Recent Comments

Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Subscribe to Legends Via E-mail

Hotel Chelsea Flickr

  • www.flickr.com
    This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from Flickr tagged with Hotel Chelsea. Make your own badge here.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in Bloglines


Powered by Rollyo

« February 2006 | Main | April 2006 »

March 31, 2006

All Power To The Corporate Blog

Earlier this week, Grumpy Old Bookman, a London-based book blog, linked to one of our posts.  One of Grumpy's readers had the following comment:

I followed the Chelsea blog for a time and find it a bit transparently promotional and probably put out by someone on the hotel payroll--which then leaves me a bit skeptical of its elaborate stories. Much like what one would read on the back of a dinner menu. In that sense, nice work.

     At last! Someone who sees the value of our blog!  Thank you Andrew.  We're going to run right down to Stanley Bard and show him your comment and demand that we be paid.  Surely he won't just Stanleyjerry raise our rent again. (Photo of Jerry and Stanley from 23rd & 7th blog, Screen capture from Chelsesa Walls)
     But we are curious about this restaurant that prints stories about fires and cockroaches on the back of its menu.  Could you give us its name and address?  We'd like to submit a story about junkies shooting up in its bathroom.  But we aren't too eager to eat there. 

March 30, 2006

The Mysterious Life and Death of David Linter

Seeing as how the tourists often end up with "Dave the Poet," in their lobby photos, we were hoping Davelobby_3 that Dave would reveal the dark inner secrets of the lobby, but I guess we're going to have to get him drunk first. 

Which poet do you most admire and how have they inspired your poetry?   For my two cents, John Berryman's The Dream Songs is the brassiest work ever put on a page; to have created such mysterious beauty while simultaneously taking evil on board is as divine as it gets.  The guy therefore loaned me his courage.

We hear that you’re working on a project about Herbert Huncke, how did that come about?
My friend and colleague, the eminent Dr. Timothy Sullivan, literally dropped Huncke's autobiography in my lap and suggested I check it.  I read exactly two pages and made a           beeline, albeit a gimpy one, for my room where I called my brother and my agent and convinced everyone that I ought to get the rights to this story.  By day's end, me and Huncke were on our way.

In all of your time enjoying the view from the lobby, what’s the most interesting lobby scene that you’ve witnessed?
I don't really find the lobby trip so interesting.  For me, it's  pure, selfish pleasure.  To read and get laid back and see and shoot the breeze with kind, fun people for hours at a time gives me the biggest kick.    Blue

Tell us about your work in the film industry.
That would be  a looong, very boring story, but I've done, and am doing pretty all right.  At least to the degree that I've got to a point where unless I'm feelin' it;.. the hell with it, the hell with me.   Fair enough and just how I always pictured it.  I guess you might say, I'm just livin' the dream.

How long have you lived at the Chelsea?  Twelve years, though not consecutive.

What inspired you to move into the Chelsea?  Mr. Bard was the only man in town willing to give me a lease without checking my credit.

How did you score your apartment?  I was in LA, just returned from Paris and was a trifle out of pocket.  I was there bumming five g's off my brother so I could get back to New York.  I bought a Village Voice and saw an ad for The Chelsea, advertising, weekly/monthly rates, so I asked a girlfriend of mine to grab me a room. 
   
Do you think there is a creative energy in the Chelsea?  Well, Christ, there ought to be.
 
How has living in the Chelsea affected your creative development?
I've no idea, but I'll bet it has.
   
What other creative people at the Chelsea or elsewhere have influenced your development?  My gal, Berengere, who if I know any genius' she be the one:  I steal everything I can off of her.
 
Who is the most famous person you’ve ever ridden with in the Chelsea elevator?  Arthur Miller. 

What’s the best/worst thing that has ever happened to you at the Chelsea?  I died, (worst), and resurrected, (best, I guess); thereby fulfilling a lifelong Lazarus complex.
   
Do you know if any famous folks have lived in your room? We'se all jes' plain folks in this here room.

What’s your favorite Hotel Chelsea story?  I like the ones about Jerry and Stanley being busboys in the Catskills when they were sprites.
 

March 29, 2006

Paris Photos

Some of the most engaging photos I have seen from the demonstrations in Paris are being posted by Gonz former Chelsea Hotel resident Sparkle Hayter. Photo shown is by by a talented 20-year old named Charlotte Gonzale.

More Bohemian Theme Hotels

Bohemian package tours are all the rage these days.  For 2,600 pounds you can check into the Savoy Savoy Hotel in London and follow in the footsteps of Monet.  The room comes with an easle, paints, and presumably, a brush.  For a more authentic -- and much less costly -- experience, why not visit the Chelsea?  Afterall, surely you can walk across the street to the art supply store and purchase your own easel.  And there are plenty of painters around here to provide some instruction free of charge. 

"a couple can stay two nights at one of the Savoy rooms where Monet painted 70 of his famous canvasses of the murky London skyline.  They will also get an easel, paints and the tutelage of art teacher Neil Meacher." (Source: CBC Arts, March 25, 2006)

At least they get it over at USA Today.  They recommend the Chelsea Hotel as one of the places to "feel the beat."

March 28, 2006

ETHAN HAWKE SUMMONS PROPHETS TO END WAR

MUSIC AND STARS AT BRUCE LEVINGSTON’S FIFTH ANIVERSARY GALA

FOR THE PREMIER COMMISSION

On our way out the door to the pianist Bruce Levingston’s concert at the Lincoln Center, the desk clerk at the Chelsea, having little faith in my powers of concentration, warned me not to fall asleep.

But there was no danger of that, as the program of music turned out to be quite invigorating.  Bruce started the evening off with a familiar Chopin nocturne.  He played it well, and I thoroughly enjoyed his interpretation.  The next piece, “Wichita Vortex Sutra,” by Allen Ginsberg, set to music by Bruceethan Philip Glass from his Hydrogen Jukebox, turned out to be the high point of the first half of the program.  Ethan Hawke came out in a semi-sparkly suit with peach shirt and delivered a stirring rendition of the piece, which is about the poet standing in the middle of Kansas, meditating on the end of war.  Ethan used a soft reading voice, but he was able to make it boom when, halfway through, he spoke like God on High, calling down the prophets of old into the vortex of Kansas to stand with him in proclaiming an end to war. (Unfortunately, this works about as well now as it did back in 1966 when Ginsberg wrote the poem.) (Photo of Bruce Levingston & Ethan Hawke by Lisa Ackerman)

After the break Bruce came back out and played a first-rate Chopin Etude, which I thought was his best piece of the night.  His mood varied between careful concentration and rapturous abandon as he gave his all at the piano, executing what was obviously a very difficult, albeit supremely rewarding, piece.

Next, Philip Glass came out and played Two Etudes, one of the highlights of the night.  It was Philipbruce_1 an exhilarating performance, and he won me over to his method right there.  An authoritative longhair sitting behind me remarked that he had made a couple of mistakes, and I could see what the guy was talking about, but Glass’s exuberance obviated any minor technical concerns. (Photo of Philip Glass and Bruce by Lisa Ackerman)

The last number was perhaps the most compelling: “Knee Play No. 5” from Glass’s Einstein on the Beach, which featured Michael Cunningham’s hypnotic reading of the weird, repetitive text: “These were theEthanmich days, my friends, yes these were the days my friends...”  (Cunningham is the author of The Hours and A Home at the End of the World, both fine novels.)  Whether by design, or simply because he had a more powerful voice, Michael drowned out Ethan Hawke, who read the other part.  That was my only quibble with the piece: tryPiano as I might, I couldn’t hear what Ethan was saying at all.  Nevertheless, it was a splendid performance of Glass’s masterful work, all the more remarkable when you learn that Glass had written a new arrangement of the piece right before the show and it had never been rehearsed in this form before. (Photos by Lisa Ackerman)

It was dreadfully crowded at the Gala reception afterward, too crowded, and there was a bottleneck going into the room.  Nobody could get through to the Veuve Clicquot—and I only wanted water, anyway—and people were swishing their long coats around and knocking wine glasses off of Party the tables onto the floor.  But the people I overheard all seemed to have appreciated the concert: “It was like a drug,” I heard a man remark.  “I closed my eyes and I could feel it surge through me.  I don’t need drugs with music so powerful as this.”  Drugs or no drugs, we had to get out of the close press in the room, so we fought our way back out to the hall, which by this time was also thronged with music aficionados. (Photo of Philip Glass, Bruce, & Ethan Hawke by Lisa Ackerman)

To our chagrin, our camera malfunctioned, so we couldn’t get any pictures of the stars.  Ethan Hawke was there talking to some old friends from the Chelsea.  Ready to give him a break, since he read the Ginsberg poem so well, I asked him if I could take his picture, and he snarled at me in reply.  I tried to take it anyway, and the camera flashed, but it didn’t turn out.  Damn.  That would have been a good one.  I was more concerned with Michael Cunningham anyway, since he’s a writer—though as far as I know he has no connection with the Chelsea.  (His book about Provincetown, Land’s End, is an extraordinary tour of another place we love, however.)  I overheard him and his friend talking about blogs, so maybe with any luck he’ll read this one and tell us whether he’s ever been to the Chelsea before.  And Michael Stipe from REM walked right past me, so close it was almost a jostle.  I could Tnmichaelstipe_032206 have whipped my camera out and flashed it right in his face, but by that point I wasn’t even trying anymore.  Ah well.  (I’ll bet he’s been to the Chelsea.)  (At least Patrick McMullan got the shot.) That’s what I get for using one of those disposable cameras; we’ll have to spring for some better equipment if we’re going to make it in the dog-eat-dog world of the paparazzi.

Unable to handle the crowd any longer, we slipped out the emergency door to the street, even though a stern security matron scowled at us disapprovingly.  Thanks, Bruce, for a thoroughly enjoyable evening of music. And thanks to Lisa for all of these wonderful pictures.

(Bruce Levingston’s new CD, Portraits, with music by Glass, Ravel, Messiaen, and Satie, is available at www.orangemountainmusic.com, www.premierecommission.org, and www.amazon.com .)  More reviews: New York Times.
Ed Hamilton

March 27, 2006

All Tomorrow's Parties - March 27 - April 2, 2006

Monday, March 27, 7:00 p.m.
John Weir, the author of one of the first novels to deal with the AIDS crisis will read from his most recent book, What I Did Wrong.
Half King 505 West 23rd St., NY NY

Tuesday, March 28, 6:30 p.m.
The Algonquin Hotel (the other literary hotel) is the location for the book release party for the new Al edition of The Portable Dorothy Parker. Editor Marion Meade will be the special guest. A full cocktail bar will be in place. RSVP to attend. Sponsored by the Dorothy Parker Society.
The Algonquin Hotel, 2nd floor, 55 East 44th St., NY NY

Tuesday, March 28, 10:30 p.m.

Susanne BDita_frontartsch, Kenny Kenny & Dita Von Teese invite you to celebrate the release of BURLESQUE & THE ART OF THE TEESE. Book signing throughout the night and show by Dita Von Teese.  Hosts: Sophia Lamar, Kim Aviance, Miranda Moondust, Andrea, and Amanda Lepore.
14 East 27 St., NY NY

Thursday, March 30
Only a couple of days left to catch Fluxus: To George With Love, From the Personal Collection of Jonas MekasThe exhibition has been curated from the personal collection of Jonas Mekas, avant-garde filmmaker and writer, founder and artistic director of Anthology Film Archives. Maya Stendhal Gallery, 545 W. 20th St. NY NY

Friday, March 31, 6 pm (doors open at 5:45)
Media artists Pat Ivers and Emily Armstrong will screen and discuss selections from their cable-TV show, Nightclubbing, which aired from 1975 to 1980. Greatest Hits includes performances by Downtown icons Blondie, Talking Heads, the Heartbreakers with Richard Hell, ( Hell recently shared Hellpink3 this tidbit with the blog: "You know, I never lived at the Chelsea, though my grandfather did, believe it or not, in the fifties and/or sixties--he was my father's mother and was named Lester Hodgson, but I've visited people there of course, and even recorded a poetry reading there that came out as a deluxe limited edition book/cd in the early '90s.) the Dead Boys, the Lounge Lizards, the Dead Kennedys, the Stillettos with Tish and Snooky, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, DNA, Iggy Pop, the Cramps, and John Cale, among many others, videotaped on location in such renowned venues as the Mudd Club, CBGB's, Hurraha's, and Danceteria. Followed by a conversation with Amos Poe, pioneering No Wave filmmaker.
Cantor Film Center, 36 East Eighth Street, Room 200

Saturday, April 1, 8:00 p.m.
Belatedly Transbigtile_1celebrate the novelist Nelson Algren's birthday (March 28) by seeing 'TRANSATLANTIC LIAISON',  a new play about Simone de Beauvoir concentrating on her affair with Nelson Algren.  The play uses details from her published letters and the novel "The Mandarins."  Algren is credited with having said "Never eat at a place called Mom's, never play cards with a guy named Doc, and never go to bed with anyone who has more troubles than you."  According to the Chelsea Hotel's official website, both Algren and de Beauvoir have spent time here at the Chelsea.
Harold Clurman Theater on Theater Row, 412 West 42nd Street, NY NY

Sunday, April 2, 8:00 p.m.
The world pemiere of Barfly Redux, Tsaurah Litzky's play concerning the life and loves of Charles Bukowksi.  Bukowski, we know, wrote about his stay at the Chelsea.
Bowery Poetry Club, 308 Bowery, NYC

If you have a relevant event that you would like featured in "All Tomorrow's Parties," please e-mail the information to chelblog@yahoo.com.

March 25, 2006

It's All About The Snakes

Just like we said last week, everybody remembers the snakes!  Peter Sanford interviews Rebecca Rebecca_miller_1 Miller about her film, The Ballad of Jack and Rose, which is opening in the UK this week.  The article briefly mentions the Chelsea.
Rebecca's childhood was, in her recollection, 'very normal' - loving parents, growing up on a farm, going to school, no limos or first-class flights. But it took place in a context that was anything but normal. So a visiting Henri Cartier-Bresson would read to her as a baby next to the Roxbury pond from the memoirs of an 18th-century French courtier. And for part of it, she lived with her parents in suite 614 at the fashionably rundown Chelsea Hotel in New York, home also to Lou Reed, Bob Dylan, Norman Mailer and 'a man with a very large snake who lived upstairs'. 

Mary J. Bilge Stops by the Chelsea

Bilge_1 After 14-Year Career Mary J. Bilge Proud to Still Be A Work in Progress
(AP Photo/Jim Cooper)

March 24, 2006

Don't Visit the Basement Or You Might Wet Your Pants

I love articles that start out by telling you that they're not going to be any good (The Independent).  That gives me an excuse to not read them.  But I soldiered on through Tracey Emin's hang-over noodlings because I wanted to see what she said about the Chelsea.  And boy am I glad I did. Turns out that after a party at the Chelsea, she and her friends decided to explore the basement.  God  knows what they did down there, but now it's permanently locked at night, with signs posted saying that's the new policy. We were wondering what brought that about.  Thanks for the info Tracey.  But really, what the hell went on down there?
On Saturday night, my New York gallery, Lehmann Maupin, held a dinner for me. I sat next to two of my favourite men - Hamish McAlpine and Julian Schnabel. It was a really cool dinner and I stayed Te sober. Well, sober enough to go to Phil Collins' party. (That' s Phil Collins the artist, not Phil Collins the musician). Mad nutty party in a suite in the Chelsea Hotel. Dancing until 4.30am. The grand finale, finding ourselves lost in the basement of the hotel. It was really scary. Like a scene out of Most Haunted. But I managed to stay calm and serene among the pipes and the ghosts - that's because I was reasonably sober. Any other time, I think I would have wet myself. That's what people do when they are really afraid. They wet themselves. (Source: The Independent, March 17, 2006, Tracy Emin)

Tonight's Event

My Mother Told Me I was Different: Stories from Stonewall On June 27, 1969 a routine raid on a little known Greenwich Village gay bar sparked a spontaneous series of events that forever changed the lives of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered people. Who were the people in the Stonewall Bar that evening? What happened that night in the bar, on the street, and in people’s minds, and why were these events destined to change society? “My Mother Told Me I was Different: Stories from Stonewall” is the moving story of the night that changed history, as told by the people who lived it. The reading will be directed by legendary downtown director and founding pioneer of Gay and Women’s Theatre, David Gaard. Bluestockings, 172 Allen St., btwn. Stanton & Rivington St. 212-777-6028. 7 p.m. Free.  (Source:  Gay City News)

advertisement

Culture Pundits Ad

Hotel Chelsea is Briefly Noted