NIGHTBIRDS

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By Mike Jeknavorian

The Stonewall Museum debuted Michael Fazakerley’s first solo photography show, Nightbirds, last Thursday.  Twenty-five years in the making, the show featured photos of New York’s prominent nightlife personalities from the 1980s and 1990s, including club kids, drag queens and go-go boys.  At the show, Fazakerly talked for about 15 minutes about his experiences photographing the subjects, as well as the challenges of having a solo show in a museum or gallery.  The show also featured vintage designs from one of the original club kids, Ernie Glam, who attended the event as well.  Nightbirds runs to January 20.

MICHAEL FAZAKERLEY

Few eras were as hedonistic or crazy as the club-kids and drag scene in New York during the 1980s and 1990s, and Michael Fazakerley was there to photograph much of it.  The first retrospective of his work, some unseen until now, will debut this Thursday in Wilton Manors.     

PHOTOGRAPH BY STEPHEN R. LANG

By Mike Jeknavorian

Where did you grow up?  In Southwest Philly.  What do you miss about it there?  Family time and Rittenhouse SquareWhere did you live in New York?  I moved there in 1978 to attend FIT, and I lived in the same apartment in Chelsea for 28 years.  How long have you lived in South Florida?  Since 2005, but I visited many times in the 80s & 90s.  Why did you move here?  In 2005, I wanted and needed change after 28 years in New York.  I was drained from my 12-year career with Calvin Klein and Georgio Armani.  What part of South Florida do you live in?  I lived for eight years on Fort Lauderdale Beach, and now for five years in Wilton Manors.  What do you like most about here?  The nature and the weather.  What South Florida venue do you miss that’s gone?  The Copa and The Marlin Beach. Oh, and Johnny’s (laughs).  Where do you hang out in South Florida?  I’m a little low-key today, so The Pride Center and Wilton Drive.  I also enjoy the beach.  What’s your claim-to-fame?  I wore a few hats.  Today, I believe it will be my photos from the New York club scene from the 80s and 90s.  I’m planning to leave my archives to the Stonewall Museum so that they can be a part of our history, live on, be part of my legacy.  I also had a great career as a photo stylus, window dresser and visual director. 


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Who was your favorite nightlife impresario?  A favorite is hard to say.  I loved Kabuki Starshine, Kenny Kenny and Leigh Bowery.  Who’s your favorite fashion designer?  Thierry Mugler, because of his impact, drama and creativity.  What’s the craziest shoot that you ever did?  Fifteen people in my one-bedroom apartment in New York for a HX cover and editorial for Valentine’s Day.  What celebrity did you photograph who was different than what you expected?  Leigh Bowery and Amanda Lapore.  Both were sweet, conversational and professional.  Will you ever retire?  I’m semi-retired early due to health setbacks, but I do pet sitting, I volunteer at a few places, I’m looking into having a book published, and I’ll travel with my exhibit.  If God were to take you tomorrow, how would you like to be remembered?  As someone who cares for other’s well-being.  What do you want to live long enough to see?  Elected officials and big businesses having to show their financials.

PHOTOGRAPH BY MICHAEL FAZAKERLEY

What’s the weirdest question that a fan has asked you?  I get asked a lot about Party Monster, the film and what it was really like.  What celebrity did you act like a “fan” around?  As a stylist, I worked with many at Scavullo’s studio.  I guess early Boy George and Grace Jones.  Oh, and Cher.  What’s the last thing that you looked at online?  I googled the November election ballot to prepare myself to vote.  What’s the best place that you’ve visited?  A few.  Sitges, Spain, and Mykonos, Greece.  If Trump was drowning, would you save him?  I would try to.  What’s your favorite drink?  Ice tea and lemonade—an Arnold Palmer.  What’s your most treasured possession?  Old family photos and my dad’s dog tags.  Do you believe in ghosts?  Spirits…?  Yes.  Either living or dead, who would you love to have lunch with?  Lady Diana, David Bowie, and my brother Frank, who passed four years ago.  What’s something that you learned in life only when you got older?  That money doesn’t buy happiness. 

PHOTOGRAPH BY STEPHEN R. LANG

What did you learn from your parents?  Work ethics and tolerance toward others who are different than me.  Who’s your favorite performers?  Cher, Elton and Patty Labelle.  What’s your best characteristic?  Compassion.  How do you enjoy spending your time?  I love the sea and mother nature.  What celebrity do you have a crush on?  John Stamos, for many years.  Who do you admire?  Many, for various reason, but let’s say Oprah and Cecil BeatonIf you could bring one person back from the dead, who would it be?  My dear friend, Jim Tremblay, who passed at 38.  Where would you go in a time machine?  To the first moon landing.  What would your last meal be?  Eggs, bacon, grits and biscuits with gravy.  What do you worry about?  Humanity.  What are you afraid of?  Prejudice and suffering. 


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Pansy Beat was a short-lived fanzine published by Michael Economy in New York from 1989 to 1990, totaling five quarterly issues. This book celebrates Pansy Beat’s brief but influential life, including a reprinting of all five issues in their original format, previously unseen photographs by staff photographer Michael Fazakerley, new full-color artwork by some of the original contributors, plus new essays and interviews.

If you were a musical instrument, what would you be?  A piano.  Are you more like a sheep or a wolf?  I go back and forth a lot, but sheep wins.  Who depends on you, and for what?  My pet-sitting clients, and my cat, Noah, for care, food, protection and love.  Who are you closest with?  Currently, my roommate Frank, my friend Charles, and my sister, Maryann.  What would your autobiography be called?  …And the Beat Goes On.  What music do you listen to when you’re upset?  Wagner and Ravi ShankarWhat’s on your bucket list?  To visit Cuba and Fiji, and to have my exhibit shown in New York City.  What’s your greatest regret in life?  Being honest to a fault.  What’s something that you never told anyone else?  Wow (laughs).  Hmm…?  Pass. Where can we see you?  At the Stonewall Museum on October 18, in L.A. in March 2019, and hopefully in New York City in the summer or fall 2019.

 

 

AMANDA LEPORE

Not many can claim that they have a watch, a doll and a rubber duck made of them, on top of being a LGBT icon.  But beneath the glitz and the glamour, and beyond the whimsical tips about hair bleaching and other ephemeral precepts, what’s the one thing that Amanda Lepore regrets in life?

PHOTOGRAPH BY VIJAT MOHINDRAI

Where do you live now?  In New York.  If you had to live somewhere else, where would it be, and why?  In Paris, because it’s so pretty and it’s the “City of Love.”  What New York venue do you miss that’s gone?  The Diamond Horseshoe.  It was such a gorgeous venue—very glamorous, with an old Hollywood vibe.  What’s your claim-to-fame?  Working with David LaChapelle, and being his muse.  What’s your favorite LaChapelle photograph?  Addicted to Diamonds.


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What’s your ultimate goal in show business?  I would love to have my own show.  Something beautiful and elaborate, like Zumanity in Las Vegas.  How would you like to be remembered?  For making people happy.  Will you ever retire?  No, not anytime soon.  Since you’re known for makeup, did you ever read Joan Crawford’s book, My Way of Life?  I never read it.  I do love the movie Mommie Dearest, though!  What’s the weirdest question that a fan has asked?  Nothing weird.  My fans are amazing and super respectful—I’m a fan of my fans!

PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID LACHAPELLE

What celebrity did you act like a “fan” around?  Traci Lords.  It was such a treat to work with her recently, since I admire her so much.  I think she’s so smart, especially with how she turned a scandal around and formed her own company to keep the rights to her work.  And then she went on to do real movies, TV and became a singer.  As you can see, I’m a “fan-girl” to follow her career like this (laughs).  What the last thing that you looked at online?  Shopping.  I’m always shopping and looking for unique items to make my own costumes and accessories.

PHOTOGRAPH BY JOEY FALSETTA

What the best place that you’ve visited, and why?  Ibiza.  It’s a continuous party there.  It’s like an extended, twenty-hour version of one of my shows (laughs).  What’s something that you learned in life only when you got older?  Not to overlap bleach.  What did you learn from your parents?  When I was picked on as a kid, my mother would tell me to hold my head high with pride, and to always be myself.  Other than Marilyn Monroe, what actress do you admire?  Jayne Mansfield.  She’s a cartoon version of Marilyn Monroe.  What performer do you admire, and why?  David Bowie, because he was ahead of his time, gender-fluid, gorgeous, had great style, and he made great music, too.

PHOTOGRAPH BY VICTORIA JANASHVILI.

What’s your best characteristic?  My petite hour-glass figure, and my lips.  How do you enjoy spending your time?  Working on looks for my shows, and working on new costumes and accessories.  What celebrity do you have a crush on?  David Bowie.  If you could bring one person back from the dead, who would it be, and why?  David Bowie, for all the reasons that I previously mentioned!  Where would you go in a time machine?  I like to stay in the present.  What would your last meal be?  One cornflake.  What do you worry about?  I’m too busy.  I don’t have time to worry.


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If you were a musical instrument, what would you be, and why?  A violin, because of its hourglass figure.  Are you more like a sheep or a wolf?  A sheep, duh!  I’m soft, curly and blonde.  If you wrote a sequel to Doll Parts, what would it be called?  Doll Parts IIWhat’s your greatest regret in life?  Not being born genetically a female.  It would have saved a lot of time and a lot of money!  What’s something that you never told anyone else?  That I’ve had plastic surgery (laughs)!  Where can we see you?  At Deryck Todd’s STRUT! at Acme on 3/13/2018, at Suzanne Bartsch’s Bareback Follies at The McKittrick Hotel on 3/16/2018, and at the Twisted Circus Tour UK from March 30 to April 7.

PHOTOGRAPH BY MARCO OVANDO

BAREBACK FOLLIES

The old school met the new this Thursday, in Suzanne Bartsch’s Art Basal edition of the Bareback Follies

SHADE-O-METER RATING

4 OUTTA 5 WERKS: “SHE GAVE GOOD FACE – SHE SERVED IT”

What’s Bareback FolliesIt’s a burlesque/drag show at El Tucan.  It’s hosted by long-time New York club promoter Suzanne BartschWhat’s El TucanIt’s a cabaret/nightclub in downtown Miami.  Specifically, it’s in the Brickell area.  The venue offers a dinner and a show.

How was the venue?  It’s beautiful and classy.  It’s also the perfect size (for you size queens).  How was the parking?  There’s a parking lot right around the corner.  It costs $10 to park in it.  The venue has valet as well.  Does the venue serve liquor?  Of course.

How were the drinks?  Now, here’s where things went wrong.  If you’re going to advertise “luxe libations,” then you better have bartenders that know what a sidecar is.  Methinks The Fine Art of Mixing Cocktails would be mandatory reading for their bartenders.  Other than this faux pas, the drinks were well-made.  However, even for Miami, they’re a bit pricey.  Wine was $17, and a Manhattan was $15.  Girls, this ain’t the Four Seasons.

Does the venue serve food?  Yes.  However, we didn’t do the dinner and show—just the show.  The regular prix-fixe is $55, and the seasonal one is $85.  How much were the tickets?  $25.  Was the show sold out?  No.  How was the crowd?  At times, in competition with the performers for the spotlight.

How was the show?  The inheritors of Warhol’s “Silver” Factor crowd, and a group that could be considered one of the earliest media whores, the club kids of the 1980s and early 1990s would even rival today’s most Instagram-obsessed individuals for attention.  The show featured some notable figures from that era, some modern burlesque acts, and some performers from RuPaul’s Drag Race.  Standout numbers were Shequida singing “Whatever Lola Wants” (re-done as “Whatever Shequida Wants”), where she fluctuated between a baritone voice and a contralto, Brent Ray Fraser painting with his penis, Amanda Lepore (billed as “having a body that costs a million dollars”), and Adora, who cleverly channeled the history of the area with an exaggerated “cha-cha” number.

What could have improved the show?  Although all of the performances were professional and adept, some of them didn’t necessarily stand out.  To quote “Mama Ru,” some of them should probably be “up for elimination” in order to elevate the bar.

What could have improved the venue?  Um, the AC wasn’t really working.  It must have been 1,000 degrees in there.  If you’re going to have a dress code, and you want people to come in “cocktail attire” or “formal wear,” please appropriately chill the customers (or change the dress code to clothing-optional).

What was surprising about the show?  That it left you wanting more.  Each performer only did one number, so they gave you their best.

El Tucan is located at 1111 Southwest 1st Ave., in Miami, Florida.  It open Thursday, Friday and Saturday.