Kenneth Anger
Kenneth Anger (born Kenneth Wilbur Anglemyer, February 3, 1927) is an American underground experimental filmmaker, actor, and author. Working exclusively in short films, he has produced almost forty works since 1937, nine of which have been grouped together as the "Magick Lantern Cycle".[1] His films variously merge surrealism with homoeroticism and the occult, and have been described as containing "elements of erotica, documentary, psychodrama, and spectacle".[2] Anger himself has been described as "one of America's first openly gay filmmakers, and certainly the first whose work addressed homosexuality in an undisguised, self-implicating manner", and his "role in rendering gay culture visible within American cinema, commercial or otherwise, is impossible to overestimate",[3] with several being released prior to the legalization of homosexual acts between consenting adults in the United States. He has also focused upon occult themes in many of his films, being fascinated by the English gnostic mage and poet Aleister Crowley, and is an adherent of Thelema, the religion Crowley founded.
Kenneth Anger | |
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Kenneth Anger in 2011 | |
Born | Kenneth Wilbur Anglemyer February 3, 1927 Santa Monica, California, U.S. |
Occupation |
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Years active | 1941–present |
Awards | Maya Deren Award (1996) |
Born to a middle-class family in Santa Monica, California, Anger would later claim to have been a child actor who appeared in the film A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935); the accuracy of this claim has come under dispute. He began making short films when he was ten years old, although his first film to gain any recognition, the homoerotic Fireworks (1947), would only be produced a decade later. The controversial nature of the work led to him being put on trial on obscenity charges, but he was acquitted. A friendship and working relationship began subsequently with pioneering sexologist Alfred Kinsey. Moving to Europe, Anger produced a number of other shorts inspired by the artistic avant-garde scene on the continent, such as Rabbit's Moon (released 1971) and Eaux d'Artifice (1953).
Returning to the United States in 1953, he set about working on several new projects, including the films Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954), Scorpio Rising (1964), Kustom Kar Kommandos (1965), and the gossip book Hollywood Babylon (1965). The latter would become infamous for its many dubious and sensationalist claims, many of which were later disproven, though some do remain as urban legends. Getting to know several notable countercultural figures of the time, including Tennessee Williams, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Jimmy Page, Marianne Faithfull and Anton LaVey, Anger involved them in his subsequent Thelemite-themed works, Invocation of My Demon Brother (1969) and Lucifer Rising (1972). Following his failure to produce a sequel to Lucifer Rising, which he attempted through the mid-1980s, Anger retired from filmmaking, instead focusing on Hollywood Babylon II (1984). At the dawn of the 21st century he once more returned to filmmaking, producing shorts for various film festivals and events.
Anger has described filmmakers such as Auguste and Louis Lumière, Georges Méliès, and Maya Deren as influences,[4] and has been cited as an important influence on later film directors like Martin Scorsese,[5] David Lynch[6] and John Waters.[7] He has also been described as having "a profound impact on the work of many other filmmakers and artists, as well as on music video as an emergent art form using dream sequence, dance, fantasy, and narrative".[2]
Biography
1927–35: Early life
Anger was born in Santa Monica, California, as Kenneth Wilbur Anglemyer on February 3, 1927. His father, Wilbur Anglemyer, was of German ancestry, and had been born in Troy, Ohio, while his disabled mother, Lillian Coler (who was the older of the pair), claimed English ancestry. The pair had met at the Ohio State University and after marrying had their first child, Jean Anglemyer, in 1918, followed by a second, Robert "Bob" Anglemyer, in 1921. That year they moved to Santa Monica to be near Lillian's mother, Bertha Coler, who herself had recently moved there. It was here where Wilbur got a job working as an electrical engineer at Douglas Aircraft, bringing in enough money so that they could live comfortably as a middle-class family.[8]
Kenneth, their third and final child, was born in 1927, but growing up he would fail to get along with either his parents or his siblings. His brother Bob later claimed that being the youngest child, Kenneth had been spoilt by his mother and grandmother, and as such had become somewhat "bratty." His grandmother, Bertha, was a big influence on the young Kenneth, and indeed helped to maintain the family financially during the Great Depression of the 1930s. It was she who first took Kenneth to the cinema, to see a double bill of The Singing Fool and Thunder Over Mexico and also encouraged his artistic interests. She herself later moved into a house in Hollywood with another woman, Miss Diggy, who equally encouraged Kenneth.[9] He developed an early interest in film, and enjoyed reading the movie tie-in Big Little books. He would later relate that "I was a child prodigy who never got smarter."[10] He retrospected his attendance at the Santa Monica Cotillon where child stars were encouraged to mix with non-famous children and through this met Shirley Temple, with whom he danced on one occasion.[11]
It was in 1935, he would later claim, that Anger had the chance to appear in a Hollywood film, taking the role of the Changeling Prince in the 1935 Warner Brothers film A Midsummer Night's Dream. Set photographs and studio production reports (on file in the Warner Brothers collection at University of Southern California, and the Warner Bros. collection of studio key books at George Eastman House in Rochester, New York) in fact contradict Anger's claims, conclusively proving that the character was played by a girl named Sheila Brown. Anger's unofficial biographer, Bill Landis, remarked in 1995 that the Changeling Prince was definitely "Anger as a child; visually, he's immediately recognizable".[12]
1937–46: First films
Anger's first film was created in 1937, when he was only ten years old. The short, titled Ferdinand the Bull, had been shot on the remains of 16 mm film to which had been left unused after the Anglemyer's family vacation to Yosemite National Park, where they had been making home movies with it. In Ferdinand the Bull, which has never been made publicly available, Kenneth dressed as a matador, wearing a cape, while 2 of his friends from the Boy Scouts played the bull.[13] His second work, Who Has Been Rocking My Dreamboat, which Anger himself often considers to be his first proper film, was made from footage of children playing during the summer, accompanied with popular songs by bands, including the Ink Spots. Anger had created Who Has Been Rocking My Dreamboat in 1941, when he was fourteen, shortly before the Attack on Pearl Harbor and the subsequent entry of the United States into the Second World War, adding to the poignancy of this early work.[14] The following year he produced another amateur film, Prisoner of Mars, which was heavily influenced by Flash Gordon, a series that he was a fan of. In this science fiction-inspired feature, he added elements taken from the Greek mythological myth of the Minotaur and himself played the protagonist, as well as constructing a small volcano in his back yard to create a form of home-made special effect.[14] It is believed that many of these early films are lost, with Anger burning much of his previous work in 1967.[15]
—Kenneth Anger[16]
In 1944, the Anglemyers moved to Hollywood to live with their grandmother, and Kenneth began attending Beverly Hills High School. It was here, he met Maxine Peterson, who had once been the stand-in for Shirley Temple, and he asked her – alongside another classmate and an old woman to appear in his next film project, which he initially called Demigods, but was later retitled Escape Episode. Revolving partially around the occult, it was filmed in a "spooky old castle" in Hollywood, and was subsequently screened at the Coronet Theatre on North La Cienega Blvd. in Los Angeles. Around this time, Anger also began attending the screenings of silent films held at Clara Grossman's art gallery, through which he met a fellow filmmaker, Curtis Harrington, and together they formed Creative Film Associates (CFA). Harrington is said to have introduced Anger to the work of Aleister Crowley.[17] Crowley's philosophy of Thelema would exert a profound influence on the remainder of Anger's career. CFA was founded to distribute experimental films or "underground films" such as those of Maya Deren, John and James Whitney, as well as Anger's and Harrington's.[18]
In high school, Anger started to become interested in the occult, which he had first indirectly encountered through reading L. Frank Baum's Oz books as a child, with their accompanying Rosicrucian philosophies. Kenneth was very interested in the works of the French ceremonial magician Eliphas Levi, as well as Sir James Frazer's The Golden Bough,[19] although his favorite writings were those of the English occultist Aleister Crowley. Crowley had founded a religion known as Thelema based upon a spiritual experience that he had in Egypt in 1904, in which he claimed a being known as Aiwass had contacted him and recited to him The Book of the Law. Kenneth subsequently became a great fan of Crowley's work and converted to Thelema.[20]
1947–49: Fireworks and early career
As Anger discovered his homosexuality, at a time when homosexual acts were still illegal in the United States, he began associating with the underground gay scene. At some point in the mid-1940s, he was arrested by the police in a "homosexual entrapment", after which he decided to move out of his parents' home, gaining his own sparse apartment largely financed by his grandmother,[21] and abandoning the name Anglemyer in favor of Anger.[22] He started attending the University of Southern California, where he studied cinema, and also began experimenting with the use of mind-altering drugs like cannabis and peyote.[23] It was then that he decided to produce a film that would deal with his sexuality, just as other gay avant-garde film makers like Willard Maas were doing in that decade. The result was the short film Fireworks, which was created in 1947 but only exhibited publicly in 1948.
Upon release of the work, Anger was arrested on obscenity charges.[24] He was acquitted, after the case went to the Supreme Court of California, which deemed it to be art rather than pornography.[25] Anger made the claim to have been seventeen years old when he made it, despite the fact that he was actually twenty, presumably to present himself as more of an enfant terrible.[26] A homoerotic work lasting only 14 minutes, Fireworks revolves around a young man (played by Anger himself) associating with various navy sailors, who eventually turn on him, stripping him naked and beating him to death, ripping open his chest to find a compass inside. Several fireworks then explode, accompanied by a burning Christmas tree and the final shot shows the young man lying in bed next to another shirtless man. Of this film, Anger would later state in 1966 that "This flick is all I have to say about being 17, the United States Navy, American Christmas and the fourth of July."[27] He would continuously alter and adapt the film up until 1980, with it finally being distributed on VHS in 1986.[28]
One of the first people to buy a copy of Fireworks was the sexologist Dr. Alfred Kinsey of the Institute for Sex Research. He and Anger struck up a friendship that would last until the doctor's death, during which time Anger aided Kinsey in his research. According to Anger's unofficial biographer Bill Landis, Kinsey became a "father figure" whom Anger "could both interact with and emulate."[29] Meanwhile, in 1949 Anger began work on a film called Puce Women, which unlike Fireworks was filmed in color. It starred Yvonne Marquis as a glamorous woman going about her daily life; Anger would later state that "Puce Women was my love affair with Hollywood ... with all the great goddesses of the silent screen. They were to be filmed in their homes; I was, in effect, filming ghosts."[30] A lack of funding meant that only one scene was ever produced, which was eventually released under the title Puce Moment. That same year, Anger directed The Love That Whirls, a film based upon Aztec human sacrifice but, because of the nudity that it contained, it was destroyed by technicians at the film lab, who deemed it to be obscene.[31]
1950–53: France, Rabbit's Moon and Eaux d'Artifice
In 1950, Anger moved to Paris, France, where he initially stayed with friends of his (who themselves had been forced to leave Hollywood after being blacklisted for formerly having belonged to trade union organisations).[32] He would later remark that he travelled to the country after receiving a letter from the French director Jean Cocteau in which he told Anger of his admiration for Fireworks (shown in 1949 at Festival du Film Maudit in Biarritz, France). Upon arrival, Anger and Cocteau became friends, with the Frenchman giving the young protege his permission to make a movie of his ballet The Young Man and Death, although at the time there were no financial backers for the project.[33] While in Paris he continued producing short films; in 1950 he started filming on Rabbit's Moon, which was also known as La Lune des Lapins and revolved around a clown who was staring up at the moon, in which a rabbit lived, something found within Japanese mythology. Anger produced 20 minutes of footage at the Films du Pantheon Studio in the city before he was rushed out of the studio, leaving the film uncompleted. He stored the footage in the disorganized archives of the Cinémathèque Française, and only collected it again in 1970, when he finally finished and released Rabbit's Moon.[34][35] It was at the Cinémathèque Française that he was given by the head, Henri Langlois, prints of Sergei Eisenstein's Que Viva Mexico!, which he attempted to put into Eisenstein's original order.[36]
—Kenneth Anger[37]
In 1953, he travelled to Rome, Italy where he planned to make a film about the sixteenth century occultist Cardinal d'Este. To do so, he began filming at the garden of the Villa d'Este in Tivoli, in which a lady in eighteenth century dress walked through the gardens, which featured many waterfalls (an allusion to the fact that d'Este allegedly sexually enjoyed urination),[37] accompanied by the music of Vivaldi.[38] This was supposedly going to be only the first of four scenes, but the others were not made; the resulting one-scene film was titled Eaux d'Artifice. As Anger's biographer Bill Landis remarked, "It's one of Anger's most tranquil works; his editing makes it soft, lush, and inviting. Eaux d'Artifice remains a secretive romp through a private garden, all for the masked figure's and the viewer-voyeur's pleasure."[39]
1953–60: Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome and Hollywood Babylon
In 1953, soon after the production of Eaux d'Artifice, Anger's mother died and he temporarily returned to the United States in order to assist with the distribution of her estate. It was during this return that he began to once more immerse himself in the artistic scene of California, befriending the film maker Stan Brakhage, who had been inspired by Fireworks, and the two collaborated on producing a film, but it was confiscated at the film lab for obscenity and presumably destroyed.[40] Around this time, two of Anger's friends, the couple Renate Druks and Paul Mathiesin held a party based upon the theme of "Come As Your Madness"; Anger himself attended dressed in drag as the ancient Greek goddess Hekate. The party and its many costumes inspired Anger, who produced a painting of it, and asked several of those who attended to appear in a new film that he was creating – Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome.[41] Inauguration, which was created in 1954, was a 38-minute surrealist work featuring many Crowleyan and Thelemite themes, with many of the various characters personifying various pagan gods such as Isis, Osiris and Pan. One of the actresses in the film was Marjorie Cameron, the widow of Jack Parsons, the influential American Thelemite who had died a few years previously, while Anger himself played Hecate.[42] He would subsequently exhibit the film at various European film festivals, winning the Prix du Ciné-Club Belge and the Prix de l'Age d'Or, as well as screening it in the form of a projected triptych at Expo 58, the World Fair held in Brussels in 1958.[43]
In 1955, Anger and his friend Alfred Kinsey traveled to the derelict Abbey of Thelema in Cefalù, Sicily, to film a short documentary titled Thelema Abbey. The abbey itself had been used by Aleister Crowley for his commune during the 1920s, and Anger restored many of the erotic wall-paintings that were found there, as well as performing certain Crowleyan rituals at the site. The documentary was made for the British television series Omnibus, but was later lost.[20][44] The following year Kinsey died and Anger decided to return to Paris, where he was described at the time as being "extremely remote and lonely".[45]
In desperate need of money, Anger and ghostwriter Elliott Stein wrote a book titled Hollywood Babylon in which he collected together gossip regarding celebrities, some of which he claims he had been told. This included claiming (with no corroboration or citing of sources) that Rudolph Valentino liked to play a sexually submissive role to dominant women, that Walt Disney was a drug user, addicted to opiates (reflected in the character of Goofy, who's perpetually stoned on cannabis), as well as describing the nature of the deaths of Peg Entwistle and Lupe Vélez. The work was not published in the United States initially, and it was first released by the French publisher Jean-Jacques Pauvert.[46] A pirated (and incomplete) version was first published in the U.S. in 1965, with the official American version not being published until 1974. Now with some financial backing from the publication of Hollywood Babylon, his next film project was The Story of O; it was essentially a piece of erotica featuring a heterosexual couple engaged in sadomasochistic sexual activities, although it refrained from showing any explicit sexual images.[47]
1961–65: Scorpio Rising and Kustom Kar Kommandos
In 1961, Anger once more returned to America, where he lived for a time with Marjorie Cameron.[48] Meanwhile, he began work on a new feature, a film about the emerging biker subculture, which he titled Scorpio Rising. For this, he employed a biker named Richard McAuley, and filmed him and some of his friends messing around, adding to it scenes of McAuley, or "Scorpio" as he became known, desecrating a derelict church. Anger incorporated more controversial visuals into the piece, including Nazi iconography, nudity, and clips of the life of Jesus Christ taken from Family Films' The Living Bible: Last Journey to Jerusalem. In Scorpio Rising, Anger intercuts images of Christ from the cheap religious film with those of Scorpio. The whole film has a soundtrack made up of popular 1960s songs, including "Blue Velvet" by Bobby Vinton, "Torture" by Kris Jensen and "I Will Follow Him" by Little Peggy March.[49] Anger himself described the film as "a death mirror held up to American culture ... Thanatos in chrome, black leather, and bursting jeans."[50] It immediately became popular on the underground cinema scene although was soon brought to court with complaints claiming that it was obscene. The all-female jury ruled in favor of the prosecutors, and Scorpio Rising was banned, although this ban was subsequently overturned on appeal to the California State Supreme Court.[51]
With Scorpio Rising finished and Anger now living in San Francisco, he went to the Ford Foundation, which had just started a program of giving out grants to filmmakers. He showed them his ideas for a new artistic short, titled Kustom Kar Kommandos, which they approved of, and gave him a grant of $10,000.[52] However, Anger spent much of the money on living expenses and making alterations to some of his earlier films, meaning that by the time he actually created Kustom Kar Kommandos, it was only one scene long. This homoerotic film involved various shots of a young man polishing a drag strip racing car, accompanied with a pink background and the song "Dream Lover" by The Paris Sisters. Soon after, Anger struck a deal that allowed Hollywood Babylon to be officially published in the United States for the first time, where it proved a success, selling two million copies during the 1960s, and around the same time Anger also translated Lo Duca's History of Eroticism into English for American publication.[53]
1966–69: The hippie movement and Invocation of My Demon Brother
The mid-1960s saw the emergence of the hippie scene and the increasing use of the mind-altering drugs that Anger himself had been using for many years. In particular, the hallucinogen LSD, which at the time was still legal in the United States, was very popular, and in 1966 Anger released a version of his earlier film, Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome titled the "Sacred Mushroom Edition" which was screened to people while taking LSD, thereby heightening their sensory experience.[54] By this time, Anger had become well known throughout the underground scene in the United States, and several cinemas across the country screened his better known films all in one event.[55] With this growing fame, Anger began to react to publicity in much the same way as his idol Aleister Crowley had done, for instance describing himself as "the most monstrous moviemaker in the underground", a pun on the fact that Crowley had been labelled "the wickedest man in the world" by the British tabloids in the 1920s.[56] Anger's fame on the underground circuit allowed him to increasingly associate with other celebrities, including Anton LaVey, the founder of the Church of Satan who named Anger as godfather to Zeena Schreck (LaVey's daughter).[57] Despite Anger and LaVey's differing philosophies, the two became good friends and would remain so for many years. However, Anger also held a resentment towards certain celebrities, namely Andy Warhol, who at the time was achieving success not only in the art world but also in the underground film scene.[58] In 1980, Anger threw paint over the front door of a house that Warhol had recently moved out of.[59]
In 1966, Anger moved into the ground floor of a large nineteenth-century Victorian house in San Francisco known as the Russian Embassy.[60] Around this time he began planning a new film titled Lucifer Rising echoing his Thelemite beliefs about the emerging Aeon of Horus. He tattooed the name of Lucifer upon his chest and began searching for a young man who could symbolically become Lucifer, "the Crowned and Conquering Child" of the new Aeon, for Lucifer Rising. While living at the Russian Embassy, he met and lived with various young men who could fit the position. Finally, he settled upon Bobby Beausoleil for the role of Lucifer.[61] Beausoleil founded a band, the Magic Powerhouse of Oz, in order to record the music for the film.[62] In 1967, Anger said that the footage which he had been filming for Lucifer Rising had been stolen, placing the blame on Beausoleil, who would deny the claims. Anger's unofficial biographer Bill Landis quotes Beausoleil who states, "what had happened was that Kenneth had spent all the money that was invested in Lucifer Rising" and that he therefore invented the story to satisfy the film's creditors.[63] Beausoleil and Anger fell out, with the former getting involved with Charles Manson and his cult, the Family, eventually carrying out Manson's bidding by torturing and murdering Gary Hinman.
In the October 26, 1967 issue of Village Voice, Anger publicly reinvented himself by placing a full-page advert declaring "In Memoriam. Kenneth Anger. Filmmaker 1947–1967". He soon publicly reappeared, this time to claim that he had burned all of his early work.[64] The following year he travelled to London where he first met John Paul Getty, Jr., who became Anger's patron, and where he also met and befriended Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, members of The Rolling Stones,[65] as well as actress/model Anita Pallenberg.[66] Anger then decided to use much of the footage created for Lucifer Rising in a new film of his, Invocation of My Demon Brother, which starred Beausoleil, LaVey, Jagger and Richards, as well as Anger himself, and the music for which had been composed by Jagger. It was released in 1969, and explored many of the Thelemic themes that Anger had originally intended for Lucifer Rising.[67] Author Gary Lachman believes the film "inaugurat[ed] the midnight movie cult at the Elgin Theatre."[68] The story of the film, its making, and the people involved are the inspiration for the novel Sway, by Zachary Lazar.[69][70]
1970–81: Lucifer Rising
Having used up much of the footage originally intended for Lucifer Rising for Invocation of My Demon Brother, Anger again set about to create "Lucifer Rising", a symbolic analogy of the coming Aeon of Horus as prophesied in the Thelemic sacred text, The Book of the Law. Anger persuaded the singer and actress Marianne Faithfull to appear in it. He also tried to convince his friend Mick Jagger to play the part of Lucifer in the film but Jagger refused. Instead he offered his brother Chris for the part. Anger accepted, but was not happy about it.[71] Anger subsequently filmed eight minutes of film and showed it to the British National Film Finance Corporation who agreed to provide £15,000 in order for Anger to complete it – something that caused a level of outrage in the British press. With this money, he could afford to fly the cast and crew to both Germany and Egypt for filming.[72] Anger befriended Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page around this time, the two sharing a great interest in Crowley. At Page's invitation, Anger travelled to Page's new home, Crowley's former residence Boleskine House located on the shores of Loch Ness in Scotland, to help the musician exorcise the building of what Page believed to be a headless man's ghost.[73] Page subsequently agreed to produce the soundtrack for Lucifer Rising,[74] and used the editing suite which was in the basement of his London home to shape the music which he produced.[75] Anger later fell out with Page's wife Charlotte, who kicked him out of the house. In retaliation, Anger called a press conference in which he ridiculed Page and threatened to "throw a Kenneth Anger curse" on him.[76] Page's music was dumped from the film and replaced in 1979 by music written and recorded by the imprisoned Bobby Beausoleil, with whom Anger had reconciled.[77]
—Kenneth Anger[78]
Meanwhile, Anger, who moved to a small apartment on the upper east side of Manhattan, took the footage that he had filmed for Rabbit's Moon in the 1950s, finally releasing the film in 1972, and again in a shorter version in 1979. Around the same time he also added a new soundtrack to Puce Moment and re-released it.[79] It was also around this time that the publisher Marvin Miller produced a low budget documentary film based on Hollywood Babylon without Anger's permission, which upset Anger and led to a lawsuit.[80] He also created a short film titled Senators in Bondage which was only available to private collectors and which has never been made publicly available, and had plans to make a film about Aleister Crowley titled The Wickedest Man in the World, but this project never got off the ground.[81] In 1980, he holidayed with his friend, the playwright Tennessee Williams.
It was in 1981, a decade after starting the project, that he finally finished and released the 30-minute-long Lucifer Rising. Based upon the Thelemite concept that mankind had entered a new period known as the Aeon of Horus, Lucifer Rising was full of occult symbolism, starring Miriam Gibril as the Ancient Egyptian goddess Isis and Donald Cammell as her consort Osiris, as well as Marianne Faithfull as Jewish mythological figure Lilith and Leslie Huggins as Lucifer himself. Anger once again appeared in the film, starring as the Magus, the same role that he played in Invocation to My Demon Brother.[82] He had surrealistically combined the roles that these characters played with footage of volcanoes, various ancient Egyptian temples and a Crowleyan adept reading from the man's texts.
1982–99: Retirement
Soon after the release of Lucifer Rising, a PBS documentary of Anger and his films was made, titled Kenneth Anger's Magick, which was directed by Kit Fitzgerald, who later recalled interviewing him in his New York flat on a very hot July evening, during which Anger revealed that he was so broke that he had been forced to sell his air conditioner.[83] Anger himself considered producing other films that would continue on from Lucifer Rising in a series, and he began referring to his finished film as "Part I: Sign Language", to be followed by two further parts.[78] Nonetheless, these projects would never be finished, and Anger himself would not produce any further films for nearly two decades. In need of money, Anger subsequently released Hollywood Babylon II in 1984, as well as continuing to screen his films at various festivals and at universities, and continuing to attempt to produce Lucifer Rising II; around this time he began wearing an eyepatch to these public events, something likely due to him having been beaten up and getting a bruised eye, a story that he would bring up in various interviews, although partly changing who it was who had beaten him up in various versions of the story.[84] In 1984, a notorious incident occurred when Anger was invited to appear on The Coca Crystal Show, however upon arriving at the studio he demanded that somebody pay for his taxi ride there, and when they refused, he attacked the talent coordinator Maureen Ivice and tried to drag her into his taxi, before she was rescued by other members of staff – Anger reportedly escaped the scene by flinging a $100 bill at the cab driver and screaming "GET ME OUT OF HERE!"[85]
In 1986, he sold the video rights to his films, which finally appeared on VHS, allowing them to have greater publicity. The following year he attended the Avignon Film Festival in France where his work was being celebrated in commemoration of the fortieth anniversary of Fireworks. Soon after this, he appeared in Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon, a BBC documentary for the Arena series directed by Nigel Finch. In 1991, Anger moved to West Arenas Boulevard in Palm Springs, California, living in what was formerly the estate of his good friend Ruby Keeler where the British Film Institute sent Rebecca Wood to assist him in writing an autobiography, which was never actually produced.[86] Instead, in 1995, Bill Landis, who had been an associate of Anger's in the early 1980s, wrote an unofficial biography of him, which Anger himself condemned, describing Landis as "an avowed enemy".[87]
In 1993, Anger visited Sydney and lectured at a season of his films at the Australian Film Institute Cinema in Paddington. In an interview given at the time with Black and White magazine, [88] Anger said he was staying in King's Cross and was putting the finishing touches to the final treatment on a feature film about Australian artist and occultist Rosaleen Norton. This project was unrealised.
2000–present: Return to filmmaking
For twenty years from the early 1980s, Anger released no new material. In 2000, at the dawn of the new millennium, Anger began screening a new short film, the anti-smoking Don't Smoke That Cigarette, followed a year later by The Man We Want to Hang, which comprised images of Aleister Crowley's paintings that had been exhibited at a temporary exhibition in Bloomsbury, London. In 2004, he began showing Anger Sees Red, a short surrealistic film starring himself, and the same year also began showing another work, Patriotic Penis. He soon followed this with a flurry of other shorts, including Mouse Heaven, which consisted of images of Mickey Mouse memorabilia, Ich Will! and Uniform Attraction, all of which he showed at various public appearances.[89] Anger's most recent project has been the Technicolor Skull with musician Brian Butler, described as a "magick ritual of light and sound in the context of a live performance", in which Anger plays the theremin, and Butler plays the guitar and other electronic instruments, behind a psychedelic backdrop of colors and skulls.[90]
Anger makes an appearance in the 2008 feature documentary by Nik Sheehan about Brion Gysin and the Dreamachine titled FLicKeR.[91] Anger also appears alongside Vincent Gallo in the 2009 short film "Night of Pan" written and directed by Brian Butler.[92] In 2009 his work was featured in a retrospective exhibition at the MoMA PS1 in New York City,[93] and the following year a similar exhibition took place in London.[24]
Anger has finished writing Hollywood Babylon III, but has not yet published it, fearing severe legal repercussions if he did so. Of this he has stated that "The main reason I didn't bring it out was that I had a whole section on Tom Cruise and the Scientologists. I'm not a friend of the Scientologists."[24] Despite withholding legal action against the highly critical 2015 film Going Clear, the Church of Scientology was known on earlier occasions to sue those making accusations against them.
Themes
Several recurring themes can be seen within Anger's cinematic work. One of the most notable of these is homoeroticism; this was first seen in Fireworks (1947), which was based around Anger's own homosexual awakening, and featured various navy officers flexing their muscles, and a white liquid (often thought of as symbolising semen), pouring over the protagonist's body. Similar homoerotic imagery is found in Scorpio Rising (1963), which stars a muscled, topless, leather-clad biker, and Kustom Kar Kommandos (1965), where a young man sensually polishes a car, with close up shots of his tight-fitting jeans and crotch. Images of naked men also appear in Invocation of My Demon Brother (1969), where they are eventually filmed wrestling, and in Anger Sees Red (2004), in which a muscled, topless man performs press-ups.
Another recurring theme in Anger's films is that of the occult, particularly the symbolism of his own esoteric religion, Thelema. This is visible in Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome, Invocation of My Demon Brother and Lucifer Rising, all of which are based around the Thelemite concept of the Aeon of Horus and feature actors portraying various pagan gods. Anger himself linked the creation of film to the occult, particularly the practice of ceremonial magic, something that Aleister Crowley had been a noted practitioner of, and Anger once stated that "making a movie is casting a spell."[94]
One of the central recurring images found in Anger's work is the concept of flames and light; in Fireworks there are various examples of this, including a burning Christmas tree, and it subsequently appears in many of his other works as well. This relates to the concept of Lucifer, a deity whom Anger devoted one of his films to, and whose name is Latin for "light bearer".[95]
In many of his films, heavy use is made of music, both classical and pop, to accompany the visual imagery. For instance, in Scorpio Rising he makes use of the 1950s pop songs "Torture" by Kris Jensen, "I Will Follow Him" by Little Peggy March and "Blue Velvet" by Bobby Vinton. He first used music to accompany visuals in the 1941 work Who Has Been Rocking My Dreamboat?, where he used tracks by the Mills Brothers.[32] His use of popular music to accompany his films has been cited as a key influence on the development of music videos and of MTV, although he has stated his dislike for the whole music video industry. On one occasion the band Combustible Edison asked him if he would direct a video to accompany their song "Bluebeard" but he declined the offer, believing that while music could be used to accompany film, it was pointless to do it the other way around.[32]
Awards
- Maya Deren Award, 1996[96]
- Silver Lake Film Festival Spirit of Silver Lake Award (2000)[97]
- San Francisco International Film Festival Golden Gate Persistence of Vision Award (2001)[98]
- Los Angeles Film Critics Association Douglas Edwards Independent/Experimental Film/Video Award (2002), "for his body of work"; tied with Michael Snow, for *Corpus Callosum[99]
- Anthology Film Archives, Life Achievement Award (2010)[100]
Personal life
—Kenneth Anger[101]
Anger has always been an "extremely private individual,"[87] although he has given various interviews over the years, with one interviewer, David Wingrove, describing him in 2008 as "a joy. Gentle, soft-spoken, immaculately tanned, he looks a good two decades younger than his 78 years".[102][note 1] In such interviews, he refuses to disclose information on his name change from Anglemeyer to Anger, telling an interviewer who brought the topic up in 2004 that "You're being impertinent. It says Anger on my passport, that's all you need to know. I would stay away from that subject if I were you."[26] In a 2010 interview, however, he stated that, "I just condensed my name. I knew it would be like a label, a logo. It's easy to remember."[24] Anger is openly gay.[103] He once joked that he was "somewhat to the right of the KKK" in his views about black people,[104] opening him up to criticism for racism, though this was likely a "Crowley-esque joke".[104] He supports the Tibetan independence movement.[105]
After many years as an acknowledged Thelemite, Anger joined the main Thelemic organisation, the Ordo Templi Orientis. He viewed many of the men he associated with as living embodiments of Lucifer, a symbol of the Aeon of Horus in Thelemic philosophy, and had his own name inked onto his chest with the Lucifer tattoo.[105] Anger has shown an interest in various other religious movements, particularly those that relate in some way to occultism. For instance, Kenneth was a lifelong friend of Anton LaVey from before the founding of the Church of Satan in the 1960s and even lived with him and his family during the 1980s. LaVey also made an appearance in one of Anger's films, Invocation of My Demon Brother (1969) as a devilish priest. Anger describes himself as a "pagan" and refuses to consider himself to be a Satanist.[24] He also characterized Wicca as being a "lunar", feminine religion in contrast with the "solar" masculinity of Thelema.[105]
Filmography
Date | Title | Length | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1937 | Ferdinand the Bull | Lost film | |
1941–42 | Tinsel Tree | 3 mins. | A silent black-and-white film that Anger personally hand tinted with gold-scarlet over the flames. It featured a Christmas tree being dressed in decorations, before being shown stripped and bare and set on fire.[106] |
1942 | Prisoner of Mars | 11 mins. | A silent black-and-white film that mixes futuristic science fiction with the ancient Greek myth of the Minotaur. The plot revolves around a character, The Boy Elect from Earth, played by Anger himself, who is sent in a rocket to Mars where he finds himself in a labyrinth filled with the bones of other adolescents sent there in the past.[107] |
1943 | The Nest | 20 mins. | A silent black-and-white film in which a brother (played by Bob Jones) and sister (Jo Whittaker) are examining mirrors when a third figure (Dare Harris), causes them to act violently against one another, before a magical rite takes place in which the sister's binding spell is destroyed by the brother.[108] |
1944 | Demigods (Escape Episode) | 35 mins. | A silent black-and-white film based upon the ancient Greek myth of Andromeda, in which a girl (Marilyn Granas) is imprisoned within a seaside crumbling Neo-Gothic church guarded by a religious fanatic (Nora Watson), till she is saved by a boy representing Perseus (Bob Jones).[109] |
1945 | Drastic Demise | 5 mins. | A silent black-and-white work filmed by Anger in Hollywood on V-J Day. Consisting of footage of a celebratory crowd, it ends with an image of a nuclear mushroom cloud.[109] |
1946 | Escape Episode | 27 mins. | A shortened version of Demigods (Escape Episode), it features Scriabin's The Poem of Ecstasy alongside the sounds of birds, wind and surf.[109] |
1947 | Fireworks | 15 mins. | Filmed in black and white, it is a homoerotic work seen through the eyes of the protagonist, played by Anger himself. |
1949 | Puce Moment | 6 mins. | Filmed in color, starring Yvonne Marquis as a celebrity in her home, and featuring music by Jonathan Halper, Puce Moment lasted only one scene and portrays her examining her dresses and perfume.[110] |
1949 | The Love That Whirls | unknown | Influenced by James Frazer's anthropological text The Golden Bough, it was set in the Aztec civilisation, and featured a youth who was chosen to be king for a year before being ritually sacrificed. The film was subsequently destroyed at the Eastman-Kodak developing plant, who objected to its theme and nudity.[110] |
1950 | Rabbit's Moon | 16 mins (1971) 7 mins (1979) | Filmed in 35 mm, it is set in a small wooded glade where a clown stares up at the moon, in which a rabbit lives. |
1951–52 | Les Chants de Maldoror | unknown | Based upon the 1868 novel by Isidore Ducasse, Les Chants de Maldoror, only test shots were produced, in which he employed members of the Marquis de Cuevas ballet.[111] |
1953 | Eaux d'Artifice | 12 mins. | A short, monochromatic film appearing in dark blue, with only one moment of color – a woman opens a fan that glows in bright green. The woman appears in a gown stretching from neck to toe, wearing dark glasses and a feathered headdress. Water flows throughout, from fountains, and suggestively through the mouths and over the faces of statuary. Fluids sensually pulse and flow, reminiscent of sexual climax. In the end the woman steps from a door seemingly from the side of a fountain, and is herself transformed into water. The film is set to the music of Vivaldi's Winter Movement from the Four Seasons. |
1953 | Le Jeune Homme et la Mort | unknown | Based upon the ballet by Jean Cocteau, this silent black-and-white film starred Jean Babilee as a young man and Nathalie Philipart as Death. It was a 16 mm pilot designed to be used to raise funds to produce a 35 mm Technicolor version, but the funding for this never materialized.[112] |
1954 | Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome | 38 mins. | |
1955 | Thelema Abbey | 10 mins. | A short, black-and-white documentary on Aleister Crowley's Abbey of Thelema in Sicily, which examined many of the exotic frescoes, a study in which Anger was assisted by sexologist Alfred Kinsey.[111] |
1961 | L'Histoire d'O | 20 mins. | Based upon Pauline Réage's 1954 novel, L'Histoire d'O, it revolved around the sado-masochistic sexual activities of a heterosexual couple. Anger would later relate that the money provided for the film had been a part of the ransom paid to the kidnappers of Eric Peugeot, heir to the Peugeot car company fortune.[113] |
1963 | Scorpio Rising | 29 mins. | |
1965 | Kustom Kar Kommandos | 3 mins. | In color, set to the tones of "Dream Lover" by The Paris Sisters, several handsome young men stand admiringly over the chassis of a souped-up hot rod. A young man slowly works the chamois over the chrome and paint of the machine. The young man now smartly dressed in matching pastel blue gets behind the wheel and begins to work the controls. Finally the engine revs and the car rolls away. |
1969 | Invocation of My Demon Brother | 12 mins. | In color, with an electronic score by Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger. The film features an array of occult symbols and activities, including a Satanic funeral for a cat. Demon Brother also includes Anton LaVey as a priest, newsreel footage of the Vietnam War, and clips of The Rolling Stones' July 1969 free concert in London's Hyde Park, their first public appearance after the death of Brian Jones and their first performance with Mick Taylor. Also shown in the concert footage are Jagger's then-girlfriend and pop singer Marianne Faithfull and Keith Richards' wife, actress Anita Pallenberg. Demon Brother is mostly assembled from footage for Anger's original version of Lucifer Rising, including scenes of future Manson Family associate Bobby Beausoleil in the titular role. |
1970–1980 | Lucifer Rising | 29 mins. | |
1976 | Senators in Bondage | Announced, but never produced[114] | |
1977 | Matelots en Menottes | Announced, but never produced[114] | |
1979 | Denunciation of Stan Brakhage | 7 mins. | Announced, but never produced[114] |
2000 | Don't Smoke That Cigarette! | 45 mins. | |
2000 | Hollywood Babylon | 4 mins. | Co-directed with Nico B. |
2002 | The Man We Want to Hang | 12 mins. | Images of artworks by or related to Aleister Crowley with music by Anatol Liadov |
2004 | Anger Sees Red | 4 mins. | Comprises footage of a muscled man, who identifies himself only as "Red", walking through a park and sunbathing, at which he is seen by Anger himself, who is also in the park, before subsequently returning home. |
2004 | Patriotic Penis | ||
2005 | Mouse Heaven | 11 mins. | A montage of Mickey Mouse memorabilia from the 1920s and 1930s, accompanied by contemporary jazz music |
2007 | Elliott's Suicide | 15 mins. | |
2007 | I'll Be Watching You | 5 mins. | |
2007 | My Surfing Lucifer | 4 mins. | Color with no sound; "A Tribute to my Surfing Pal Adolph Bunker Spreckels III" "BUNKY". A young man with a white Mercedes, the rolling waves breaking on the beach, the surfers riding them in. The film ends with a closeup of the skinned elbow of the surfer, presumably abraded during a wipeout. |
2008 | Foreplay | 7 mins. | |
2008 | Ich Will! | 35 mins. | |
2008 | Uniform Attraction | 21 mins. | |
2010 | Missoni | 2 mins. 32 secs. |
Books
Year | Title | Other |
---|---|---|
1959 | Hollywood Babylon | |
1961 | A History of Eroticism | An introduction to Lo Duca's book. |
1970 | Atlantis: The Lost Continent | An introduction to Aleister Crowley's book. |
1984 | Hollywood Babylon II | |
2001 | Suicide in the Entertainment Industry | With David K. Frasier. |
References
Notes
- In 2008, Anger was actually 81, but claimed to be younger, as he has repeatedly done throughout his life.
Citations
- Hunter 2002, p. 108
- The Kinsey Institute, Spotlight on the Collections: Filmmaker Kenneth Anger Archived March 10, 2006, at the Wayback Machine 2004. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
- Svede, Mark Allen (2002). "Anger, Kenneth". glbtq. Archived from the original on May 26, 2006.
- Landis 1995, p. 24
- LoBrutto, Vincent (2002). The Encyclopedia of American Independent Filmmaking. Connecticut: Greenwood. pp. 16. ISBN 0-313-30199-9.
- Lachman, p. 19
- Landis 1995, p. 195
- Landis 1995, p. 5
- Landis 1995, pp. 6–8
- Hunter 2002, p. 105
- Landis 1995, pp. 9–11
- Landis 1995, p. 12
- Landis 1995, pp. 13–14
- Landis 1995, p. 14
- Lachman, p. 11
- Hunter 2002, p. 11
- Usher
- Landis 1995, pp. 17–20
- Landis 1995, pp. 25–26
- Hunter 2002, p. 48
- Landis 1995, pp. 37–38
- Landis 1995, p. 39
- Landis 1995, p. 38
- Hattenstone, Simon (March 10, 2010). "Kenneth Anger: 'No, I am not a Satanist'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
- Hoberman, J.; Jonathan Rosenbaum (1983). Midnight Movies. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-06-090990-0.
- Lachman, p. 10
- 'Film Credits – Magick Lantern Cycle' in Anger: Magick Lantern Cycle DVD booklet. British Film Institute, p. 25.
- Landis 1995, p. 40
- Landis 1995, pp. 83–87
- 'Film Credits – Magick Lantern Cycle' in Anger: Magick Lantern Cycle DVD booklet. British Film Institute, p. 26.
- Landis 1995, pp. 52–55
- Russo, Carl (2000). Spotting UFOs with a Manson Killer: An Interview with Kenneth Anger.
- Landis 1995, p. 59
- 'Film Credits – Magick Lantern Cycle' in Anger: Magick Lantern Cycle DVD booklet. British Film Institute, pp. 26–27.
- Landis 1995, pp. 59–60
- Landis 1995, p. 61
- Landis 1995, p. 63
- 'Film Credits – Magick Lantern Cycle' in Anger: Magick Lantern Cycle DVD booklet. British Film Institute, p. 27.
- Landis 1995, p. 64
- Landis 1995, pp. 66–67
- Landis 1995, pp. 72–74
- Landis 1995, pp. 72–81
- Landis 1995, p. 93
- Landis 1995, pp. 88–90
- Landis 1995, p. 92
- Landis 1995, p. 94
- Landis 1995, pp. 95–96
- Landis 1995, p. 100
- Landis 1995, pp. 104–113
- Landis 1995, p. 112
- Landis 1995, pp. 119–120
- Landis 1995, p. 117
- Landis 1995, pp. 122–123
- Landis 1995, p. 131
- Landis 1995, p. 134
- Landis 1995, p. 136
- "Anger ref. as Zeena Schreck's godfather". zeena.eu. Archived from the original on December 22, 2019.
- Landis 1995, pp. 148–149
- Landis 1995, p. 220
- Landis 1995, p. 141
- Landis 1995, pp. 141–142
- Landis 1995, p. 145
- Landis 1995, p. 158
- Landis 1995, pp. 158–159
- Landis 1995, p. 162–167
- Landis 1995, p. 166
- Landis 1995, pp. 170–174
- Lachman, Gary (2001). Turn Off Your Mind: The Mystic Sixties and the Dark Side of the Age of Aquarius (New York: Disinformation). ISBN 0-88064-278-5, p. 305.
- Taylor, Charles (January 13, 2008). "Their Satanic Majesties". The New York Times. Retrieved July 14, 2011.
- Lazar, Zachary (2008). Sway. Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-11309-0.
- Landis 1995, pp. 180–181
- Landis 1995, p. 182
- Landis 1995, p. 183–184
- Salewicz, Chris (1977). "Anger Rising: Jimmy Page and Kenneth's Lucifer". NME. (registration required)
- The Story Behind The Lost Lucifer Rising Soundtrack, Guitar World magazine, October 2006.
- Landis 1995, pp. 208–209
- Beausoleil, Bobby. "Fallen Angel Blues: The Story of Lucifer Rising". Archived from the original on December 6, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2009.
- Landis 1995, p. 237
- Landis 1995, p. 188
- Landis 1995, p. 188–191
- Landis 1995, pp. 211–212
- Hunter 2002, p. 113
- Landis 1995, pp. 226–227
- Landis 1995, p. 243
- Landis 1995, pp. 251–252
- Landis 1995, pp. 252–259
- Landis 1995, p. xiii
- "The Compleat Anger", Black and White No 2 (August 1993), pp 34-37, 110.
- "Boot Camp". www.artforum.com. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
- TechnicolorSkull.com Archived January 25, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved through kennethanger.org, May 31, 2010.
- "FLicKeR :: A Film by Nik Sheehan". Retrieved April 21, 2008.
- https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1782500/fullcredits
- ps1.org. Kenneth Anger. February 22, 2009 – September 21, 2009. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
- Hunter 2002, p. 47
- Lachman, p. 13
- Austin, Tom (February 15, 1996). "Swelter". Miami New Times. Archived from the original on January 24, 2018. Retrieved January 24, 2018.
The night before his dinner at the Foundlings, Anger received the Maya Deren award for independent film and video artists from the American Film Institute in New York "a Tiffany crystal star and $5000. ...
- Rauzi, Robin (September 14, 2000). "Itinerary: Silver Lake". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on December 11, 2015. Retrieved January 24, 2018.
- Rickman, Gregg (April 18, 2001). "The Festival of Highlights". SF Weekly. Archived from the original on January 24, 2018. Retrieved January 24, 2018.
Kenneth Anger -- who receives the Golden Gate Persistence of Vision Award on Sunday [April 22, 2001] ...
- "28th Annual Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards". Los Angeles Film Critics Association. 2002. Archived from the original on August 4, 2012. Retrieved January 24, 2018.
- http://jonasmekas.com/diary/?p=453 | Jonas Mekas
- Landis 1995, p. 197
- dcarins.wordpress.com. Wingrove, David. Anger...and Other Deadly Sins August 26, 2008.
- Landis 1995, p. 49
- Landis 1995, p. 50
- Anger, Kenneth. UCLA. YouTube. Uploaded April 10, 2009. Do What Thou Wilt: Kenneth Anger and Aleister Crowley and the Occult on YouTube.
- Hunter 2002, pp. 105–106
- Hunter 2002, p. 106
- Hunter 2002, pp. 106–107
- Hunter 2002, p. 107
- Hunter 2002, p. 114
- Hunter 2002, p. 117
- Hunter 2002, pp. 116–117
- Hunter 2002, pp. 117–118
- Allison, Deborah. "Kenneth Anger". The Film Journal. Retrieved October 2, 2012.
Works cited
- Hunter, Jack, ed. (2002). Moonchild. The Films of Kenneth Anger: Persistence of Vision Volume 1. London: Creation Books. ISBN 978-1-84068-029-4.
- Lachman, Gary. "Kenneth Anger: The Crowned and Conquered Child". Anger: Magick Lantern Cycle (DVD booklet). British Film Institute.
- Landis, Bill (1995). Anger: The Unauthorized Biography of Kenneth Anger. ISBN 978-0-06-016700-4.
Further reading
- Braund, Simon (September 2008). "Kenneth Anger: The King of Babylon". Empire. pp. 86–92.
- Eaton, Thomas Dylan (2008). Cinema, Messianism and Crime, Parkett 83, pp. 197-205.
- Eaton, Thomas Dylan (2008), 1000 WORDS; KENNETH ANGER, Artforum, September, pp. 412-415.
- Hutchinson, Alice L., ed. (2004). Kenneth Anger. Black Dog Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-904772-03-3..
- Pilling, Jayne; O'Pray, Michael (1989). Into the Pleasure Dome: The Films of Kenneth Anger. London: BFI.
- Sanjiv, Bhattacharya (August 22, 2004). "Look Back at Anger". The Observer.
- Smith, Claiborne K.H. (November 17, 1997). "Kustom Film Kommando". The Austin Chronicle.
External links
- Official website
- Kenneth Anger at IMDb
- bentclouds.com. Essay on Kustom Kar Kommandos Non-Normative Sex in Kustom Kar Kommandos.
- The Film Journal. Review of Alice Hutchison's book on Anger
- Artforum 1000 Words
- Esquire Kenneth Anger: Where The Bodies Are Buried, by Mick Brown.