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Tag: john waters

  • How three hitchhikers contributed to rock history – National | Globalnews.ca

    How three hitchhikers contributed to rock history – National | Globalnews.ca

    Hitchhiking can be dangerous for both the Good Samaritan driver and the person on the side of the road with their thumb out.

    Just dig into the history of serial killers. Ted Bundy, Edmund Klemper, Donald Gaskins, Ivan Milat, and the still unknown Santa Rosa killer are just a few examples of murderers who preyed on people who just wanted a ride.

    Those horrible stories overshadow the countless times when giving a stranger a ride turned out not only to be a kind gesture but a life-altering event in a good way. Here are three examples from the annals of rock history.

    How Bono’s hitchhiker encounter saved U2

    At 5:20 p.m. on July 13, 1985, U2 stepped on the stage at Wembley Stadium to perform at Live Aid. They were still a medium-sized band at the time — their Joshua Tree breakthrough was still two years in the future — so they knew a powerful performance in front of over a billion people would do wonders for their career.

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    Every act had about 20 minutes, so U2 carefully chose three songs. They’d start with Sunday Bloody Sunday, move into Bad, and then finish with a rousing rendition of Pride (In the Name of Love), their biggest single to that point.

    Things started well enough, but during Bad, Bono noticed a woman in the crowd named Melanie Hills. According to Bono, she seemed to be in some distress. (That’s disputed; it’s more likely that Bono was trying something for the cameras.)

    As the band played, Bono jumped into the photographers’ pit, then into the audience, whereupon he pulled the woman onto the stage with him to engage in a very slow, intimate sort of dance.

    He tried to get Hills’ sister, Elaine, then, but the security guards didn’t respond. A third woman, 15-year-old Kal Khalique, is pulled from the crowd for another slow dance.

    It was a nice TV moment, but the slow dance act between Bono the women took so long (Bono also had a hard time getting back up on the stage) that U2 had to vamp on Bad for 12 long minutes. By the time the song wrapped up, their time was over. They never got to play Pride.

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    The rest of the band was furious and there was a very big row backstage. It was bad. “We’ve blown it!,” they said. Bono, chastised and angry, flew back to Ireland alone to brood with his wife at his in-laws’ place in the countryside. He was sure his bandmates were so angry at him that U2 was finished. Maybe he’d just quit.

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    But then fate intervened.


    In the week following Live Aid, the general consensus became that U2’s set (along that of Queen) was the highlight of the Wembley portion of the concert. They hadn’t blown it. In fact, Bono’s effort to break down the barrier between band and fan was some kind of career-making moment.

    Second, there’s a story that while Bono was driving to his in-laws, he picked up a hitchhiker who’d seen Live Aid and gushed about how much they loved U2’s performance. That was the validation Bono seemed to need. Within days, all was forgiven and patched up. U2 was saved.

    Is the story about the hitchhiker true? I’ve heard it repeated a few times over the decades. There’s also the tale about a breakup in 1981 over the band’s inability to reconcile their religious beliefs with rock stardom. It is said that Bono went for a drive in the country, picked up a hitchhiker, and had a long conversation that made him realize there was a way to compromise.

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    Which story is true? Both? Neither? Take your pick.

    This hitchhiker story is definitely true. While walking through West Vancouver in 2011, Bono and his assistant were caught in the rain. Sticking out his thumb, a car driven by Edmonton Oilers center Gilbert Brule pulled over.

    Bono and the assistant squeezed into the car with Brule’s girlfriend German shepherd and for the ride back to the hotel.

    For his trouble, Brule and his girlfriend were given backstage passes to U2’s upcoming show at Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton.

    The Irish hitchhiker who inspired the Foo Fighters

    Kurt Cobain’s death devastated Dave Grohl. He was so distraught that he couldn’t pick up an instrument, let alone think about making music and performing anymore. He’d reconciled himself to the fact that his music career was over.

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    Escaping to Ireland, Dave was thinking about his future as he went for a drive in the countryside in the area of Ring of Kerry. Then, on the side of the road, was a young man who needed a ride. He was wearing a Kurt Cobain T-shirt. His name was Lorcan Dunne. When he climbed into the car, Dave had an epiphany. “[I]t was Kurt’s face looking back at me in the middle of nowhere.”

    This Nirvana thing had been so big, so influential, that there was no way Dave would ever be able to outrun it for the rest of his life. It was at that moment he decided to get back to work. The result was the Foo Fighters.

    Dunne’s cousin tells the story in the tweet below.

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    John Waters heads to Utah

     

    This final story isn’t quite as earthshattering as the previous two, but it’s still very cool.

    In May 2012, an indie band called Here We Go Magic was on their way to yet another gig in Ohio when they noticed a tall, slight man, with a thin moustache begging for a ride next to the on-ramp to I-70. He was wearing a hat that read “Scum of the Earth” and holding a sign that read “To the End of Rte. 70,” which would mean somewhere in Utah.

    At first, the band just drove on past, thinking it was another itinerant. But half a kilometre down the road, the band’s sound man said, “John Waters.” One of the band members said, “Yep. Definitely John Waters.”

    The van took the next exit, circled around and found the man still there. It was indeed film director John Waters. He’d been hitching for a couple of hours and no one wanted to pick him up.

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    What was a famous film director from Baltimore doing begging for rides on the side of an interstate? Hey, he need to get to Fort Cove, Utah, for some reason.

    &copy 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Alan Cross

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  • ‘When Harry Met Sally,’ ‘Iron Man’ added to film registry

    ‘When Harry Met Sally,’ ‘Iron Man’ added to film registry

    They’ll have what she’s having.

    The 1989 rom-com “When Harry Met Sally” is one of 25 films chosen this year to enter the National Film Registry, a list that ranges from Disney’s “The Little Mermaid” to a 1898 silent documentary, long thought lost, about the Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans.

    Also chosen this year for preservation: Marvel’s “Iron Man,” John Waters’ “Hairspray,” Brian de Palma’s “Carrie” and the 1950 “Cyrano de Bergerac” starring Jose Ferrer, whose performance made him the first Hispanic actor to win a best actor Oscar.

    The registry is housed at the Library of Congress, which since 1988 has selected movies for preservation based on their cultural and historic importance. This year’s picks bring the total number of films in the registry to 850 — many of which are among the 1.7 million films in the library’s collections.

    The oldest film selected this year is the 1898 “Mardi Gras Carnival,” a silent era documentary with the earliest known footage of the carnival in New Orleans. A copy was recently found at the Eye Filmmuseum in the Netherlands. Showing floats, spectators and marchers at a parade, the film is one of nine documentaries chosen, covering topics like the Attica prison rebellion, female union workers, mental health treatment, LGBTQ history and others.

    And the most recent film on this year’s list is the 2011 “Pariah,” by Dee Rees, a coming-out story about a lesbian teen in Brooklyn that’s considered a prominent film in modern queer cinema.

    Among a number of other LGBTQ-themed films chosen this year is the 1967 student short film “Behind Every Good Man” by Nikolai Ursin, a look at Black gender fluidity in Los Angeles. Another: the 1977 “Word is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives,” which interviewed over two dozen gay people about their lives, becoming a landmark of the early gay rights movement.

    “We are proud to add 25 more films by a group of vibrant and diverse filmmakers to the National Film Registry as we preserve our cinematic heritage,” said Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden.

    Among the films entering the registry:

    — “When Harry Met Sally” (1989), Rob Reiner’s much-loved rom-com starring Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan with a script by Nora Ephron, and one of the best scenes ever filmed in a deli.

    — “Iron Man” (2008), the Marvel superhero film starring Robert Downey Jr. and Gwyneth Paltrow, directed by Jon Favreau.

    — “Carrie” (1976), the Brian de Palma horror classic about a teen outcast (Sissy Spacek) with telekinetic powers.

    — “Hairspray” (1988), the John Waters version of the story about teenagers in Baltimore, starring Ricki Lake, Debbie Harry, Jerry Stiller, Sonny Bono and Divine. The film would go on to become a successful Broadway musical.

    — “Charade” (1963) by Stanley Donen, the only movie to pair Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn.

    — “Cyrano de Bergerac” (1950) directed by Michael Gordon, the first U.S. film version of Rostand’s 1897 French play. It made Ferrer an Oscar winner for best actor.

    — “The Little Mermaid (1989), the classic Disney production with the Alan Menken and Howard Ashman songs (“Part of Your World” and “Under the Sea,” for example) about Ariel, who lives under the sea but wishes she were human.

    The library said that Turner Classic Movies would host a TV special on Dec. 27, screening a selection of this year’s movies entering the registry.

    Also being preserved: “Cab Calloway Home Movies” (1948-1951), Scorpio Rising (1963), “Titicut Follies” (1967), “Mingus” (1968), “Manzanar” (1971), “Betty Tells Her Story” (1972), “Super Fly” (1972), “Attica” (1974), “Union Maids” (1076), “Bush Mama” (1999), “The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez” (1982), “Itam Hakim, Hoplit” (1984), “Tongues Untied” (1989), and “House Party” (1990).

    Online: https://www.loc.gov/programs/national-film-preservation-board/film-registry/

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  • Why John Waters Is Giving It All Away to the Baltimore Museum of Art

    Why John Waters Is Giving It All Away to the Baltimore Museum of Art

    The director John Waters has been collecting contemporary art for decades, and he’s built a trove full of some pretty idiosyncratic works. Take, for instance, Karin Sander’s Gebrauchsbild (2010). The artist did nothing to the canvas. She’s never been on the same continent as the canvas. She just told her dealer, Friedrich Petzel, to leave it in the backyard of his Hamptons house for a summer. Eventually, the canvas grew some green-black mold, and that’s the work. Petzel was worried the mold would poison him, so he refused to bring it inside his house. Waters bought it immediately. 

    “(A) it’s beautiful to me. It looks like a Robert Ryman painting. And (b) it can kill you; it can ruin your house. It could disappear. And it’s expensive,” he said, standing in the Baltimore Museum of Art on Wednesday, staring at the decomposing woven fabric that he bought at a fancy gallery for a lot of money.

    “It’s got everything I love about contemporary art. I think art for the people is a terrible idea—I like the elitism,” he went on. “It’s a secret language. You have to dress a certain way; you have to learn a language; you have to be able to see. It’s a magic trick. And once you can, every day you walk home, nothing looks the same.”

    The work, along with 371 others, was donated to the institution by the 76-year-old legendary filmmaker, author, performer, artist, and collector in 2020. It’s his hometown museum. Even though he has homes in New York and San Francisco and summers in Provincetown, Waters has never left Baltimore; if he is, as the sobriquet goes, the Pope of Trash, this is his Vatican City. Walking around with him on a weekday in the historic port town was surreal. Waters, immediately recognizable to all with his pencil-thin mustache and mischievous smile, talks in a low baritone, with that rare real Maryland accent that’s slightly Southern despite coming from a Union state. Waters is probably the most iconic Baltimorean the city’s produced since Edgar Allan Poe, and he’s treated there like a deity, even if his films deal in smut and the scatalogical. The hip new hotel where I was staying, Ulysses, has its decor deeply influenced by the John Waters–Charm City aesthetic on display in movies like Cry-Baby and Hairspray.

    And if this is his Vatican City, that makes the Baltimore Museum of Art something akin to Waters’s Sistine Chapel. It was there, brought by his parents, that he made his first art purchase: a poster of a work by Joan Miró. In 2018 the museum gave him a retrospective, and now there’s another one of sorts. On Sunday, a new show, “Coming Attractions: The John Waters Collection,” opens to the public, giving those who never got an invitation to his Christmas party a chance to see the unmistakably John Waters–esque horde of treasures. Out of the hundreds of works, 90 were selected and curated by the artists Jack Pierson and Catherine Opie at Waters’s request. He had no idea how they would be installed until he walked in on Tuesday. 

    “I always liked the Baltimore Museum—it’s one of the first places that ever gave me recognition, way before it was safe to like me,” Waters says. “I’ve always stayed in Baltimore. My career would not have worked as well if I had left.” 

    I asked how having his private collection now in the hands of a public institution got his juices going. He said he was especially keen on having the difficult works enrage and bedevil the everyday Baltimore residents who come to the museum to see the Matisses. He bent down to show me Mike Kelley’s Child Substitute (1995), a crude collage of cutouts of cats pasted on paper. 

    “This is my favorite Mike Kelley because it so infuriates people,” Waters said.

    “It’s very Mike Kelley,” I said.

    “It is. It’s pitiful, and he invented pitiful,” Waters replied. “But pitiful’s very important. A lot of this art is pitiful. It’s a movement of pitiful.”

    We came upon a framed piece of lined paper upon which Cy Twombly had written down his address. When an artist jots down a note for logistical purposes, it’s usually not an artwork. Then again, some of the late artist’s works are just words he wrote on canvas, and his makeshift business card sure did look like a Twombly. 

    “That I love,” Waters says. “And I always said I would never show it because I met him and we were hanging out and I said, ‘Can I…?’ That’s how he wrote his address down for me.” 

    To hammer the point home, there’s a Twombly piece around the corner, Five Greek Poets and a Philosopher, that is just text, just the names of the poets and the philosopher. John Waters Sr. was so angry that his son had spent his hard-earned movie money on the work that he made his own Twombly to show how anybody could do it, scrawling “Crazy” in a style uncannily like that of the artist and then signing it “Cy W.” It’s now in the collection of the BMA, hanging between works by Opie and Pierson. 

    Waters entered the art world as a collector, having grown up going to galleries while at college in New York and reading about shows in The Village Voice when he was in Baltimore. He often went around with Brenda Richardson, the longtime curator at the BMA, and found it easy to get access to primo works because the dealers liked his movies so much. Mary Boone gave him a fat discount just because the painting was going into his collection. He befriended the world’s biggest dealer, Larry Gagosian, and they remain close —when Gagosian held a dinner for Andreas Gursky in May, he saved the seat right next to him for Waters. 

    “He hired me to write the text for the Elizabeth Taylor Warhol show, and my things would have made the collectors so crazy,” Waters says. “He printed them on the wall, what I said. He was great. He didn’t censor anything. I haven’t bought anything from Larry in a while—by the time they get to him, I can’t afford anything.”

    It was way harder for the galleries to take him seriously as an artist. He didn’t have the bona fides of an art-school education and a Yale MFA, and could be seen as a Tinseltown interloper slumming it in SoHo with the art freaks. That changed after talking with one of the dealers he bought from, American Fine Arts founder Colin de Land. 

    “Colin was my first dealer—I would have never made it in the art world without Colin, because there’s nothing people hate in the art world more than somebody coming in from show business,” Waters says. “There’s nothing more hated. Colin, he legitimized me. He said to me, ‘Do you ever paint?’ And I said, ‘Well, I have all these little pictures.’ He said, ‘What do you mean you have these little pictures?’ Because I had some, but I hadn’t shown them to anybody. So he came down and saw them, and he gave me a show.” 

    Nate Freeman

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