Showing posts with label CHURCH OF SATAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHURCH OF SATAN. Show all posts
Saturday, February 15, 2020
KENNETH ANGER ON SEX, SATANISM AND BOBBY BEAUSOLEIL
Kenneth Wilbur Anglemyer, known to the world as Kenneth Anger just turned 93. The Methuselah of the Macabre not only has shown over the years that Satanism sells, but has the purported longevity that the Devil promises.
Long associated with Luciferian inclinations, Anger has been a firebrand in the heart of traditional establishment with his outspoken persona, his books, and his films, as well as being openly gay. Not particularly prolific (a couple of books and a handful of films), Anger has rested on his laurels proselytizing his philosophy only when he chooses to do so.
The interview below is from the online journal, FLASHBAK. Accompanying this is an interview he did with the UK cinema and culture mag, KINOKAZE (issue #3),
Sex, Satanism, Manson, Murder, and LSD: Kenneth Anger tells his tale
He told where the bodies were buried in the third issue of Kinokaze Magazine circa 1993. Or so it seemed, as no subject appeared to be off-limits. Drugs, murder, and movies. But then again, Anger rarely if ever veers from the script as he is a man who has carefully controlled his myth and reputation for decades.
By Paul Gallagher | February 5, 2020 | Flashbak
Kenneth Anger told where the bodies were buried in the third issue of Kinokaze Magazine circa 1993. Or so it seemed, as no subject appeared to be off-limits. Drugs, murder, and movies. But then again, Anger rarely if ever veers from the script as he is a man who has carefully controlled his myth and reputation for decades.
Anger is a singular figure in 20th-century American culture. A filmmaker, a writer, a musician, an actor, activist, and an occultist. Best known for his hugely influential short films–Fireworks (1947), Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954), Scorpio Rising (1963), Kustom Kar Kommandos (1965), Invocation of Demon Brother (1968), and the magnificent Lucifer Rising (1972/1980). Anger’s films have influenced more filmmakers than would care to give him credit, but specifically directors like Martin Scorsese, Derek Jarman, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, David Lynch, John Waters, and let’s not forget the whole host of promo directors who would be nothing without him. As Scorsese said of Anger:
I was astonished when I saw Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising for the first time. Every cut, every camera movement, every color, and every texture seemed, somehow, inevitable, in the same way that images of the Virgin in Renaissance painting seem inevitable—in other words, pre-existing but dormant, and brought back to life through some kind of evocation.
[Kenneth Anger] is, without a doubt, one of our greatest artists.
Anger is the author of two books of scurrilous gossip Hollywood Babylon I & II and notorious for his following of Aleister Crowley, and association with the Church of Satan (through Anton La Vey), and let’s not forget the Manson Family via Bobby Beausoleil, who is one of the more tragic figures in that whole sorry tale. Anger also, allegedly, cursed Jimmy Page by turning him into a frog.
I’ve known Anger since 1994. We corresponded, met twice, and I have interviewed him twice. I like him, admire him, though of late we haven’t spoken or written. C’est la vie.
Anger is larger than life. He arrives with a myth that floats like Dracula’s cape around him. It encircles both expectation and response. But I’m a dick, so I never get fussed by that kinda shit. The first time I met him, I’d come out of bar on 44th St. NY, to greet him at his room at the Gramercy. He met me at the door of his room in dressing gown and a face covered in cold cream. “I’m jet-lagged,” he said, having just arrived from LA. I felt like telling him, “So, am I, pal, but the bar’s open.” Then thought better of it. We chatted, and seemed to get on. The next day, a long interview in front of cameras, which was fun, well at least for me. Anger spilled all his favourite tales of Hollywood debauchery. We kept in touch. He was kind and generous and sent me books, magazines, photographs, posters, and many, many gifts which I was most fortunate to receive. But his letters never revealed anything other than a thank you and a hello.
Spool on a few years. This time we met in LA. Anger is allegedly living in a garage or something similarly drab. Who knows? I didn’t pry. Why would I? We were at the Standard Hotel on Sunset, where we were to do a an all-day interview on camera about his long and eventful life. We sat in my room and chatted while waiting for the crew to set-up a few doors down. Anger sat on the bed tearing sex stories out of the tabloid newspapers I’d brought from the plane journey. He was going to send them to the Kinsey Institute. I stood on the balcony, smoking, watching the shimmer of eucalyptus trees in the late morning breeze.
When it was time for the interview, we walked along the orange-carpeted corridor only to be stopped by another film crew who were making a movie. At a half-corridor stood George Clooney and Brad Pitt, filming a scene for Ocean’s Twelve. Both looked smaller, but their heads somehow bigger. They must have kept their magic for the camera, for it seemed that neither had the presence or, looked as grand a star as Anger, who stood half in shadow, just quietly waiting by one of the movie’s ADs.
The interview went well. Anger telling the same stories I had read so many times in magazine interviews and newspaper cuttings. Only once did I get something new, when he talked about his feelings about some of the people he had loved in his life. For a moment, he opened up. But just as quick, the curtain came down and the spotlight routine continued.
The next day, I took him for lunch to Musso & Frank’s where he told me all about the glamorous stars who had dined there. That was fun, but I wanted to know about him. I thought of the line Derek Jarman once wrote of how Anger had hidden himself behind screens. Anger always struck me like one of those reformed alcoholics who only stuck to the script of the twelve steps to redemption, never quite realising how boring all that shit could be for anyone else. But we all play games like that–we only tell people what we want them to hear.
After lunch, we headed to the Sex Museum and spent half-an-hour fondling lubricated dildos and looking at b&w photographs of well-hung cowboys butt-fucking twinks. “He’ll never fit that in there,” said Anger, but I reckon that guy probably did. We seemed to be having fun. Then suddenly Anger got angry. Where the fuck was the crew? Why was this taking so long? The crew were parking up and getting their tickets stamped. They should have been with us at the Egyptian Theatre. When they arrived, the filming went quickly. But this was more about Anger doing something for visuals–or cutaways–and not talking about himself. We headed to the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, where Anger gave me a tour of the graves and the mausoleums. He showed me Rudolph Valentino’s vault. A small plaque on a marbled wall. He had a flower in his pocket which he placed by this memoriam. We filmed some more, chatted, and took a bunch of photographs. But Anger was bored. He asked about money. I paid him. Then it was over. The thanks and all that false bon homie that every TV and movie production goes through. I was sad. I liked Anger. We said goodbye, then for some reason recalled how I’d read somewhere that Anger had the power of invisibility. That he could disappear right in front of your eyes. Well, yeah, that’s possibly true. I gave Anger a hug and a kiss and said “Goodbye.” I watched him walk off across the graveyard. Then I pulled a cigarette from a packet and lit it up. Between the time of finding my lighter and lighting, and drawing in that beautiful breath of smoke, Anger had disappeared. I thought I was imagining things. I walked the route he had taken. Two hundred yards to the wall. No Anger. No nothing. He had disappeared without a trace. Magic is what you make it.
Kinokaze was a magazine that reported “from the underground with an emphasis on cinema, drugs, and performance art.” Founded and edited by Donal Ruane, Kinokaze grew out of London’s Exploding Cinema group which was a mix of anarchists, rebels, ravers, and eco-warriors in the early 1990s. Kinokaze ran between 1992-96. This interview with Anger was taken from the third issue. Interesting to note that Anger’s claim to be the Changeling in Max Reinhardt’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream has since been discredited. The Changeling was played by child actress Sheila Brown. Similarly, his claim that Bobby Beausoleil stole his films has long been denied by Beausoleil. But it’s still a good story.
Friday, March 22, 2019
LAVEY, MONROE AND MANSFIELD GET "HUSTLED"
One of the countless outré and other outrageous personalities that emerged from the "swingin' sixties" was Anton Szandor LaVey, the self-appointed High Priest of the Church of Satan, who reigned as supreme magus during the days of the decade's Occult Renaissance. For a time, the shaven-headed, pointy-bearded Mephisto look-alike could be seen and heard proselytizing his manifesto everywhere in the media -- from magazines and films, to late-night TV shows, his Crowley-esque philosophy of "indulgence, not abstinence" and other counter-culture mottoes and mantras were shocking, even for those times. The public loved it -- or were at least curious enough to go along for the ride.
With a circus showman's background, LaVey admittedly confessed that much of his initial rise to fame was due to exploiting the expertise that he had learned over the years as a carnival cage boy, roustabout, organist and overall rake.
| A typical scene inside the Church of Satan. |
After a few years of taking on all would-be witches and warlocks into the fold, LaVey realized that his flock was populated by more crazies, freaks and fringies than serious Satanists. Attracted by the promise of free sex and other uninhibited behavior, Satanism, and LaVey's church became the perfect naughty crash pad for the libertines of the underground. Even the pre-Manson follower, Susan Atkins, lay naked at LaVey's ritual altar for a time.
LaVey professed relationships with two of the most popular blonde bombshells, Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield. He lived with Monroe for about a month in Los Angeles. Monroe was a stripper at the time. "There was was something of the exhibitionist about her," he said. "Something almost juvenile, like a child trying to see how far she could go without getting caught."
Monroe was not interested in "the Dark Side", but Jayne Mansfield was. In the fall of 1966, after hearing of LaVey's mastery of the occult, she payed him a visit and asked him a favor -- cast a curse on her ex-husband (Matt Cimber) so she could retain custody of the kids. It appeared to have worked, as custody was granted by the court.
| LaVey knew both Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield. |
That convinced Mansfield enough to join the Church of Satan. "She was a true witch," LaVey explained. "She was happiest when she was rolling on the floor, fucking up a storm." Soon, she was having trouble with her new lover, attorney Sam Brody. She went to LaVey again for a curse -- this time the darkest curse of all -- death. LaVey did so and told Mansfield to stay away from him. She ignored his warning.
Early in the morning of June 29, 1967, Mansfield and her kids, Brody and their driver were on a foggy New Orleans road. The driver failed to see a truck in front of them and crashed into it, the impact forcing the gray 1966 Buick Electra under the semi's trailer. When help arrived, Mansfield and her dog, Brody, and the driver were dead.
The following article by Fred Harden from the December 1979 issue of HUSTLER, tells of Anton LaVey's rise to fame and power and his involvement with Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield. The illustration by Gary Ruddell sensationalizes the legendary crash scene by showing Mansfield's head separated from her body on the road next to the wrecked car. The two accompanying articles tell the truth of the extent of Mansfield's injuries. Either way, the gruesome end was far from befitting such a glamorous life.
| Anton La Vey and Jayne Mansfield in 1966. |
WAS JAYNE MANSFIELD DECAPITATED?
In the early morning hours of 29 June 1967, on a narrow country road near a Louisiana swamp, a grey 1966 Buick Electra glided through the dark on its way to New Orleans. The road ahead was obscured by a white haze laid down by a distant mosquito fogger which prevented the car’s driver from discerning the presence of a slow-moving tractor-trailer ahead of him. At approximately 2:15 a.m., the Electra slammed into that truck, then slid under it. All three adults sitting in the car’s front seat were killed instantly, but surprisingly, the three children riding in the back seat were cushioned from serious harm. Dead at the scene were the driver, Ronnie Harrison; actress Jayne Mansfield; Mansfield’s boyfriend Sam Brody; and Mansfield’s small dog. Three of Mansfield’s five children (Mariska, 3; Zoltan, 6; and Miklos Jr., 8; all fathered by her second husband, Mickey Hargitay), survived the accident.
The precise nature of the injuries inflicted in this accident would not usually bear thinking about, but rumors about the death of one of the passengers was turned into the stuff of contemporary lore when it became “common knowledge” that Jayne Mansfield had been decapitated. It is because this belief is as widespread as it is that this topic merits study, and it is due to the nature of the rumor that the discussion needs to be as detailed as it does.
Although Mansfield’s actual mode of death was gruesome, she was not beheaded. According to the police report on the accident, “the upper portion of this white female’s head was severed.” Her death certificate notes a “crushed skull with avulsion (forcible separation or detachment) of cranium and brain.” One thinks of a beheading as the neck’s being sliced through, causing the head to be separated from the body, but that is clearly not what happened here. Scalping is perhaps a closer description of Mansfield’s fate, but even that word does not accurately reflect the cranial trauma she suffered, because scalping victims at least retain an intact skull. The Angel of Death did not afford Mansfield this luxury: Her skull was cracked or sliced open, and a sizeable piece of it was carried away.
As gruesome as this mode of death was, it at least had the benefit of being quick. Mansfield probably never felt what happened to her, and because of the sharply reduced visibility conditions on the road that night, she likely had only an instant of “We’re going to crash!” shock to cope with before the impact.
Kenneth Anger’s 1975 Hollywood Babylon contains a controversial photo of the wrecked Electra which shows Mansfield’s dead dog lying beside the car as well as another item that has aroused considerable discussion, something that appears to be a clutch of human hair. Debate continues as to whether what was captured in that photo was the top part of Mansfield’s head, a wig she was wearing (or carrying) at the time of the crash, or something else entirely.
Some have chosen to attribute Mansfield’s early demise (she was only 34) to a curse somehow connected to the International Church of Satan, an institution founded in 1966 by Anton LaVey. Little is known about the rumored curse, but LaVey is on record as saying it was worked upon her by a consort. Another version has LaVey laying it onto Mansfield’s boyfriend Sam Brody, supposedly because Brody was disruptive during Church services and was making Mansfield’s life a hell on earth. That the alleged curse also ended up taking the life of one it was meant to help is deeply ironic.
[SOURCE: Snopes.com.]
| The crash site. |
ONLY HER UNDERTAKER KNEW FOR SURE...
May 4, 1997
''Her head was attached as much as mine is,'' says Jim Roberts, gently dismissing a longstanding myth about Jayne Mansfield's grisly demise. The accepted version (now playing in the movie ''Crash'') has it that Mansfield was beheaded when she died in a car accident just outside of New Orleans on June 29, 1967. Roberts says the beheading part is hooey, and he should know -- he was her undertaker. ''People always figured wrong about Jayne,'' he laments. ''About the way she lived and the way she died.''
These days Roberts, 77, lives in cozy retirement above the New Orleans funeral home where he worked for 41 years. He's unaware that Mansfield's death has been reduced, by some, to a pop-culture reference point, but he probably wouldn't like it. He was a fan, and for years he kept a scrapbook of clips, pictures and old obituaries. ''She was such a fine-looking person,'' Roberts says. ''And she couldn't stand to be away from her children.'' As he also recalls, Mansfield died in a sedan that slammed into the back of an 18-wheeler that was shrouded in ''fog'' from a mosquito-spray truck. The impact drove the car's engine into the front seat, killing the actress, two adults and a Chihuahua (who rode up front) but sparing Mansfield's children. Mansfield's wig was thrown to the side of the road, where it was mistaken in news stories for her head.
Headless or not, Mansfield did not go gently. Her face and body, Roberts allows, were ''as bad as you get in this business,'' and he worked all night, valiantly trying to reconstruct her face before her relatives arrived. ''She had a lot of makeup with her,'' he remembers, ''and I used it all.''
[SOURCE: nytimes.com.]
| Jayne and Mickey Hargitay. |
| Jayne and her attorney/lover, Sam Brody. |
| LayVey said that Mansfield was an exhibitionist. |
| Mansfield in her pink bathroom. |
| Mansfield's home was a shrine to herself. |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)