Tag Archives: Billy Name

BLAKE GOPNIK AND OLIVIA LAING IN CONVERSATION

Blake Gopnik will join Olivia Laing and moderator Charlie Porter for a conversation about Andy Warhol, the subject of Gopnik’s massive new biography and the Tate Modern retrospective that opens this week.

Book signings with Gopnik and Laing will follow the event.

ON WARHOL—BLAKE GOPNIK and OLIVIA LAING

Thursday, March 12, at 6:30 pm.

Starr Cinema—Tate Modern

Bankside, London.

Andy Warhol, from top: Self-Portrait, 1986; Boy with Flowers, 1955–1957; Ladies and Gentlemen, 1975; Blake Gopnik, Warhol: A Life as Art, British edition, courtesy and © 2020 London: Allen Lane/Penguin; Billy Name (left) and Warhol in the Factory, mid-1960s; Debbie Harry, 1980. Images courtesy and © 2020 the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., Artists Right Society, New York, and DACS, London.

LUPE

LUPE (1965)—the last feature Edie Sedgwick shot for Andy Warhol—features his most notorious superstar playing herself in an art-meets-life portrayal of Lupe Vélez, the stage and screen actress known as the “Mexican Spitfire” who died at age 36 after an overdose of Seconal and brandy. (Edie made it to age 28.)

The film—a double-screen projection—co-stars Factory regular Billy Name and will screen this week at USC.

LUPE

Wednesday, March 27, at 7:30 pm.

Ray Stark Theatre

George Lucas Building, USC

900 West 34th Street, Los Angeles.

Edie Sedgwick in Lupe, © Andy Warhol Museum, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, all rights reserved.

FREDDY

“Freddy was addicted to that moment between the body’s rise and fall.” — FREDDY, by Deborah Lawlor

Freddy Herko was a beautiful, talented dancer, a co-founder (with Diane di Prima, Amiri Baraka, and choreographer James Waring) of the New York Poets Theatre, and—with Lucinda Childs and Yvonne Rainer—a charter member of Judson Dance Theater.

At Warhol’s factory, he was introduced to the wonders of methamphetamine. A runaway addiction commenced, which ended in 1964 when Freddy—age 28, but aging fast—took a great, naked leap into the blue from a fifth-floor loft in Lower Manhattan, the highly amplified sounds of Mozart’s “Coronation Mass” following him out the window.

Herko’s ballet days and Factory nights are revisited in FREDDY, Deborah Lawlor’s 50-minute fantasia—part theater, part dance, part happening. Lawlor (a co-founder of the Fountain Theatre in Los Angeles) was an intimate of Herko’s in the ’60s, and knew all of the characters who dance through her piece: Waring (Mel England), Billy Name (Connor Clark Pascale), Ondine (Justice Quinn), Rotten Rita (Jesse Trout), etc. In the title role, Marty Dew ably captures the energy and waste of Herko’s fast trip and long drop, but the piece is anchored by Lawlor’s alter ego—a narrator called “present-day Shelley”—played with grace by former dancer and veteran actor Susan Wilder.

FREDDY—a Fountain Theatre production, playing off-site at the Los Angeles City College’s Vermont Avenue campus—is directed by Frances Loy, with choreography and movement direction by Cate Caplin.

FREDDY, through October 14.

CAMINITO THEATRE, LACC, 855 North Vermont, Los Angeles.

See Tim Teeman, “The Life and Dramatic Death of an Avant-Garde Hero,” The Guardian, October 23, 2014:

theguardian.com/fred-herko-avant-garde-hero

From top:

Fred Herko dancing on rooftop in Manhattan in the early 1960s; Freddy, with Jesse Trout (kneeling left), Connor Clark Pascale (standing right), Justice Quinn (below Pascale); Marty Dew as Herko in Freddy; Herko.

All Freddy photographs by Ed Krieger.

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