kathy Rose and Harry Whitlaker Sheppard present several pieces at Danspace. S1. Marks Church. 2nd Ave. and 10th SI. l hrough May 13th Jean-louis Morin and Terese Capucilli dance at A's pertermance space . 330 Broome SI. lhrough May 13th " MAY 11TH Debra Wanner presents lour new and revised solo dances at P.S. 122. 150 l SI Ave. Ihrough May 13th Christine Brodbeck and Isabelle Marteau present an evening ot their choreography at Cash pertormance space. 10 E. 1811'1 SI. through the 1311'1 Bene Gordon's Variety, about sex and power. atme variety Theater. 110 Third Ave.• mtlinight .. MAY 18TH Toni Smilh dances iwo new W{Irks and " Fast lane " at P.S. 122,1 50 1st Ave. through May 20lh " MAY 21ST Various chOreographers at Awoco. 50 E. 7th SI. through May 28th __ MAY 24TH tsadora Guggenheim premiers " lifting Belly " at SI. Marks Church. 10th SI. and zno Ave. FILM/VIDEO • MAY 3RO Our Man In Havana wilh Alec Guinness. a classic. Also Th. Key, at Theater 80, 8051. Marks e. AI Robbins' Realities video at Millennium, 66 E. 411'1 51. . MAY 4TH Kay lIrgo and The Treasur. of Sill11I Mldrl wilh Bogart al t r eater 80. 80 51. Marks PI. Animation Film Festivalat NYU 's Biiotl Theatre, 40 E. 7th 51. teal uring student works Jean Genet' s Un Chant d'Amour all(!Jacques Rivelle's Paris 8elongs to Us . attne SQual tneatre. 256W. 23rd 51. through May 6th . MAY 6TH An evening 01 SuperBI nd 16mm films at Franklin Furnace. ieaturing shorts by various filmmakers. 112 Franklin SI. • MAY 9TH Tenderness .n d Aflg.r, a documentary on S WISS GYPSIes at Film Forum 1. 57 watts 51. through May 2200 . MAY 10TH Early Video History, a panel discussion at Millennium. 66 E. 4th 51. . MAY 11TH Fritz Lang 's Ministry of Fear. also The Fallen Idol at t neeter 80.80 SI. Marks PI. Knile in lhl Water by Roman Polanski al'ld Barrier at lhe squat t reare. 256W. 23rd SI. through May 131h . MAY 15TH Wild in thl Streets and Bad Boys at Film Forum 2. 57 Walls SI. • MAY 17TH PIer Marton, reciures and screens video tapes at Millennium, 66 E. 41h 51. . MAY 18TH Crislo: Tin WOfks in ProgrlSS , Public P1JCes-Sitl Inc. andfour other shorts al Squat Theatre. 256W. 23rd 5t. lhrough May 20th • MAY 23RD In Heavin Thl rl Is No Belr? afld Sprout Wings and Fly. two beauties by les Blank al Film Forum 1. 57 Watts 51. l hfoogh June 51h . MAY 24TH Ernest Gusella's Whit Undl r lhe Sun? video lape screened al Millennium. 66 E. 41h 51. MUSIC/,PARTIES • MAY 2ND Salon Bon Ton presenlS " The Trouble with Harry," a real eslale operetta al B Be. 339 E. Bth 51. "'.h.gClrly, a Brechl opera at Pyramid. 101 Ave. A 'Aru hOSts a birthday party lor ,PriSCIlla Woolworth and Carlos ,u avrOleon. 9:00,11 pm. 157 Husdon St. . MAY 4TH Tony lovi and his On thl Town Orcheslra perlorm movie music! Starring John Sex and Phoebe tecere. Especially recommended . al Pyramid. 101 Me. A Judith Ren-la y performs Minor Venom at P.5 . 122. 150 lsi Ave. through me 6th . MAY 5TH Beastie Boys and Arms Allimbo play at nanceterta . 30 W. 21s1 l $1. Secret Sam SOCilty, Nekron 99 andothers in Damrosch Park behind lincoln t enter . MAY 6TH Roell Agl inst Rl cism fealuring hardcore. reggae. rap. 100k music and speakers at the cenlral Park saneseen. noon 10 B:OO p.m. Billy Bing and lCarln Borca play at tne Cafe. 101h SI. & Ave. B. 4:00 p.m. . MAY 7TH Visage opens! 610 W. 56th 51. Wed.·SaI.. 10'00 p.m. 10 4:00 a.m. Pianosaurus rocks Folk Cily. 130 W. 3rd 51. . MAY 10TH live Skul1. Nomad , and Ilona Granll play at Pyramid, and KestuUs Nakas starts a series 01 Thursday theme parties. Tonight. Vuri And.opovin Hell. wilh sovet songs by Tony lo ve. 101 Ave. A . MAY 11TH l ONE and thl Ordinaires play ar 8 Be. 339 E. 81h 51.1 :00 am . . MAY 12TH Point Blank wilh Honeymoon lCillers, Mush. Yellow Grave , David Rat, and Vielor Poison-Tell on Conga Bill at uarcerere , 3D W. 21s151. The Cucumbe.s play limbo. 339 E. 10th 51. '- MAY 13TH Wuthering Heights opens al Danceleria. 30 W. 21st St. Ellen Christi and Us. Sokolov sing al life Cale, 10th 51. & Ave. B . MAY 15TH The Pop T.ns Play al Pyramid . 101 Ave. A •~ry GHtler al l imelight. 6th Ave. lal 2151 Sireel . MAY 16TH E. st Vill.ge Eye's FilthAnm"e/sat)' Pltty. Fealuring Newcleus ~ J. m on II), and spetlal guesls. AI Danceler1a , 30 W. 21st 51. Il a Troupe M.kandal plays Haitian ,Voodoo music at S.0.8.'s . 204 ,varick 51. Sytvain Syfnin plays Folk City. 130 w. Jrd 51 . 9:00+ 11 '00 . MAY 18TH .The RaybeJls arKI lhl Cucumbers playal Danceteria, andon Congo 8ill. TheAndyand Edie Show fealu ring Joey Arias and Ann I Magnuson . 30 W. 21s1 51. The Ptp Tarts playal l imbo. 339 E. 10th Sf. . MAY 19TH R.d HouSl lrom Atlanta. and 86 atnancereru. 30 W. 21s1SI. . MAY 20TH Jem"1 Moondoc and Roy Campbell Play at Ule Cafe. 10th St. & Ave. B. 4:00 p.m. . MAY 23RD Fred Frith and Rhys Cl\alham al Pyramid. 101 Ave. A Area's new lheme opens lonlght. This month. " The Color Red " . Through June at 157 Hudson SI. .MAY 24TH The Popl ans ptay at Beulah l and. 162 Ave. A . MAY 25TH nareeteru. The Midnight Beach. Danceted.l"s Hamptons branch opens on me Montauk Highway in WalenrnU. blw Soulhhamplon and Bridgehamplon . MAY 27TH In Ihl Service 01, makes their of· licial oeout at nancetena. 30 W. 21st SI. A musl! Wayne HOrvitl and John l orn p1ayal lile Ca fe. 10th 51 & Ave. B. 4:00 p.m. PERFORMANCE/ THEATER '- MAY 3RD Rats. a play by tsraet Horowitl at the la st Resort Showcase . 153 tst Ave. through May An Ab surd Pitce: AmericJ_ The Other Side 01 the Egg , speclatle at the Slorefroni for Art and At· cnnecnee. 8:30 c.m : alsoMay 41' Alex Mavro perrcms with The Sallisla at at Franktifl Furnace. 11 2. Franklin 51. B:30 p.m. . MAY 5TH VioIJling the Frame, the world's mosl beautiful slide show al S Be. 339 E. 8th 51. . MAY 6TH Diane Spodarek perlorms H, 's O!,Iy , M.A, incorporating slides. liveaction and audio at limbo. 339 E. 10th 51. .MAY 7TH Del /nk' Von Pl/II . a COllage play ' Ilhe Perlorming Garage. 33 Wooster 51. Mon.-Wed. Ihrough May 2Jrd l¢ia l unch opens a series 01 happenings, MOnday nlghlSal 11 :00. in lhe basemenl 01the Pyramid , 101 Ave. A '- MAY 9TH Peter Van De ICluthorsl in lhe Iirst 01 a S1ries Intitled The New Dutch Masters. Al ABe No RIO. 156Rivington 51. . Ihroogh lhe 19th. J. Aller EgoI nd t!'le l ost Pointl play BeuJah la nd. 162 Ave. A Victory Bonds opens al Ihe New Thealre. 62 E. 41h St. lhrough May Ground Plan. ethoo·tech band. and the Redmole Thealer Group al Pyramid . 101 Ave A . MAY 10TH The Impossible Mission, a IiIm Slarring Mark Anderson , Manami Mitani. Jenniler Mitchell. and Haoui Monlag. And a penormance by Boom! al Dancetena. 30 W. 21s151. Roads tl E....rywhell performance by Rom Linke and Benita Abrams at al Franklin,Furnace. 11 2. FrankJin 51. . MAY 13TH Wetl I I Horniness (new and improved) at Pyramid, 101 Ave. A . MAY 17TH I'm Am Joe 's Body by xestuns Nakas at Pyramid . 101 Ave. A . MAY 18TH Strange Fruit presented by SalOn Bon Ton al8 Be. 339 E. Blh SI. Todd Sit'l1I presents an annnucJear installa tion at ABC No Rio. 156 Rivinglon 51. lhrough June 61h . MAY 21ST Oreamings End presented by the Reo Mole tte arer group anne Ohio th eaer. 59 Greene St through June '- MAY 30TH Found la nguage. a group exhlbllion curated by larry list fea turing works by Brian Eno. DaVid Byrne. Grandmaster Flash. and others at Franklin Furnace. 11 2 Franklin sr. lhrough July 301h May22 Poetry 'r G"'"J<8radlo/, £I,,,,bdh vreelerd Cla' l ical GuiliJr by IJd:vid G#fix BooI<Art by!Jd vi?TomtJrd June S Fic1ion by Bdrb<J"-dDdvis{ Mi,.,dyR:.nnjl:.'rJC.Xcr Podry by MJom i l...azard June19 An eve n /'¥} with t he tditol"J ofthe HUD50N RtViEW Jb<tryt "'bles by Fn!tk6d, MorfPn Essays About the House by /lou'" D<;t L , Readings areonTuesdays at gp.m. $3 16Stuyvesant St. (dt COrntro f 9"'SU ] rd AV<.) POETRY . MAY 1ST NYC Poetry calendll benelit at St. Marks Church. 2nd Ave. and 10th SI. with nine e pcets. .MAY 2ND Margaret Randall reads poelry on women's revolu tionary work. at P.S. 41 . 61h Ave. and 11th 51. . MAY 5TH An af1ernoon 01 20th cenlury Spanish literature in translation. David Unger and Magda Bogin read at EAR Jnn. 326Spring 51. . MAY 12TH Kenneth Irbr from l awrence. Kansas reads al EAR Inn. 326 Spring 51. '- MAY 18TH .... An evening 01 Polish Poetry. a bj • ~ ngual reading al lhe Writers' Voice. 5 W. 63rd St. fealUring seven Polish poels . MAY 19TH Janel HamiD and poet and blood donor Max Blagg read al EAR Inn. 326 Spring 51. . MAY 22ND Georg, Bradlevand Elizabeth Vrl ebnd read al lucky Strike. 16 Stuyvesant St.. 8:00 p.m. . MAY 26TH An afllloooo of vinlage American wriling from the .IWtn lies. featur' ing Warren Hl rendeen and .Donald G. Plrh r al EAR Inn. 326 iSpring SI. , JOE D AV I S ~o c~ ~ INI0~ ~ H[AD __ _..1 9 ·, t , - :~ 4%?p ,2. .:7 .... ---:- ~. ~ . 3 300 MOVIES _ '. . .. L . MAT " .. EAST VllLAG< EYE 61 FILMS conl;nutd from 51 duet documents the Cuban government 's violation of th e rights of homosexuals. dissident s. J ehovah 's W itnesses, and those accused of " extravagant behavior" and "im prope r conduct." Because of the lack of independently produced footage on Cuba, the film takes the form of interviews with persecuted Cubans and their supporters living in exile. Although it is rather un cinematic, Improper Condecr is a logically structu red, eloquent ly presented argument vilifying Castro' s government and longing for the rule of law in Cuba . Yoshimirsu Morita's Tbe FamIly Gam e is perhaps the funn iest , most irreverent Japan ese film you' ve seen. cj apanese insrin nions-c-school . parents. work, study, achievement, a wife's place, etc. , are all ridiculed mercilessly in this film about 'a fam ily (hat hires a tu tor to raise the grades of its unde rachieving son, with hilarious results. Several recurrin,R jokes which revolve around eat ing and drinking culminate in one of the most absurdly fun ny moment s you are likely to see from J apan . Finally, two German films (one East , one W~St) are also at the tOP of th e list. From Gunther Reich and Gunther Rucke of The German Democratic Republic, Tbe Fiancee, accordi ng to the press notes, is the authentic Story of a "Communist activist " who was imprisoned for ten years by the Third Reich . Wha t makes it heartbreakingly ironic is that rathe r than bein g a Communist, she is the lover of one. Her crime is one of love. not conviction, and her imp risonment is only bearable tb rougb the hope that love instills. As Hetla . juna Wachowiak is mag nificent . dr iven 1'0 the dep- ths in solitary confinement and rising again slronger, tougher . with hope and the corwinion she entered prison lacking. Doris Dorrie's Straight Th roughl The Heart, though more absrracr than any of the other selections, is an amazingIy sure-foo ted feature debut . Dealing with topics of obsession. loneliness, emot ion and detachment . Straight Through The Heart works on several levels without becoming murky or unclear. Its narrative line never wavers. Here the mysteries of the Story are in the Story, rather than in rhe style of storytelling. The plot concerns a blase you ng woman who is hired to live in the home of a wealthy man (almost 2.S a d ecoration) but who becomes .so obsessed with him that she will fake a pregnancy and steal a baby in order to ensure her future with him . It is well-paced , and often humorous. If one name should be added to the New Directors " d iscovery" ad for 1 9 8 ~ . Doris Don ie should be the one. JESURUN conlinlled from 53 Therefore I pass the information along in pieces. Some characters fictionalize. ot hers don 't. There are SO many ways of passing along information . But each character is so relentless that the audience can c h ~sc which pieces of infermanon to accept. " It gives everything more of an ensemb le feeling," he adds. " I told the actors in Chang that they were pan of one huge character: Chang. There is no hero. SO the characters are more or less equal. J don 't want to squander the audience's focus on one point of view . That's why th ere are two actors playing both Chang and J ohn . It gives another 'point of view, and Russ Kunkelplayed the GUEST conlinue d from 47 called The TVShow, which was on in '78. We did a take-o ff on The Midnillhr Spcc.'i.u. Rob piar ed WolfmanJack and we presented thisband, SpinalTap. for that. Loudon Wai nwright was the keyboard player drummer on the show, we all thought it would be fun to somcday do tt as a larger pro jec t . So the ideabehind This is Sp i nal Tap staned the n and it took years from the bcgrnntng of rhe idea to getting the movie out. 11 $«ms like great t imi ng now w ith HC.':ll "j' Met21 /x'ing sc big :lgain. That wasobvlousfy an acctdent because we had no idc:a that that wasgoing to happen. It's funn}'. keeps the audience off-balance, and gives it a sense of duality." A good deal of j esurun's repenoire comes directly from his pa st training and personal experience. The simplicity of idea and execut ion in Robert Morris' works impressed him as an artist. His staging has that same feeling. He regards Pinte r as one of his favorite playwrights and occasionally in Chang and Dog 'J Eye Vi~ w one can hear the internal rhythm and understated violence that made Belrayal so great. " I recentl y discovered why J use SO much interrogation in my scripts." j esurun explains. I was once arrested in an " Alice's Restau rant " situation and was interrogated for hours. J guess J never got over tbar. " Actually," he conti nues. "Rock'n'roll was my greate st influence. (liked Phil Spector and Neil Young . Most young people's influence has been music. It 's thei r main cultural activity. I use a lot of guitar. singing, and allusions to music. My scenes are often like linl e songs in terms of rhythm and length ." Although rock is a major part of his work, Frank Maya and John Kelly's duet of an aria from "The Pearl Fishers" by Bizet was a memorable Chang moment . "Originally, I wanted actors who were musicians," he fu rther explains. " I wanted musicians because they know how ( 0 project without falling back on their training as actors. Eventu ally I met actors who were talented eno ug h not to have to fall back on theatrical tricks." " I' ll always do Chang. It could go on for the rest of our lives. It's like a d iary for all of us. But it' s time to move on ." Number Minus One playJ May ' , 6, 12, and 13 at 9 p .m. TicReu are $6 and reservations can be made by calling 966-3671, Some people ha"C' $;lid that the film is not nt7rly :lS ,'icious 2S it could tu vc l>cen. It 5" not nemy ss de,·:JSt:lt · i ng :IS, ~rh:lps. Lemmings ~"'2S. I don't think the film is vici ous at all. I think Lc.'m · mingsW2.S vicious at times. think the whole intent of This is Sp i n:lI T:lf W2.S nor to be vicious. Most of the time when peopleare doing parod)' of rqck and roll, it's done by people who don 't like rock and ro ll. or I involved but J canu give you anyn um bers of people because J don 't know these figures. But DIX 6 Sandinisras are MarxistLe ninisrs. They are in a problemaric situation. On rhe one hand , the U.S. ain' t giving up - it's leaning hard and heavy on them . But we have problems with people who feel they have to rely on the Soviet Union to fight th e U.S. - and vice versa-beca use that usually ends you up 2.S not liberated and not indepe ndent . That 's our view on Cuba, Ethiopia and a num ber of situations. You accuu bOlh the Soviet Union and the U.5. ofbeing imperiaftil. If tbet 's the case, whal 'J going /0 happt1l ? The problem they face is that impe rialism is based on domina tion and economic exploitation. They must continuously expand t hei r area of dom ination and that means war. Fundamentally. you see the rulers here and in the Soviet Union trying to figu re OU t how to use these tremendously destructive weapons to defeat their rival while maintaini ng themselves. J US[ the dimensions of the crime they're plannin g-c-and dragging all of huma nity -r- is reason enough for their overthrow. Why would someon e described as a " Yuppie" wanllhiJ JyJtem overthrown? We think even Yuppies have a reason to want imperialism overth rown . They don 't see the d ay-in . day-out degradation of a peasant in Tu rkey or someone in EI Salvador who has to dodge the bu llets of the death squads. but fundamentally, it ain't like life is the greatest for them . either. What's in the cards could end the whole ball game ! How large is tbe nt Ui movement you 'lie announced ? It is a small movement internationally. There arc 14 parties co n tin u~d from c~na.in l}·"C'aq' t play rock and roll if they wanted to. Our snu auon W2.S different. \l7~ Iik~ pl:aring rock and roll. We JUSt thought t ha t this parti cular segment of it w2.S funny. W~ also likNl the people we were playing. It's not a hostileputdown of the music bustness. It's JUSt rally showing it a lot like it is. .A lor ofpeople wh o 'veseen also parties that are preparing for revolution don't lay OUt what [he extent of the ir stuff is. As for the numbers. we' ll say we haven 't got enough to do what we need ot do, but we ha\'c got enough to begin 10 reach OUt and draw peop le to the kind of stand th at will be needed . We do n't have a secure territorial base, but we do have dedicated revolutionaries. We' rr- prett y confident that we can pick up and come from behind and do what is necessary to srop the world war. UBI conlin u~d f rom one guy I' d always see, he'd be punin ' New York down saying. 'New York this' , ' New York tha t. ' So I was singing OUt in the park and 1 saw him come by and I JUSt sta rted singing, ' If you don't like New York City. you don' t have to stay.' " I don't think anyone really influenced my music. except maybe Bob Dylan, who had , like the power of the word . I wasn't really that interested in music when I was young. Somet imes in Harlem I'd be in an afrerbours joint and beat some skins. you know, play the dr ums or try to sing a lin k , but not much . I JUSt came about with my own sound by singing out there every day. Sometimes I' d stand near a big truck or the subway or somet h i n ~ so ( could test myself, make mysel f sing louder againsr this (tuck. Bur playing OUt there man , it's the best edu cation . I' ve become a psychiatrist . I can tell exactly what to sing or say to people or what they be thi nkin' or wanrin' to do. It 's an education . but I've p u t in my time. paid my dues ." much of it is true. They're no r just ca riaca tures of reo- Everybody saysthat. Prett)' pie. They're " cC)' closeto that we've rnet and been on the road with. Some of the situations come from our own ex pertences. I was touring with a group called Lennyand me Squigtones (Michael McKe.an'sand David Lande r 's band which rcsuited from their Lenny and Squiggy roles on 1.3verne & Shirk yJ and a loeof thosesituationscome from that. We wanted an oppa r- stick through. The only part 01 her that ever moved was the eye which was shi ny and large, and it didn't move mUCh. AI night. with all the lights off , Theresa wou ld go to the closet and open the door. She would stand relaxed ;n the·presence of the woman and soak her up, get strength from her and the particular power she needed to continue writing the book. Her love for the woman was the entirety oHer lile, complete and ~und less . The book was done in love for the woman and derived completety lrom the woman in the sense that her ex- istence gave Theresa a cenler from which to see that saw things so clearly (because it was eternal. compreheilsive and unchanging) that it immedi· ately knew the past and future of everythi ng upon which it looked and its exact condition in re;ation to Theresa . Every night Theresa would go to the closet door, open it, renew her capacity to see, and then spend the follow ing day employing that capacity in a wor k of devotion to the being who enabled her to have it. It was a nice set-up . It isn't easy to write 190 pages describing the stow murder of one's t he film $;Iy things like, "I kn o w th :lt man.ager,.. or '" kn ow th:u pu blicisr." 46 IXOPIe tUliity to do something more than a sketch. W~ really wanted to p1.2}' real people not just people for ten minutes. You r intert'St in rock and roll goes b2ek :J long W2y. Yes, As you know I was doingthingslike that in temmings.and that was ten yat'S ago and I was playing in groups five years before that. I haven't Stopped playing. So this seemed like ' the perfect thing for us to do~.as far.ashaving fun and being funn}'. , conlinuedfrom 28 every tenth page. The relationship Ihatthe two strike up during the course 01 the shooting is one of the most profound in the history of the world. Each bullet acts as a new chapler or a new extreme close-up, a shot from a different angle, a sudden new slide of my trip to India: from the Taj Mattal to a pilgrim at the Ganges to a white rib protruding fro m the red edges of the brown s kin of a torso. To two fis hes in the deep. She thought she'd killed her friend, but two bullets later Mary staggers around to see Theresa with her small ·caliber pistol smoking. They're in a sunken living·room like the Beatfes. Incredible permutations of love and history of the world. Writing the book was unspeakably harrowing for her and she began to sense the presence 01 a person for and lrom whom the book was being created. It was an old 64 EAST Vll LAGf EYE MAY 1914 woman who existed in Theresa's closet lying in the clothes immobile and bent like a fetus except lor her erect head. She was . there when Theresa opened the closet door. not subject to gravity, but stuck in the impression she'd made in the clothes like head on a pillow or the gun in its velvet box. The woman was a cyclops with the remnants of the two eyes ~elow her midd le one still visible but shrunken, sunk deep below her eyebrows , and fused shut. Her hair was dark and filthy and her ' face li ke a patch 01 dirt a kid had been pulling a a best friend by oneself and it's just as difficult to imagine why one wou ld want to write such a book, but Theresa knew it was the will of the hag in the closet. And it was the will of the hag in the closet. Perhaps the hag in the closet is a snake handler hoping Theresa's poison witl supply a serum. Perhaps the hag is a teacher trying to cure ,Theresa 01 her fear of death. Who knows? It sure is a great book though. Theresa sends pages to Ups as she writes them. He swings open a page to . find hours of insect-free privacy and is transported. I ----------------: CLASSIFIED AD: $1 CLASSIFIEDS Tribeu _ 'W, Got the Ug tlW' 1800 U. eI.WiliOI building . conven ien t Ioetllon . ",. ., kileh&n. one ~ bedroom. S225,OOO, S8OO.00 malnt....nce. Call GI"e9 Clu t... L. .ell'IlI eono.ota Ql·1338 lOWER EASTSlOE. one bedr oom, eo<lO' own, " In. price of renting.. Tl klng ~IIJonI pr_U,. Call CrMtl¥lllNlng Concaptl 431·1338 HANOI ROCKS U.S. FAN CLUB f or lnlOl"lTll llon w, ltl ; P.O. 110_ 1591. Murr. y Hill S t"lon. NY, NY 1015l!l Athlns I nd Allan'.. GI . ~ WI" Ind 1Wdc:or' blndI: 1 ... II.bII lor cl Ub ~ IIIL Call 101,,111114(N) JIl6.OOlllIInd book some olIn. bill mulle: your c:tutl his _ hII'd . Available now. H llnd r~ . 01 pho! ogr l Ph$ ol you ! Famous pho!ogrlpllllf. I Utt>orol booI<. lont with Wililim Burtoughl l - ' tl pun k l ollli lor we ird eeelaborl tlonl. send photolpohone 10 SO- 745. Wooc:tltoc:k,NY 12948. 101 good IltNl lfId wild j)lrlie$. COuoIes weiOOtI'Ie. 21-40. Slimprltterled. H.I'IlI nic:I PIll in M¥I\il tWl . ART ltM Afllml!tfl WKCA.f"M NYC Jazz · C1ulllc:.t . Transllgurld Night 24 houq I dIy. Stll' WIlICI MIN NIE BIRD PLEASE COME HOME ALL IS FORGIVEN .umsTS: Eul Village GlllIfY . . . . to r...... work In I K IMdIL Ca ll 8l!I6-5oI7l!l Of.-d allOn and _ 10"....,. 30tl AIMfIklI Dr. 14-0. NYC 10025 Arlli tl Wlnted l~t curltOfli aa NII<lng l iides and ...-urnetl IOf poallble group Of one llIflJOll Ihovrrl . Sand to Publ ic: Worb. so. .. 337 Eut 10th S lteet, NYC 1000ll REAL ESTATE L E.5. - IOOO sq . II. ~1 , llnollalld 1I~llI(I lolt w/g real right. br l<:k wi lli , lully 1I.lured $925 mn . No FF . Alto: 1000 sq . II. d upll•• bric k will•. full, IIxtulet;lS130tl mon th. No FF. l ' k' 43 1-lJ38. CrN Il.,. U IIIIl(I Conc:ep tl TrltMtc:a - 1800 IQ . It. 6Ilt hru . 12' ~Ii· 11l(I', brick wal talln ls'*' wood IIrl., new kitc he n " bl th. $1700 month. l e k'43 1·1338 TrIbec:I -1.co sq. ft. with Ilntlltle ligh t. bflck willi . I k,Ug hll , nice views. l uli klt cl'len" b11lh. seoo month Inc:ludeI hell . S2QK FF. llkl 431·1338 SOho-250 sq . ft. 7OOsq. It. .. 1000 IQ. II. I lorll. SlIOO-$ I2OO mon Ul. Long leaMa 1. llll blt. l lkl 431.1338 Crealr.. LN. III(I eonc:.ptt Slorl tOf Ren t 200 E. 3r d SI,. .I. Suitable IOf Sou- llq ua. Hl lra tytlsl or oll leM. Reuor\IbIe ..m. ga tll. Call f"eny 43 1·133&.CrM II.... LNslng eonc:.ptt STUFF FOR SALE SuI)' SOHo Aac:Of(l S tore. prill'll loulion. lIaIapICI ..,.lllblllO INti wllh ~ bouIlqu.. Renl $5OOtmontll. Ca ll 475-6m. 1-3 pm MUSIC: . PEOPLE & MACHINES 2 uSu lllf Ut, " series30. 5 " E.F • Mo¥Ie Profectlon lenin. Old. good ...... "'" r;ond. BII' of l". Calt 2()3.f78-5I»Q. ""nual. SIlO. m -ll157 There' , A PI. e. N•• r Union I~~ 10 owiIft. 8SS9tMtd f/dlf ~ O'l pa,_ £~ e$$MII"'. CdOl wrife E.' f Vill.~ E.,..6118fc.lway.N YC 1001%. 177-$l S1. A.tk lor ~. YAM AHA HEADF'tiONES YH· I. SIlO S lII HeadphOnes SK3. S65 Grado 61 .. c:.rl rldga . S50 ~~ S~ro lmp~ld~ """ kit Ind demo 10 337 E. 10t h 5 t. SONYC 10 00 9 . P u b li c Wo rk $ 1173-N 7e mini mig. Send $2.00 to Blldcfy F. Yulz""n (Humor Monge, Il larg, ) 640 BfoadWI , . SO- 89. Dln ver CO. Female ModIls to PoH Nude lor wefYw&l l known pllnt". Tribec:;1 sl udlo . Olne"a I nd col orful IyPllil. " poLegIlU ne " I btlt mU$t be unhlblled. CIII 219-0610. Les\'ll name I nd no. US per "Our. FOR SALE: Ca slo (MTt I) Brlnd ~ - S40. Ufldfiwood ellc: lflc: T,pewrilltr - used - good c:ond. SiD. Ca ll Ma r901 522·1711 F,,,,. II Voc:alli l wllh Oflglnll. 1001<· 111(1 for e.PIII,nee. Hynd e. Lenno . a t, 11 . oc:ala, gu llir Ibllity. Into new wa~' " d anel mUllc. DorOlhy. Lea... me ssage tor Rm :lOS. 59S-3027 Muslc ll nl wllh R&BldllCOldlnc:e I b ility wl nted lor m us k: wll"Oul prac:onc:l1ltlOOI . J B Stooge.. sex Pfllols . Ubu . Wlter• • Ylrdbl,ds , Blmbllt... ISllc HI ' es. No Immed. S. Fri nk ll6&m RABID CITY HUMOR MAGAZIN E. A.Den~"·bllICl ."., PERSONAL Domlnanl w/m. 30 , leekl nl u.ghly g llil who nNd d iscipline " mild $Pl n kl~l. Call Mll ter I nyllme l He n. EP. Tour . Hi le YOU' Job. 8011 , la ndlord , l Q\'llflSjlO\l" , Mother, Shrlrlk. Dog, Unio(l,ep, Oru.g lu pplle f. Guru ? What ll\l" you r bill w, itl I nd w, '11 publlih \'9Urlelter In lull. NO Idvl ci g l\'lln. Totll l non , mlty. Beel s Anon ymou l . P.O. SO. 3831. NY, NY 5744014,533-71117 '0020 ROCK VIDEO PRODUCTION Delached nltl¥l NY BIlly IdOl Ian seeks rebel lor midnigh t hour Iltachrnen l. Stancil -P.O. SO. 8(11, QRUMGODWHO SCREAMS wlnled by He l lth """ qUllity w\deOt; I t IlCHltln Ihlt pr~ Rotll ll(l Stonn. YokoOno. lor I lractlon ollhel' COlI1. ImIga Ml kar m-!i5T1 I ! 0 ~.1t ~ fll By WIN STON c , ROBINSON,JR , conlinl/ed from 44 percussion and the electron ic no i~ that swoosh in and OUt throug hout th e m ix. Yeah , tho~ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Q 5• o ~ Q o:! ~ '. ~ u ~ Fem l le Model$1 Phol og r;lpher look · 111(1 lor . ltrl c ll.. $tender $ubjec:ts . No , . perle nce nllClIISI'Y. Also Iree phOlographl lor I nte ,n tl ~ mode ls. cen Fred e,lck 8S1.1036. ffi ·- ." 1: 0 • o . ~ ~ u . ••a ••s- •:2:2s WANTED 0 Got a GOOD l oldi ng bi c y c lB you want t o sell? CIII Robert. • 1S-2853, 7~ 0 55 "n::" > •0• . p.m. 00 ~~ •• •• 0 0 • !• 0 ~ 0 . 0 c c NYC 1002:2 grunts: "Ooh-ah . ooh· ooh. ah -ah-give me what you give me last n ight" are spo ken in the a:otic JamaiC2n patois that Ame ricans find so irresistabl e. I'd like to see people try and " grind " to thiJ record . RCA Records th rew a reall y I 1 '" a. 0 0 0 ill 1 RECORDS 1 11 1 1 1 . .OOapaCIill. Send PfISI (2 12) 564 ·1734 ALL AGRAVATIONS AIRED 1 1 St.,. 1a.co •• lL"":~ I "' · · 1-;;e:~ !! .-: great pa rty at Limeligh t on March 26 to celeb rate the release of Nona Hend ryx's new Ip , The An of Def~ns~, and like her last album , it tOO is prod uced by Material. When No na went on, around 12:30 AM, she gave a brief, thou gh ---------_. heanfdr performan ce of " I Swea t (Going Th rough the Molions)" -her n~ single. and of " Strictly Confidem ial". her previous one. " Sweat " is funky ·1fld well-crafted . Once it gets going, (he dave takes over un· til you ' re grooving on that one. singular Ix2t. pierced by d ectroni es, vocals and a wh ining guiu.r that enters 2nd disap· JK'an: at will. o o o o o o o Attention Retailers: You can order Bomb-Contact II'Details Pure Entertainment'Raw-Stop-ZG and other fine publications from NY New Papers st MA ,"~S p\.~C ~ " 1 1 1 1 e P l rlo rme rs Wln t l d Ind epeml en t book ing Igency seeks I U typel 01 perlorm " l lor $howl II ~.rioul CIubl ,_ 1 FEATURES EDITOR NEEDEDI .... . Squ.,.., ' 20 jlII ge joumaI by BI" DohIrt)' the artl l " Send $8 10 Epoc:h, 473 P' 1IOl'l1l A... JetMy City NJ FOR 1 • ~ 1J«Ide. " Ir~ eit· COMMODORE VIC·20 Computer wllh RF 1n11l'1_. 1 COST OF AD 1 I 0tWt with tItIs fonn. 1 HELP WANTED eumslillI(:U. NotrWYI mont)' 1 CIty I...... ARTISTS ASSISTANT KlSlTlON AVAI LAaL£. VkIIo, film produc:lIo n. are/lMng. Ptoduc:tlon u.perllnc:l higI'ltf' uMtvl. Ablllty to c:omplatl lISb on your own. Ratl. 43t~. 1-6 pm W....dIys Enc:Ioet "sit, elMct. « 1 Nomo 1 _.. Lh Iln, 1 1 1 : June deadline: May 23 : I Altrac...... Ilim WIM. 30 seeks tema les CallKen (2 12) ~ tl 34. VILlAGE-One tlIdroom aparlmlflt. 3_ , 1114n klIchen. Call Gfag CrMtl¥l UoIIlng Conc:ap tl 43t ·1338 1 Classifleds are $1.00 for the 1 first four lines, $1.00 for 1 each additional line. Send for our free cas/ogue at: 611 Broadway, rm 214 New York, NY 10012 or can (212) m-6157 MAY '91. EAST VI llAGE EYE 6S SOIR by BEAUREGARD HOUSTONMONTGO MERY socialite-goddessOliver Rish roused me out of bed at the crack of noon, arriving soon after in Jaguar coupe owned and wo of the most rude operated by handsome and dapand obnoxious ques- per satellite tycoon Rick Blume. tions I'm asked is After stopping in Tribeca (Q col" Who ace you and lect mistressof beauty Francine what do you do ?" Hunter and the: chann ing and In answer to this sleepy-eyed R ichard Skidmore inevitable invasion we arrived at P.5. 1 and Francine of privacy , I indeclared it was "such a Sunday variably reply: " I am school," a busy school indeed! Beauregard and I do Every floor was teaming with acexactly as I please." tivity. My very favorite expert on What follows here is the arts Edit De Ak. took me in a perusal of my tehand and gave me a delightful cent social agenda. tour of twO floors; tantalizing Starting with my me with her dishy expen ise. Her binhda y party which best quote was: "She is like a I threw as a distracreptile in head" Never mind tion from the certain wbc . this is a social column. panic any aging nar- darling. not me sports page. J cissist feels at the paused long enough 10 greet the passing of time, I invited 85 of cool and collected Abnna Heiss . my closest friends. 35 carne. The surveying her brilliant handiwork other hundred that showed up as though it were all as effortless wert total strangers. but they as she makes it seem. Alongside brought wonderful gifts. Guests was photographer ecraordin included socialites Abn and naire Timothy GreenfieldRebecca Rish . handsome man Sanders. whose work is included .about town Dieter Kearse . in every worthwhile permanent fashion hall-of-farner Joey collection this side of the HorNapicrkowski, GQ's Lisa chow. Also in evidence were the Thackerbeey , Pulitzer prize win- tall and elegant Peter Hujar and ning pioneer feminist Ruth Herschberger (who developed an attachment to Lower East Side buffoon Brian Goodfel low). US • magazine's Mary Kay Sctlllling. Sandy Dancer. whose poodle JUSt carne back from the taxidermist in ('W Jersey. Prince of publishing Peter Begar. sex icon of St. Mark'sJohn Sex, those twin tremors of Beekman Place Charles and Ahn Rosenberg, fashion darlings Terri Toy and Sresen Meisel , the beautiful julian De Rorhschild-Blau and historic preservationistJohn Boorom, who made batches of Pink Squirrels.Jane Krupp and Prince Alex Neraroff CUI capers galore. Gallery owner Colin Deland practiced hisTaylor Mead rendition for P.S. I the "a feisrv Arlene Gottfried . Kim next day. After hours we all Jones had one of the best performance-installations this went to ex-Pulsallama gals Andi side of House and Garden. In and Darn's new club on Ave. B the artie was a recreanon of the between 10th and I l th sneers. old Warhol Factory. it was all It was literally smoldering . . . very cute (and mobbed). How Later that morning blonde - Ludders, who told me "We know everyone, we've had everyone . we will have everyone." Now pause to connecr the adiecnves and fill in your own retort ... The evening was salvaged by the sudden vision of legendary screen goddesses Sylvia Miles and Monique Van Vooren chatting together. I left on this high note. beating a path to Danceteria (a blessing in disguise) for Haoui Monr:aug's No Entiendes anniversary parry. Dianne Brill and Rudolf were still glowing from their encounter with the King (he' ll sue if I say Queen) of Qiana and precursor of drag Liberace time flies - who says cute doesn't himself Rudolf, always impeccable. was wearing a stunning age well, or is it that apalling Liberace plastic pendant. I turnages cute? ed green with envy and forgot to ... Monday and Tuesday I ask for drink tickets (it was an thanked God for Passover and bar. but I'm a born rolleropen saw to my Personal Life . which tor). culminated with din ner at the On Thursday i had a late lunFour Seasons on Wednesday, cheon at the shiny new 5th Ave. with a tall. dark. handsome, loft of relocated west coast mysterious and Greek baconphotog. Liz Crenshaw. We sipcheeseburger heir. I ordered veal ped champagne while she told auxJeanne Moreau (I swearl) me her plans for the future. and saw cult actress Meg Miles from All At] Children and Sa/an With her curious sense of honesin High Hed s. I continued on to ty and applied glamor. her success in commercial and fine an is the Limelight for a pany in assured .. . On fO Kamikaze . or honor of another Greek. Esquire Kamikaka as a certain blonde columnist Taki and his book Princes, Playboysand High ClOJs socialite goddess refers to it, for a Mark De Angelis soiree. CunnTarn. Role model Cindy Adams ing Mark has a knack for taking promised Debs. Snobs, Hustlers. a boring record parry and tuming it into a brilliant mix and a swell time, starring with that dreamy door diplomat Be-Bop. Celesre-Mcnique Lindsey was trading snide quips with beef)' Vito Bruno. ....cui, Bettina and Maurice were all there. Francesco Bemaducd and Bcnjamin detoured on their Wlly to Area. ditto Colin Deland and Eric Bordiga du Monaco. Oliver Rish lost her scarf. Hours later I finally arrived at the Thierry Mugler parry at Area only to be completely ignored and then rudely rebuked . Ebullient Annie flanders pf De/ails and wonderwoman Dianne Brill came to our rescue as they were exiting. We had out own little pany on the sidewalk as they filled me in on Snoaen and Pretenders . In atttndance were Cornelia Goesr, all the juicy Derails inside. Once seen basking in such bright Christopher Makos, Larissa, light, we were giventhe high Tadeusz, Alexis Del Lago Blassini and primitive painter sign to enter. I returned my own Gaylord and buxom transsexual gesture and ran off into the night. avoiding further ConfineHoney Palmer and escort.Eric mem ofull of great tidbits. Of I could never repeat anything I didn 't actually observe. Dianne is off to Santa Barbara. Another earthquake is imminent. On to Lauren Podesta's penthouse cocktail party where a patient Michael Musco (adjectives are tOO numerous to apply to this one) waited for the muchin-demand Agapito to minister to his beauty needs. I sipped Tequila and took notes on the guests. chatt ing with Dutch designer Ray Makers. The guests seemed to be better-boutique dad up the corporate ladder young women and tattooed and earringed younger men. On to Studio 54. backdoor, dressing room where Michael M. was performing in the Bunny Hop Show. After the show a radiant RickJ ames came downstairs to compliment Michael on his performance for /hru boen: Mr. James' recent hospital stay did a world of good. Today's celebs go at such an exhausting pace! Easter Sunday I took respite at Edward Brezinski 's Sunday salon featuring Brien Coleman's wonderful. intricate, famasmic paper mosaics. Gallet)' owner Patrick Fox. Gary Indiana and Tony Heiberg popped in, as has everybody else in the downtown an scene, one Sunday or another since Edward srancd it all a few weeks ago . . . From there I went on to Vinnie's Clam House at Thompson and Bleecker. where I took in hypnotist Dr. Marshall King with the indefatigable Oliver Rish (he's her Uncle Marvin) . The clever doctor made fools ora packed house, with his assistant (who reminded me of Brother Theodore) and a Mexican band that do lionel Ritchie tunes. thrown in. My vivacious and aged pomeranian Pilar Crespi , iUS( back from Argentina. adored the show. especially Uncle Marvin 's goatee and sharkskin tuxedo! I left: pondering another rude question: " Is A) MichaelJackson ; B) Boy George: q Liberace gay???" Why people ask me this I cannot imagine, since I don' t even know them (yet). but it isn't hard to deduce that with the pressures of stardom. they are more likely downright morose. Let us be above all compas...innate... COU fS(' POLICY CONTAINEDTHESE TYPES IN CERTAIN AREAS. INTERVENTION IN INTERNAl SQUABBLES WAS RARE. THE INHABITANTS • COULD MAKE OF THEM SELVES WHAT THEY WOULD . THEY PROVIDED A USEFUL POOL FOR THE GUARDIANS . - TOBE CONTINUED OPENING WEDNESDAY NIGHT. 121W. 31S T MAY 1914 EAST VILlAGE EYE 67