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Three Dog Night clothes designed by Pamela Courson

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The band Three Dog Night wore clothes from Pam’s boutique Themis for their new album photo shoot LP sleeve ‘It ain’t easy’.  According to Jimmy Greenspoon, Pamela Courson designed the clothes and they were all custom made for the band. They were one of a kind.

The band’s album cover

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The back

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Photos from the shoot with the band mates wearing the clothes Pamela designed and made for them.

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Photo Sources:

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Pamela-Courson-She-Dances-In-a-Ring-of-Fire/526308087482227?fref=photo

http://born-late.blogspot.com/2011_05_01_archive.html

http://ashenlady-rhiannon.blogspot.com/2011/08/themis.html

Pam with Jim, Tere and friends in Themis, 1969

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New rare picture of Jim and Pam just published

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On September 22, 1967, The Doors played two sets at Brown University’s Meehan Auditorium in Providence, RI. Below is a rare photo of Jim Morrison with his girlfriend Pamela Courson taken before the concert that night. Click here to learn more about the concert and see other rare photos and an original print ad. Both photo and text is credited to http://www.thedoorsguide.com/

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Pamela Courson running around at corsica grave

Now available Jim Morrison and Pam Courson’s Norton Avenue house

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The house at 8216 Norton Avenue.

It’s official! The house at 8216 Norton Avenue where Jim Morrison and Pam Courson once lived is now a bed and breakfast. The property also boasts a plaque stating “Last U.S. Home of Jim Morrison”.

Cheri Woods the owner of the Norton Avenue house, which she calls ‘Cheri Amour’ has a long track record of trying to exploit the property and its association with Morrison and Courson for profit. She’s sold vials of dirt from the property calling it ‘Doors Dirt’, the appliances, and against zoning laws has rented the house out and given quick tours for $20. This past spring Woods applied for and has been granted a Cultural Resource Designation paving the way for her to make the property a bed and breakfast.

Yesterday a rental listing went live online for monthly rentals of the house. Of course the main attraction is being in the same space as Morrison and Courson, sleeping in their master bedroom, or sitting in the same living room where Morrison gave his last U.S. interview to Ben Fong-Torres. The house boasts easy access to Hollywood, Beverly Hills, and the Sunset Strip (“for the exciting night life where you will rub shoulders with the stars”). The listing also assures, “We are the location of choice for entertainment industry luminaries!” You can also bring your pets to stay with you.

A few drawbacks, no central air though a couple of rooms have window unit air conditioners, and a minimum stay of 30 days. How much does this all cost? Average price $3000 for the month. If you would like more information on staying at the Norton Avenue house or you would like to see a slideshow of the interior, visit Jim Morrison’s Last U.S. Home at Roomorama. Tell them Jim sent you.

Photo and text by Jim Cherry

http://www.examiner.com/article/now-available-jim-morrison-and-pam-courson-s-norton-avenue-house


Jim Morrison & Pamela Courson – Original Color Themis Boutique Photo

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Found this at recordmecca.com

An original 11″ x 14″ photograph of Doors frontman Jim Morrison with his girlfriend/muse Pamela Morrison (with red hair) and friends, shot at Pamela’s clothing store Themis, in Hollywood.  This was shot for an article in Story magazine during the late 1960′s, by photographer Raenne Rubinstien.  This is a hand printed photograph in mint condition, printed on Agfa Professional photo paper.  A rare and beautiful original print (we are selling only the photographic print here; the copyright remains with the photographer.)

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To see original size version and more details go to:

http://recordmecca.com/products-page/museum-quality-collectibles/doors-jim-morrison-pamela-courson-original-color-11-x-14-photograph-themis-boutique/


Bronson Caves from Recordmecca.com

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Another beautiful picture of Jim and Pam for sale at Recordmecca.com. From their website:

An original 11″ x 14″ photograph of Doors frontman Jim Morrison and girlfriend Pamela Courson in Hollywood’s Bronson Canyon, by celebrated photographer Edmund Teske. This is a hand printed photograph, 11″ x 14″ and in mint condition, with Teske’s studio stamp on the reverse.

Edmund Teske was a highly regarded fine art photographer who photographed The Doors and Jim Morrsion in 1969 and 1970. His work was exhibited at major galleries and museums including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, The Art Institute of Chicago, The Pasadena Art Museum, The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and a one man exhibition at Los Angeles’ J.Paul Getty Museum. His images appear on The Doors’ “American Prayer” and “13″ albums. A rare and beautiful original print.

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Go to their official page:

http://recordmecca.com/products-page/museum-quality-collectibles/edmund-teske-jim-morrison-doors-photograph-2/


More better quality photos of Jim and Pam from 1969 Bronson Caves & Norton Avenue Apartment

Jim Morrison on his way to Santa Rosa with Pam 1968

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The following Screen captures were made by the webmasters of Pamela Courson She Dances In a Ring of Fire. These were from the new Feast of Friends documentary. This was film on April 13, 1968 and Jim was on his way to Santa Rosa to make it to one of The Doors show. The woman driving the car seems to be none other then Pamela Courson. When you get the chance, buy Feast of Friends or Netflix it at the very least. It’s incredible to watch in great quality and the extras are fantastic!

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Screen caps credits https://www.facebook.com/pages/Pamela-Courson-She-Dances-In-a-Ring-of-Fire/526308087482227



Beautiful quality Themis photos of Jim and Pam

Beautiful photo of Pamela Courson by Edmund Teske 1969

The beautiful brunette posing with Jim and Pam for the Themis photos

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The gorgeous brunette posing with Jim and Pam in the Themis photo shoot is Tere Tereba. I have written about her in the past on this page which you can read on this link. https://pamelasusancoursonmorrison.wordpress.com/2013/08/08/pamela-courson-friendship-with-tere-tereba/

Just thought I post some solo photos of Tere from Themis since she was also part of designing clothes and helping Pam out. She always sticks out a lot in the Themis pictures. Beautiful lady just like Pam.

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This is a picture of Tere today still looking as beautiful.

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Photo’s courtesy of these pages: http://pamelacourson.tumblr.com/, http://bandaidpennylane.tumblr.com/, http://mygloombeauty.tumblr.com/


A look at the new Love Street House

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In 2011, the iconic home of Jim Morrison and Pamela Courson, located in Laurel Canyon, L.A, was burned down by an arsonist. Doors fans around the world were shocked to hear this news. Here is a review of the “Love Street” fire story written by Jim Cherry: “Harry Burkhart, a German national was taken into custody Monday, January 2, 2012 in connection with the Los Angeles fires that officials have estimated to have caused $3 million dollars in damages including the Laurel Canyon house that Jim Morrison and “cosmic mate”, Pam Courson, lived in during the 60’s. The house inspired Morrison to write the song, “Love Street”, about their time there.

While the exact motivation for Burkhart starting the fires isn’t known, his mother was arrested last week on fraud charges stemming from incidents in their native Germany. At his mother’s hearing Burkhart broke out in an expletive filled rant against the U.S. While he made no specific threat to either person or property, the fires started within 24 hours of the hearing.

Burkhart was identified by federal authorities after seeing a video of the arsonist taken at a carport where one of the fires broke out. He was later picked up by a Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputy who saw him driving a van similar to one reported in the area of the fires and was arrested on suspicion of arson and is expected in court Wednesday January 4th.”

http://www.examiner.com/article/love-street-alleged-arsonist-arrested

More from Jim Cherry: “The house, built in 1923, was the residence of Morrison and Courson, it was the inspiration for The Doors song “Love Street”. The house sits right above the Laurel Canyon Country Store whose clientele has included rock stars from Morrison, Frank Zappa, Mick Jagger, David Bowie, Peter Tork, or just about any rock star that lived in the canyon. Morrison memorialized the store in “Love Street” as “the store where the creatures meet.“ The house now being billed as ‘chateau’ and is available for filming, small events and/or weddings. The nightly rent runs to $1095, and weekly it will cost up to $6495.”

Now images of the new refurbished “Love Street” home has been released together with a great story of Jim Morrison by Taylor Negron. The following are photos of what the house looks like now, taken by Kaango Home Listings.

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Taylor Negron’s story can be read at Jim Cherry’s Examiner’s page :

http://www.examiner.com/article/jim-morrison-stories-ii


Magazine scans of Jim and Pam from Finnish Magazine

Oliver Stones ‘The Doors’ Meg as Pam

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I have not seen The Doors by Oliver Stone in over 15 years. It was nice to see all these screen caps uploaded onto Tumblr today. It brought back some fond memories of first seeing the movie with a several close friends of mine and me walking out of the theater in a daze. I also fell madly in love with Val Kilmer. That face. That body. The way he spoke. The way he sang. The way he performed like Jim Morrison…

I was in love!

Of course the movie was controversial within The Doors community. Oliver Stone took the liberty of changing history and creating several scenes in the film that never happened in real life. Low grade Acid? Never existed. Ray’s hippie wedding to Dorothy in the beach? Didn’t happen that way. Pam meeting Patricia Kennealy for the first time at a Thanksgiving dinner,  where Pamela proceeded to ask Jim “did you put your dick inside this woman?” Never happened. But despite all the historical errors, wrong dates and horrible wigs, the film was good. Val’s incredible performance was Oscar worthy. The film introduced a new generation to the music of The Doors.

I feel like watching the movie now. I think I will Netflix it tonight…

So, here are some screen caps posted by Bandaidpennylane on Tumblr!

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Screen caps by
http://bandaidpennylane.tumblr.com


Pamela’s mother Penny Courson’s Obituary

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July 11th will be the one year anniversary since Pearl “Penny” Courson, the mother of Pamela Courson, died of Cancer. Today while searching google, I found this beautiful page with the scanned newspaper obituary of Penny’s death. I have never seen a picture of a young Penny Courson. So I was delighted to have found this site with the scanned image! She was gorgeous! Movie star gorgeous. I am so happy to have found this link.

You can read more about Penny from the person who scanned the obituary on this page:
http://wendybrandes.com/blog/2014/08/for-doors-stans-pamela-coursons-mother-has-died/

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Penny being interview for a Jim Morrison Documentary in 2006

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Source:
http://wendybrandes.com/blog/2014/08/for-doors-stans-pamela-coursons-mother-has-died/



Beautiful full version of a Themis photo 1969

Laurel Canyon home “Love Street” images from the original house circa 1980’s

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Photos of Jim and Pam’s first home located in Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles have been published recently. This is a big deal as we never see a good quality picture of the “Love Street” home before they began rebuilding it in the 90’s. The only picture of the house from that time that has been in circulating Doors fan pages was of poor quality and very small.

This is the original house just as it was before it was touched, rebuild, refurnished and resold many times. These are all the original wood, windows, nails, screws and structure of the home. Over the years the house was left to rot. No one lived in it after Jim and Pam moved to the Norton Avenue place in 1970. I don’t know the reason why Jim and Pam up and left Laurel Canyon. Could very well be because of the Sharon Tate Manson murders. A lot of celebrities ran from their homes when Sharon and her friends were found murdered in her home. It escalated when the Labianca’s bodies were discovered the next night.

Morrison fans had stolen parts of the home. From wood planks to pieces from their stove. There have been plenty of renovations to the home as last year the house burnt down and was rebuilt. For me the original home Jim and Pam lived in is gone. It was gone the moment they added new wood, floors, walls and a bell to the upper part of the house. It never had a bell when Jim and Pam lived there. Today the house no longer has wood. It’s now made entirely of cement and that bell was added in again. You can see recent photos and the history of the home in this link  http://bandaidpennylane.tumblr.com/tagged/laurel-canyon

The images were all added by http://bandaidpennylane.tumblr.com including these http://bandaidpennylane.tumblr.com/post/117189170131/a-good-quality-of-the-original-house-jim-and-pam but that person found the nice quality original home photos from http://www.rockandrollroadmap.com/places/homes-of-rock-and-roll-stars/los-angeles-area/laurel-canyon

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Mirandi Babitz

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Today I will be blogging about the legendary Babitz sister. First, Mirandi Babitz. Mirandi was Pamela Courson best friend all through college and up to the time Pamela opened up her own boutique Themis. Here’s an article written by By Dennis Nishi about Mirandi transitioning from clothing designer to therapist.

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A jacket Mirandi designed and made, This slim-fitting jerkin, with its appliquéd design of an eagle's head, is in keeping with the late-1960s interest in 'ethnic' cultures. It was bought at Hung On You, an elite Chelsea boutique owned by Michael Rainey, who was married to the hippy socialite Jane Ormsby Gore, daughter of Lord Harlech.

A jacket Mirandi designed and made, This slim-fitting jerkin, with its appliquéd design of an eagle’s head, is in keeping with the late-1960s interest in ‘ethnic’ cultures. It was bought at Hung On You, an elite Chelsea boutique owned by Michael Rainey, who was married to the hippy socialite Jane Ormsby Gore, daughter of Lord Harlech.

When Mirandi Babitz started playing the harpsichord, she knew she would never become a professional musician like her father, a classical violinist. She didn’t have the same talent, she says. Ms. Babitz did find her way into music eventually — as a concert promoter and the designer who outfitted Doors frontman Jim Morrison in his signature leather pants. After 18 years of rock ‘n’ roll, Ms. Babitz, now 62, hung up her fast life in music in favor of something quite different: family therapy. But, she says, her first act perfectly informs her second.

Ms. Babitz spent much of her childhood in Europe and returned to the U.S. after high school. In 1967, she met her first husband. He was a clothing designer and musician, and together they opened a clothing boutique on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood — right next door to the infamous Psychedelic Conspiracy shop. The two worked their connections in the local Los Angeles music scene to design one-of-a-kind garments for rock musicians like John Kay of Steppenwolf and Eric Clapton.

In 1974, Ms. Babitz and her husband divorced and she quit clothing design. But a singer friend convinced her to become a road manager, and Ms. Babitz discovered it was a job she was good at. Although Ms. Babitz had no experience, she used her connections from her design days to sign well-known bands. At one point she helped the labor leader Caesar Chavez put together a benefit concert for the United Farm Workers.

Ms. Babitz continued to produce concerts for the next eight years for top headliners including Jackson Browne, Little Feat, Bonnie Rait and Crosby Stills & Nash. But she also indulged in the dangerous lifestyle of a musician. By 1983, Ms. Babitz says she realized the alcohol and substance abuse she’d fallen into had spiraled out of control. “I was so miserable that I had to make a change before it killed me,” she says. So she entered a recovery program.

Ms. Babitz went back to concert promotion after rehab but says she had lost her passion for the work. Her closest friend, Laurie Pepper, wife of former jazz saxophonist Art Pepper, recalls the time. “The weather, the flaky acts, all of those responsibilities were too much,” she says. “The only thing that really kept her going for those last two years after sobriety was the law of inertia.”

Ms. Babitz quit the field altogether in 1985. She had no idea what she wanted to do next. Then, a psychologist friend suggested that Ms. Babitz should consider a mental-health career.

Ms. Babitz embraced the idea and enrolled in the clinical psychology program at Antioch University in 1987, where she earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree. She interned for two years under an instructor and then started her own marriage and family counseling practice in Torrance, Calif.

Now, after 14 years as a therapist, Ms. Babitz says she is doing exactly what she was meant to do. She specializes in addiction and anxiety disorders and often works with artists and musicians. “I’ve found that my own story of how I got out [of addiction] is essential to reach somebody caught in addiction,” she says. “It puts patients at ease.”

Mirandi today at the age of 69

Mirandi today at the age of 69

Jim wearing some of Mirandi leather designs.

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Source and credits:
All Text article by Dennis Nishi http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB122998382930027825
Photos and information by:
http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O121992/jerkin-mirandi-babitz/
http://materialconcern.com/?m=201108&paged=4
Jim Morrison photos from:
https://www.google.com/search?q=mirandi+babitz&newwindow=1&biw=1538&bih=770&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=YoJeVeD4NbOOsQTv94CACA&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAQ#newwindow=1&tbm=isch&q=jim+morrison+leather+pants


Eve Babitz

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Eve Babitz is Mirandi Babitz sister, who was a friend of Jim and Pam. Mirandi designed and made all of Jim’s leather pants. She went to art school with Pamela. Her sister Eve dated Jim and later on went on to become a great writer and author. This is Eve’s story. I will paste the Eve Babitz story from Vanity Fair by Lili Anolik

It’s 1959. You’re a girl, 15 years old. Your parents are bohemians before the category becomes a fashionable one. Your dad, Sol, born in Brooklyn, is first violinist for the Twentieth Century Fox Orchestra. First violinist for the Los Angeles Philharmonic too, and a Fulbright scholar. He once got into a fistfight over the proper way to play the dotted notes in Bach. Your mom, Mae, is an artist. A work of art, as well, so beautiful is she, and charming. Your godfather is Igor Stravinsky. He’s been slipping you glasses of scotch under the table since you turned 13, and his wife, the peerlessly elegant Vera, taught you how to eat caviar. Your house, on the corner of Cheremoya and Chula Vista at the foot of the Hollywood Hills, is always full-to-bursting with your dad’s hip musician friends: Jelly Roll Morton and Stuff Smith, Joseph Szigeti and Marilyn Horne. There are tales of earlier picnics along the L.A. River with Charlie Chaplin and Paulette Goddard, Greta Garbo, Bertrand Russell, and the Huxleys. The two Kenneths, Rexroth and Patchen, perform readings in your living room regularly. But poetry bores you blind, so you talk Lucy Herrmann, wife of movie composer Bernard—Bennie to you—into telling you stories upstairs. Arnold Schoenberg just laughs when you and your sister, Mirandi, get stuck together with bubble gum in the middle of the premiere of his latest piece at the Ojai Music Festival.

You’re a sophomore at Hollywood High. It’s that dead time between classes and you’re in the girls’ room, smoking one of the 87 cigarettes you share daily with Sally. Sally, who before she even transferred to Hollywood High had been through the wringer at Twentieth Century Fox, signed to a contract and then summarily dropped because she’d bleached her hair an eyeball-scorching shade of platinum the night before she was supposed to report for her first day of work, rendering herself superfluous because, unbeknownst to her, the studio had been planning to make her the next natural-type beauty in the Jean Seberg mold. Sally, who finds mornings so onerous she has to chase 15 milligrams of Dexamyl with four cups of thin coffee just to drag herself to first period. Sally, who is rich and surly and sex-savvy and has recently been taken up by a group of twenty-somethings from her acting class, the Thunderbird Girls you call them, if only in your head, knockouts all, cruising around town in—what else?—Thunderbird convertibles, spending their nights on the Sunset Strip, their weekends in Palm Springs with the ring-a-ding likes of Frank Sinatra. Sally, who is your best friend.

The company you keep is fast, which is O.K. by you since fast, as it so happens, is just your speed. No woof-woof among sex kittens you. Not with your perfect skin and teeth, hair the color of vanilla ice cream, secondary sexual characteristics that are second to none. The year before, when you were 14, you went to a party you weren’t supposed to go to. A right kind of wrong guy—an Adult Male, a big beef dreamboat galoot, just what you’d had in mind when you sneaked out of the house—told you he’d give you a ride home. You jumped at the offer. But when you lost your nerve, confessed your age, he pulled the car over to the side of the road. “Don’t let guys pick you up like this, kid—you might get hurt,” he said, undercutting this gruff bit of fatherly advice by laying a five-alarm kiss on you. He drove off without telling you his name. A few months passed and there was your white knight in black-and-white, on the front page of every paper in town. He’d had a run-in with another under-age girl, only this encounter had ended in penetration: her knife in his gut. Johnny Stompanato, henchman of Mob boss Mickey Cohen, dead at the hands of the 14-year-old daughter of his squeeze, Lana Turner. Tough luck for Johnny, but a good sign for you: you caught the eye of the guy who took off the Sweater Girl’s sweater nightly. If that doesn’t make you a movie star yourself it puts you in the same firmament as one, doesn’t it? At the very least it makes you seriously hot stuff.

And you’ve got more than looks going for you. You’ve got brains too. You read all the time—Proust, Woolf, Colette, Anthony Powell. And you’re good at school, even if you spend most of your class time doodling Frederick’s of Hollywood models on the back of your notebook. You certainly have no intention of making a right turn on Sunset after graduation, moving up the road to U.C.L.A., in squarer-than-square Westwood.

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The bell tolls and you and Sally take final drags on your cigarettes. As you turn to flick the butt out the window, you’re confronted by the same sight you’re confronted by every day except weekends and vacations: the 50-foot-tall mural of Rudolph Valentino, the exquisite Latin androgyne with the almond-shaped eyes and sulky mouth in the role that drove the viewing public into a state of rapture, of frenzy, of insanity—the Sheik, Hollywood High’s mascot. The giant close-up, painted on the west-facing side of the school’s main building, depicts him in windblown headdress and romantic profile, gazing moodily past the football field, out into the distance. Perhaps at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, a block away on Hollywood Boulevard. Perhaps at Persia’s desert splendor, oceans away on the other side of the world.

This reproduction of the silent-screen icon, crude as it is, corny as it is, transfixes you. You can’t take your eyes away. Now don’t forget. You’ve got that schizophrenic background. On the one hand, you have your family, representing the East Coast, Europe, High Culture. On the other hand, you have your own immediate context, Hollywood, California: Roadside Beach and pineapple snow cones; the Luau in Beverly Hills where you and Sally buy rum drinks with gardenias floating in them with your fake IDs, bat your lashes, also fake, at men twice your age; Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell in matching polka dots and cleavages pressing their palms into the wet cement in front of Grauman’s as you stand in the crowd and look on. And if that weren’t enough, you’re possessed of a naturally romantic disposition. Consequently, the melodrama of the image before you, larger than life, large, in fact, as the movies, grips and beguiles you. The longer you stare, the more susceptible you become to its dark fascination, its trashy-profound glamour.

And then—just like that—your imagination is captured, your sensibility formed. Even if you don’t think much of the movies or the people who make them, your viewpoint from this moment on will be, in essence, cinematic. Hollywood, with its appeal to the irrational and the unreal, its provocation of desire and volatility, its worship of sex and power and spectacle, will forevermore be your touchstone and guiding light. For better or worse, its ethos is your ethos, its values your values. Henceforth, when you look at Sally you won’t see a fun but troubled classmate. You’ll see an ingénue, the kind of girl who turns everyone, you included, into a bystander, a spectator, a fan. To you, high school is the set of a movie, a starry one with a sky’s-the-limit budget, a flashy locale, and legions of luscious extras. But then, to you, what isn’t the set of a movie?

You’re Eve Babitz, future artist and muse, observer and observed, chronicler of scenes, stealer of them, too; and you’re poised to enter a new decade.

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Eve Babitz’s claims to fame rest, in large measure, on her claims on the famous. She’s the goddaughter, of course, of one of the most influential composers of the 20th century. Then there’s that photograph of the chess match with Marcel Duchamp, Eve contemplating her next move without so much as a fig leaf for cover. And what about the series of Adams, better known than the original, some of them, to whom she offered her forbidden fruit? Jim Morrison, Steve Martin, Ed Ruscha, J. D. Souther, Stephen Stills, Glenn Frey, Harrison Ford, Warren Zevon, Ahmet Ertegun all took a bite at one time or another.

If that were her whole story, however, Eve wouldn’t be a whole story. She’d be a footnote. A minor figure of glamour in America’s cultural history. A groupie with a provocative pedigree. She’d be Edie Sedgwick, basically: so relentless a companion to celebrity that she became a bit of one herself, the spotlight just naturally spilling over onto her, making her luminous, too. But she’s not. Eve is Edie cut with Gertrude Stein and a little Louise Brooks thrown in.

Why?

For one thing, Eve had what artist Chris Blum dubbed “major radar,” a sort of next-order intuition that allowed her to see connections and affinities between people and things that others couldn’t, not until she brought them together. She arranged for an encounter between Frank Zappa and Salvador Dalí. (“One of my favorite things I ever did.”) She put Steve Martin in his first white suit. (“There was this great French photographer, Henri Lartigue. He took pictures of Paris in the 20s. All his people wore white. I showed his photographs to Steve. ‘You’ve got to look like this,’ I said.”) She gave singer-songwriter Michael Franks the title to one of his best-known tunes, “Popsicle Toes,” a phrase she tossed off when they were in bed together and her tootsies got cold. (“Everybody steals my lines.”) And she was the first to pick up on the fact that a Bennington College junior in need of a blurb was a rock ’n’ roll star in disguise. (“[Less than Zero] is the novel your mother warned you about. Jim Morrison would be proud.”) And speaking of her old flame Jim, she very nearly talked him out of naming his band after some goofy Aldous Huxley book. (“I mean, The Doors of Perception. What an Ojai-geeky-too-L.A.-pottery-glazer kind of uncool idea.”) Well, you can’t win them all.

For another thing, Eve could write.

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It’s generally reckoned that the 50s weren’t truly over until J.F.K. got shot in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963. But, for Eve, it was the end of an era when she saw the words MARILYN EST MORTE!, replete with lurid exclamation mark, headlining the newspapers in Nîmes, France, on August 6, 1962. Eve, still in her teens though not for much longer, was living with her family in Europe, as Sol completed his research on the finer points of Baroque musicology. Her favorite movie star, the one with whom she most passionately identified, had made the permanent, and likely voluntary, fade to black, while she was instead hanging around La Coupole, making voulez-vous coucher eyes. She was angry with herself for not being there. She felt she could have saved Marilyn. Years later she would write, “Marilyn kept putting herself in other people’s hands, believed them. They let her think that she was just a shitty Hollywood actress and Arthur Miller was a brilliant genius.” Eve, though, knew the truth, that really Marilyn was an artist in disguise, the cheesecake stuff just a front, a way of hiding in plain sight.

Taking the death as a sign that it was time to go home, Eve placed a call to her then boyfriend, a married director in his late 20s and so sexy, Eve said, that when he walked into a room full of women “it was like Santa Claus in an orphanage.” He arranged for a flight back to L.A.

While in Europe, Eve had devoted most of her energies to matters amatory. Not all, though. In between pickups she’d written a novel called Travel Broadens, which she likened to Daisy Miller, only her Daisy was from Hollywood, naturally. What’s more, Eve had very nearly gotten the book published after she sent one humdinger of a fan letter to Joseph Heller.

The letter in its breathtaking entirety:

Dear Joseph Heller,

I am a stacked eighteen-year-old blonde on Sunset Boulevard. I am also a writer.

Eve Babitz

Heller, charmed, wrote her back, asking to see her work. She sent him the manuscript. Hoping to make her the next Françoise Sagan, he introduced her to the young editor who’d discovered Catch-22, Robert Gottlieb. The project wound up languishing. Eve was disappointed, of course, but not too deeply. She’d managed to pique the interest of a Major Artist. No mean feat. Even better, she’d done it not by denying her sexpot voluptuousness but by reveling in it. It was the first time.

It wouldn’t be the last.

NUDE PONDERING HER NEXT MOVE Eve Babitz, chessboard, and Marcel Duchamp, 1963., Photograph © 1963 Julian Wasser.

NUDE PONDERING HER NEXT MOVE Eve Babitz, chessboard, and Marcel Duchamp, 1963., Photograph © 1963 Julian Wasser.

It was the fall of 1963 now. More than a year had passed since Eve’s adventures abroad. She had a new boyfriend, Walter Hopps, but the same problem: he was married. Hopps, 31, then curator of the Marcel Duchamp retrospective at the Pasadena Art Museum, had neglected to invite her to the private party for the show’s October 7 opening because his wife had unexpectedly returned to town. (Too bad. It was some party, Andy Warhol, Dennis Hopper, and Beatrice Wood, the inspiration for Catherine in Truffaut’s Jules and Jim, all dressed to the nines and sipping pink champagne at the ultra-swellegant Hotel Green.) Said Eve, “I decided that if I could ever wreak any havoc in [Walter’s] life I would.”

She proved as good as her word. Julian Wasser, then taking pictures for Time, approached her at the opening, the public opening, which she’d attended, humiliatingly enough, with her parents. Wasser told her he was looking for a girl willing to be photographed playing chess with Duchamp, who in the 20s had all but forsaken his career as an artist to devote himself exclusively to the game. The only catch: the girl would have to strike a pose toute nue, since the Frenchman’s most famous work was titled Nude Descending a Staircase (No. 2). In a move so Hollywood it was practically a rite of passage, Eve agreed to bare all for the camera. Only she wouldn’t be doing it for rent money like some down-on-her-luck starlet. She’d be doing it for revenge.

And art.

NUDE PONDERING HER NEXT MOVE Eve Babitz, chessboard, and Marcel Duchamp, 1963., Photograph © 1963 Julian Wasser.

NUDE PONDERING HER NEXT MOVE Eve Babitz, chessboard, and Marcel Duchamp, 1963., Photograph © 1963 Julian Wasser.

Wasser had a reputation as one of the most exciting young photographers on the scene. When asked why he chose Eve, he said, “I knew she’d blow Duchamp’s mind. She had a very classic female body.” The artist Larry Bell was even more direct on Eve’s appeal: “She had the biggest tits in Hollywood!”

At eight the following morning, a nervous Eve entered the museum. She hung around while Wasser set up, her mother’s advice ringing in her ears, Never put anything in writing or a photo, along with her father’s, Take his queen. At last, Duchamp arrived. Wasser gave her the signal. Eve took a deep breath and dropped her smock.

The resulting photograph achieved its intended effect: it got Hopps to return Eve’s calls. It achieved an unintended effect, too, becoming one of the most enduring images of postmodernism, showing up years later on posters for the Museum of Modern Art, in New York, and used in promotional catalogues and advertisements for Pacific Standard Time, the sprawling, grand-scale series of exhibitions in 2011–12 that commemorated the birth of the L.A. art scene. In the photo, Eve sits at a table. Appearances might have been deceiving. She might have had something on—the radio, for example, or Chanel No. 5—but you sure can’t tell from looking at her. Opposite her is the dada of Dadaism more formally attired in a black suit and heavy-rimmed spectacles. Both figures are intent on the chessboard between them. Legs crossed at the ankles, chin propped on her elbow, hair forming a curtain, blocking her face, Eve is a vision of innocence and carnality, the American dream made sun-kissed nubile flesh, as if sprung from the imagination of the European aesthete-satyr sitting across from her.

Eve had certainly progressed since her Hollywood High days. No longer content to be a mere looker-on, part of the audience, she was a player now. She wanted all eyes on her and she got them. Posing for this photo constituted an intensely exhibitionistic act, no doubt about it. Yet it was a private one as well, since she was exhibiting herself to the world so a single person would see. Nor did she take credit for her coup. By printing a shot that concealed her face when most of them didn’t—Wasser allowed her final say—she was opting to be The Girl, just as with Heller she was opting to be The Stacked Eighteen-Year-Old Blonde, a symbol rather than an individual, an exploitable sex object, only one that she exploited every bit as ruthlessly as any of the men did. Said Eve, “[Walter] thought he was running everything and I finally got to run something.”

Eve was learning how to be a pinup on the surface, an artist underneath. Just like her idol, Marilyn.

And now for what Eve would call her “groupie-adventuress” phase. It could be argued that, by the time of the photograph with Duchamp, she was well into it. After all, she’d already cut quite a swath through the cute young hunk L.A. artists: Kenny Price, Ed Ruscha, Ron Cooper. But post-photograph, she went on a tear that lasted nearly half a decade. Said Earl McGrath, former president of Rolling Stones Records, “In every young man’s life there is an Eve Babitz. It’s usually Eve Babitz.”

Rock ’n’ roll had been around awhile when a 24-year-old Eve walked through the doors of the Troubadour, a club in West Hollywood about to become the club, in 1968. She’d never paid much attention to the music, though, apart from the Beatles, and the Beatles were really her sister’s thing. (Ringo was a notch on Mirandi’s lipstick case. She’d seduced him at a party in Bel Air when the band was in town to play the Hollywood Bowl during their first U.S. tour. No slouches, these Babitz girls.) Well, the music had her attention now, every bit of it. This was a whole new scene and she needed to figure out a way to get herself on it. She’d write in Rolling Stone, “I posed as an album-cover designer and photographer. . . . That I today have some album covers and photographs to show for myself is a monument to the attention-to-detail of my disguise.” Eve here is being typically understated about her achievements. She created now iconic covers for Buffalo Springfield (Buffalo Springfield Again), the Byrds (Untitled), and Linda Ronstadt (Heart Like a Wheel).

But her point is taken. The art of seduction seemed to be the art she was most interested in practicing, singer-songwriters her particular weakness. Not that she was categorically opposed to giving non-musicians a tumble. In spite of her prejudice against actors—“They’re so horrible. If they aren’t talking about why they aren’t stars, they’re talking about security”—she had a brief romance with Harrison Ford. Maybe because he was making a living as a carpenter at the time. And maybe because, like the old joke goes, carpenters know how to nail it. Said Eve, “The thing about Harrison was Harrison could fuck. Nine people a day. It’s a talent, loving nine different people in one day. Warren [Beatty] could only do six.”

It’s at this point in her story that the comparisons to Edie Sedgwick start to become inevitable, Eve seeming to offer herself as an alternative version of Edie: L.A. to Edie’s New York; Chateau Marmont to Edie’s Chelsea Hotel; Ruscha, Hopps, and Morrison to Edie’s Warhol, Morrissey, and Dylan; Jewish Princess to Edie’s Wasp debutante. But a crucial difference—one of many—between Eve and Edie is that Eve was bedding these guys before they’d made it. And it’s not star fucking if they aren’t stars yet, is it?

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As Steve Martin, then a young banjo-playing comic and Troubadour regular, explained, “Nobody was famous yet. Eve knew who the talented ones were.” Eve was assured in her taste, no question. She knew what she liked and why. Her account of her affair with Jim Morrison is simultaneously gaga and coolheaded. She would write, “Being in bed with Jim was like being in bed with Michelangelo’s David, only with blue eyes.” If she venerated him as a love object, though, she rejected him as an artist: “[Jim’s] voice was embarrassing, sounding so sudden and personal and uttering such hogwash.” Eve might have been a hopeless romantic but she was also nobody’s fool.

By the end of the decade, Eve knew everyone. She was at every party, every event. “Life was one long rock ’n’ roll,” she’d say of those days. Even fun, though, can get to be a drag if you have too much of it. Writer Dan Wakefield, Eve’s big romance during this period, said, “Our year together was one of my favorite years, but I couldn’t have lived through two of them. My God, the decadence!” By 1971, Eve was suffering from a condition she termed “squalid overboogie.” It was time for a change.

Shifting her attention from photography back to prose, she began writing a piece about her alma mater titled “The Sheik.” When she was finished, she showed it to Joan Didion, whom she knew through Wakefield. Said Eve, “Joan and I connected. The drugs she was on, I was on. She looks like she’d take downers, but really she’s a Hell’s Angel girl, white trash. . . . [Joan] was all the rage then. Grover [Lewis, an editor at Rolling Stone] asked her to write for him. She couldn’t, because of her contract with Life. She recommended me.” Eve sent the piece to Lewis. Lewis sent Eve a check. She could scarcely believe it. Rolling Stone was, at the time, the hottest thing going, “just too fabulous and hip for words.” Best of all, it was publishing her work.

At the tail end of her ingénue days, 28, the age at which Edie’d OD’d, Eve had been discovered. No more cameos, wowie but uncredited. No more second-banana supporting roles. (Why should she spend her time and talent making a bunch of rock ’n’ rollers look good?) From here on out, it would be star turns and nothing but.

Eve’s right in the phonebook, yet I found it near impossible to reach her. I sent her several fan letters on postcards featuring movie stars for whom I knew she had a particular regard: Kim Novak, Tony Curtis, Marlon Brando. Nothing. Not a peep. So I gathered together my nerve and picked up the phone. No answer, ever.

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And it wasn’t just me who couldn’t get anywhere with her. Art critic Dave Hickey attempted to mount an Eve Babitz revival a few years ago. Then a professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Hickey had assigned his students several of her pieces, and they’d flipped. He got in touch to see if she’d come speak to the class. The request didn’t go over so hot. “She told me to fuck myself,” he informed me cheerfully. “That’s O.K. She blows everybody off these days.”

She did? Why? What had happened? What had caused this most profoundly and abidingly social of creatures to go J. D. Salinger? Howard Hughes? Norma Desmond? An accident, as freakish as it was horrific.

Driving home from a party in 1997, Eve had dropped a bit of ash from the cigar she was smoking onto her skirt. Seconds later, she was up in flames. Her face was spared, but she suffered third-degree burns over half her body. The doctors gave her a 50–50 chance of survival. The odds wound up breaking in her favor, and she pulled through. Her life, though, was forever altered. Whether from discomfort or lack of interest, she stopped going out, turned increasingly inward, increasingly reclusive.

Lacking Hickey’s grace, I refused to take a hint and persisted in my quest. At long last, I managed to establish contact. Or, rather, I managed to establish contact with those with whom Eve was still in contact: sister Mirandi; Paul Ruscha, younger brother of Ed, her on-again, off-again one and (semi) only from the early 70s to the mid-90s; cousin Laurie. Either Eve got curious or she decided it would be faster to get rid of me if she just did what I wanted, because she sent out word that she was willing to meet. I booked my ticket to L.A.

She suggested lunch at a restaurant in her neighborhood—a burger joint, only fancy. I arrived early, waited nervously for the woman who once said she believed “that anyone who lived past thirty just wasn’t trying hard enough to have fun,” now 70. Suddenly, there she was. She was no longer glamorous-looking, her hair frankly and unapologetically gray, the cut short and blunt; her clothes a way of being not naked and nothing more. She told me she was starving.

No exaggeration, as it turned out. Our grass-fed burgers and russet potatoes fried in truffle oil arrived and she barely came up for air. I remembered Paul Ruscha’s description of her M.O. at fêtes during her party-girl heyday: “She’d bypass the host or hostess and first head to the buffet table and dive into it like Esther Williams on Dexamyl. She’d bolt if something made her uneasy, then barge back in and demand that I take her home. I’d ask her why. After all, we’d just gotten there, and she’d say, ‘So we can fuck!’ ”

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Once she’d cleaned her plate at lunch, Eve was similarly hot to trot. We talked a bit on the way to the car and in it. The conversation, though, never really got off the ground. We couldn’t get any rhythm going, any flow. I was uptight and over-eager. And she seemed not quite all there, her few remarks directed to an invisible point above my head or to herself. I turned onto her street and she was out the door in a flash, practically before I’d braked, disappearing into her building without so much as a wave.

We had better luck when I was back in New York and called her on the phone, which she was now, thankfully, answering. Eve has a great voice, girlish and lilting, and is an easy laugher. And small wonder if she prefers her communication to be disembodied these days. Talking about the past, her stories are sharp and funny, her recall excellent. (On meeting Andy Warhol: “There was a party of some kind, a benefit, if you can believe it. Yoko Ono was there. Her job was to make crêpe paper curl and then throw it all around so it was like prom in a high-school gym. It was so goddamned packed I couldn’t move. I was on LSD.” On seeing Joseph Cornell’s work for the first time: “I went to one of his shows. It was great. I was on LSD.” On her cocaine addiction: “I got really thin. I was a size seven and these extremely weird people were attracted to me and I thought they were just sick.”) And once you push past the political stuff—her views have taken a sharp right turn in the last decade, which is her own bee’s wax and her prerogative, only it’s hard getting her to give the subject a rest—she’s terrific on the present too. She tells me about the book she’s reading, Life, Keith Richards’s autobiography (“The reason Keith doesn’t die is because he doesn’t mix his drugs”), why she isn’t writing (“I’d rather do nothing for as long as I can stand it”), what her skin looks like (“I’m a mermaid now, half my body”).

back sleeve from one of Eve's books

                                                              back sleeve from one of Eve’s books

This last remark is the one that knocks me out the most. I love it not simply because it shows how tough she is, how un-whiny, but because of its sneaky eroticism. She’s comparing her burned epidermis—a painful and grisly condition, a disfigurement—to the scales on the tail of a mermaid, the femme fatale of the sea. As an image, it’s grotesque and romantic at once. Not just sexy, perversely sexy. Not just perversely sexy, triumphantly perversely sexy.

On the phone, she talks like she writes.

Eve’s piece on Hollywood High was featured in the October 2, 1972, issue of Rolling Stone. A book deal soon followed. Seymour Lawrence, responsible for publishing such luminaries as Katherine Anne Porter and Kurt Vonnegut, would be her editor. Friend Annie Leibovitz would shoot the cover: Eve, in nothing but a black bra and a white feather boa, ready, as ever, for her close-up.

So what’s her writing like? Eve is to prose what Chet Baker, with his light, airy style, lyrical but also rhythmic, detached but also sensuous, is to jazz, or what Larry Bell, with his glass confections, the lines so clean and fresh and buoyant, is to sculpture. She’s a natural. Or gives every appearance of being one, her writing elevated yet slangy, bright, bouncy, cheerfully hedonistic—L.A. in its purest, most idealized form.

L.A. is, in fact, her favorite subject matter. It’s the height of irony that Joan Didion should have been the one to give her a shot at the big time. Their views on the city couldn’t be more antithetical. Didion—small, unsmiling, fragile, a lifelong sufferer of migraines—sees it as a spiritual and intellectual wasteland, a place where “a belief in the literal interpretation of Genesis has slipped imperceptibly into a belief in the literal interpretation of Double Indemnity,” where the Golden Dream turns into God’s Worst Nightmare as quickly as the Santa Anas whip down the San Gorgonio Pass. Her sensibility is doom and gloom with the style to match: dry, measured, spare, with a tight-lipped control of emotion, lots of white on the page.

Eve, on the other hand—curvy, sunny, resilient to the point of indestructibility, only gets headaches when she gets hangovers—sees the city as “a gigantic, sprawling, ongoing studio,” loving it for its “spaces between the words, [its] blandness and the complete absence of push.” Eve is the true spirit of L.A., the pleasure principle incarnate. And, as with Didion, her style is reflective of her sensibility: giddy, gushing, conversational, infused with a kind of hip, happy innocence, sentences that run on and on and on, unable to catch their breath.

Eve is easy to dismiss because she doesn’t wear her seriousness on her sleeve. Her concerns are the seating arrangements at dinner parties, love affairs on the skids. She offers up information commonly known as gossip. Girl stuff, basically. (By that standard, of course, Proust was writing girl stuff, too.) But her casualness has depth, an aesthetic resonance. She achieved that American ideal: art that stays loose, maintains its cool, is purely enjoyable enough to be mistaken for simple entertainment. It’s a tradition that includes Duke Ellington, Fred Astaire, Preston Sturges, Ed Ruscha, and, it goes without saying, Marilyn Monroe.

Eve went on to write seven books, a mixture of fiction and nonfiction, though the fiction is really nonfiction tricked out in dark glasses and a glued-on mustache. And while she never managed to acquire a husband—no Arthur Millers cramping her style—she did manage to acquire several high-pedigree fans in addition to Heller and Didion. Dave Hickey, of course. Vanity Fair columnist and culture critic James Wolcott too: “Eve remains a one-of-a-kind writer. . . . [Her] out-of-print titles still beckon and glimmer with humor and seduction.” Yet she never quite broke through, never became a genuine star. She stayed a B-movie vamp. A Dorothy Malone rather than a Marilyn Monroe.

How come? Why is Eve a cult, not a phenomenon, her work under-discovered and under-read? Hickey offered the following explanation: “Maybe she’s overlooked because her style is so serene. You never feel a hesitation.” In other words, Eve makes it look too easy. What’s more, she seems to encourage the idea that writing for her is a form of slumming: “When men I had once thought of as wise daddies asked me ‘How do you write?’ . . . I would just smile and say, ‘On a typewriter in the mornings when there’s nothing else to do.’ ” It’s an obviously coy response, not meant to be taken seriously, though some people would, and it’s pure Eve. Admitting to toil isn’t just against her scruples, it’s against her style.

Her agent, Erica Spellman-Silverman, takes a different view: “I called her F. Scott FitzBabitz. She really got the time—L.A. in the 70s. Captured it perfectly. In the 80s, though, things started to change.” And not for the better. Not for Eve. The advent of cocaine caused overboogie to sink to untenable depths of squalor. Said Paul Ruscha, “She’d blown her book advance on coke, fucked up her nose. She called me, begged me to come over. I couldn’t believe what I saw. There wasn’t an inch of floor not covered in bloody Kleenex. The cats were running around high.” It was time for Eve to join A.A., not just for alcoholics, according to her.

And the 90s, thanks to that cigar, were an even bigger nightmare. Eve was predictably without health insurance. Her medical bills ran into the hundreds of thousands. To raise cash, Mirandi, Laurie, and Paul, along with screenwriters Michael Elias and Caroline Thompson and artist Laddie John Dill, arranged a benefit at the Chateau Marmont. An auction was staged with works donated by, among others, Ed Ruscha, Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston, and Dennis Hopper. The ghost-of-amours-past invitees included Harrison Ford, Steve Martin, and Ahmet Ertegun.

Afterward, Laurie reported back to Eve, still in the hospital, to tell her how this group of guys had really come through for her, Ford and Martin coughing up $50,000 apiece. A prostrate Eve, in full Camille mode, raised her head. Through cracked lips she croaked out the words “blow jobs” before collapsing back on the pillow.

Eve Babitz, The Sunset Tower, West Hollywood, California, Vanity Fair by Lloyd Ziff

                     Eve Babitz, The Sunset Tower, West Hollywood, California, Vanity Fair by Lloyd Ziff

Eve has not written a book since the fire. She did, however, have a new set of business cards printed up:

Eve Babitz Better red than dead.

She still lives in Hollywood.

Source and credits:

All text by Lili Anolik for Vanity Fair
http://www.vanityfair.com/unchanged/2014/03/eve-babitz-los-angeles-party-scene
Vanity Fair photo by Lloyd Ziff
Other Eve photos by https://www.pinterest.com/search/pins/?q=eve%20babitz


ROLL OVER ELVIS THE SECOND COMING OF JIM MORRISON ESQUIRE MAGAZINE MARCH 1991

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Jim Morrison Is Alive And Well And Living In Hollywood
By: Eve Babitz

I know why I loved him. I know why lots of women loved him. But what I want to know is this: Why now, does Oliver Stone love him? A survivors report.

J.D. Souther once told me he spent his first years in L.A. learning how to stand. Jim knew how to stand. He stood pigeon-toed, filled with poetry against a mike with that honky tonk Berlin organ in the background, and sang about “another kiss.”

And there is something to be said for singing in tune. Jim not only sang in turn, he sang intimately – as Doors producer Paul Rothchild once pointed out to me, “Jim was the greatest crooner since Bing Crosby.”

He was Bing Crosby from hell.

In those days, in the 60’s, people in L.A. with romantic streaks who knew music went for the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, Paul Butterfield – and for clubs like the Troubadour and the Trip and the Ash Grove. The Whisky, where the Doors flourished, was the kind of place where the headliner would be Johnny Rivers, a white boy who covered Chuck Berry’s “Memphis.” By the 60’s, white boys weren’t suppose to cover soul anymore, but at the Whisky it was still groovy. The Carpenters played at the Whisky.
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At the Whisky, the bouncers were bouncers, the management was from New York City and the women wore beehive hairdos long after it was cool. Rock groups who went to college and actually got degrees were not only uncool, they were unheard of.

Jim went to college and he graduated. My friend Judy Raphael, who went to film school, too, remembers Jim as this pudgy guy with a marine haircut who worked in the library at UCLA and who was supposed to help her with her documentary term paper one night but ended up talking drunkedly and endlessly about Oedipus, which meant she had to take the course over that summer.

The Doors were embarrassing, like their name. I dragged Jim into bed before they’d decided on the name and tried to dissuade him; it was so corny naming yourself after something Aldous Huxley wrote. I mean, The Doors Of Perception….what an Ojaigeeky-too-L.A.-pottery-glazer kind of uncool idea.

The Beatles were desperate criminals compared with them. The Beatles only had one leg to stand on – rock ‘n roll. The Doors, though were film majors. If you wanted to make a movie, even if you went to UCLA like Francis Coppola and then to the Rodger Corman School of Never Lost a Dime Pictures, you still weren’t cool. Even Jack Nicholson wasn’t cool in the 60’s. Being an actor wasn’t cool in the 60’s, because all movies did was get everything all wrong. At least until Easy Rider, being in the movie business was a horrible thing to admit.

Of course, Oliver Stone was so uncool he voluntarily went to Vietnam instead of prowling around the Sunset Strip with the rest of his generation. Oliver Stone was such a nerd he became a soldier, a Real Man. He didn’t understand that in the 60’s real men were not soldiers. A real man was Mick Jagger in Performance, in bed with two women, wearing eye makeup and kimonos. Or John Phillip Law, with wings, in Barbarella. Of course, Bob Dylan was even cooler than Mick Jagger, so cool he couldn’t sing. He didn’t bother, and he was so skinny, with those narrow little East Coast shoulders and that face. And he was mean.

Like everyone back then, Jim hated his parents, hated home, hated it all. If he could have gotten away with it, Jim would have been an orphan. He tried lying about having parents, creating his life anew – about what you’d expect from someone who’d lost thirty pounds in one summer (the summer of ’65, from taking drugs instead of eating, and hanging out on the Venice boardwalk). I mean he awoke one morning and was so cute, how could ge have parents?

According to some statistics I recently heard about, the ‘50’s was the decade when the American diet contained its highest percentage of fat – over 50 percent. And these 50’s children, overfed, repressed and indignant, waited in the wings lurking and praying to get nig enough to get the f**k out. Jim Morrison had it worse than a lot of kids. He was fat. And his father was a naval officer.

Then the ultimate dream of everyone who weights too much and gets thin happened to Jim. He lost the weight and turned into a Prince. Into John, Paul, George, and Ringo. Into Mick. I met Jim early in ’66 when he’d just lost the weight and wore a suit made of gray suede lashed together at the seams with lanyards, and no shirt. It was the best outfit he ever had, and he was so cute that no woman was safe. He was twenty-two, a few months younger than I.

He had the freshness and humility of someone who had been fat all his life and now suddenly a morning glory. I met Jim and propositioned him in three minutes even before he so much as opened his mouth to sing. This great even took place not at the Whisky but at a now forgotten club just down on the Strip called the London Fog, the first bar there the Doors played. And there were only about seven people in the room anyway. “Take me home,: I demurely offered when were introduced. “You’re not really going to stay here playing, are you? “Uh,” he replied, “we don’t play. We work. I suggested the next night. And that’s when it happened (finally!) Naturally, I dressed the part – black eye makeup out to there, a miniskirt up to here – but the truth was that I did, in fact, have parents. On our first date I even confessed to Jim that my ridiculous father was on that very night playing violin in a program of music by Palestrina. To my tremendous dismay, Jim immediately expressed his desire to drive to Pasadena. I packed him into my ’52 Cadillac and off we went, but by intermission I had had enough. He whined that he wanted to stay for the second half, but I put my foot down. “You just can’t be here,” I said. “Listening to this. You just can’t.”

Being in bed with Jim was like being in bed with Michelangelo’s David, only with blue eyes. His skin was so white, his muscles were so pure, he was so innocent. The last time I saw him with no shirt on, at a party up in Coldwater, his body was so ravaged by scars, toxins and puffy pudginess, I wanted to kill him.

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He never really stopped being a fat kid. He used to suggest, “Let’s go to Ships and eat blueberry pancakes with blueberry syrup. “It’s so fattening,” I would point out. I mean really. Jim was embarrassing because he wasn’t cool, but I still loved him. It was his mouth, of course, which was so edible. Just so long as he kept his James Dean smolder, it worked. But it takes a lot of downers to achieve that on a full time basis. And no fat.

Just so long as he stood there in the leather clothes my sister had hand made for him, the ones lined with turquoise satin, trimmed with snakeskin and lizard. The black leather pants, the leather jackets. My sister never thought Jim was that cute, but then my sister was one of his girlfriend Pamela’s friends, and it was in her best interest to ignore Jim, even though, for a month, my sister and her boyfriend lived with Jim and Pamela, and it was almost impossible. “He was always a very dark presence in a room,” she said, “In fact if you asked me today the feeling I got, I’d say it was of a person who was severely depressed. Clinically depressed.” She’s now a psychologist, so she knows.

“He thought he was ugly,” she said. “He’d look at himself in he mirror trying on those clothes, but he hated looking at himself, because he thought he was ugly.”

My sister and Pamela had to fight to persuade him to leave his hair long, because left to his own devices he’d get it cut preppy-short and break everyone’s heart. Even his voice was embarrassing, sounding so sudden and personal and uttering such hogwash in a time when, if you were going to say words, they were to be ironic and a little off center. Jim just blurted things the f**k out. My artist friends found him excruciating, too but my movie friends *who were, by definition, out of it and behind the times and got everything all wrong) loved him. He said what they meant. They might not have understood Dylan – they thought he couldn’t sing – but in Hollywood they loved Jim.

Jim as a sex object and the Doors as a group were two entirely different stories. The whole audience would put up with long, tortured silences and humiliation and just awful schmuck stuff Jim did during performances. He could get away with it because his audience was all college kids who thought the Doors were cool because they had lyrics you could understand about stuff they learned in Psychology 101 and Art History. The kids who liked the Doors were so misguided they thought – “Crystal Ship” was for intellectuals.

Jim as a sex object lasted for about two years. In fact, once he and Pamela became entangled in their fantastic killing struggle – once he finally found someone who, when he said, “Let’s drive over this cliff,” actually would – he became more of a death object than a sex symbol. Which was even sexier.

When Pamela Courson met Jim, he began putting his money where his mouth was. Whereas all he had previously brought to the moment was morbid romantic excess, he now had someone looking at him and saying, “Well, are you going to drive off this cliff, or what?”

She was someone with red hair and a heart embroidered on her pants over the place her anus would be. He was a back doorman, and Pamela was the door. Pamela was the cool one. Everything a nerd could possibly wish to be, Pamela was. She had guns, took heroin, and was fearless in every situation. Socially she didn’t care, emotionally she was shock proof, and as for her eating disorders – her idea of the diet to be on while Jim was in Miami going to court was ten days of heroin. Every time she woke up she did some, so she just sort of slept through her fast. One, when she did wake up, she went with some friends to the Beverly Hills Hotel to see Ahmet Eregun and fainted. Viola, there she was back at UCLA, diagnosed as dying of malnutrition.

Good old Pamela, what a sport. She would take Jim’s favorite vest and write f*g in giant letters on the back in India ink. She would go through Rodeo Drive’s Yves Saint Laurent Rive Gauche, piling her arms higher and higher with more stuff, muttering under her breath, “He owes it to me, he owes it to me, he owes it to me.”

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Pamela was mean and she was cool. She liked to scare people. Pamela had control over Jim in real life. He made his audiences suffer for that. And I mean, he was so cute, you would. Pamela looked sunny and sweet and cute – she had freckles and red hair and the greenest eyes and just the country girl glow. It was hard to believe her purse was stuffed with Thorazine (that horrible drug they used to give acid freak outs). She wore mauve, and large, soft, expensive suede boots and large shawls, but even her laugh her was mean.

She was so mean, she told Ray Manzarek (the worst nerd worldwide, know to his friends as Ray of the Desert) that Jim’s last words were, “Pam, are you out there?” even though he actually left a note. And she knew that the note would establish forever the literature movie myth of Jim’s Lizard King image. Everyone hated Pam except Jim.

A friend of mine once said, “You can say anything about a woman a man marries, but I’ll tell you one thing – it’s always his mother.” “Mother,” sang Jim, “I want to….aggghhh.” Pamela was more than happy to supply the lip back: “Oh, you would, would you? Well, f**k you!”

I couldn’t be mean to him. If the phone rang at night there was a long pause after I said hello, I knew it was Jim. He and I had a lot of ESP in some kind of laser twisted, wish fulfillment kind of way. I always wished he were there, and every so often, he zoomed in. “The thing that really made people mad at him,” my sister reminds me, “was that he drank. And it wasn’t cool in those days.” “Yeah,” I say, “he did drink.” Of course, I drank, but I tried to keep my drinking with the psychedelia-subscribed boundaries of okayness. I drank Dos Equis, wine and tequila. Jim drank scotch. Scotches.

Adults drank and got drunk and were uncool. I myself drank, got drunk, and was uncool. But I myself didn’t drink, get drunk and become so uncool I flashed an audience in the South. I myself didn’t drink, get drunk and then jump out of windows, get busted, stick my fist through plate glass, show up three days late for an interview with Joan Didion from Life magazine, drunk, unshaven, and throwing lit matches in her lap. But Jim did.

Jim drank, got drunk, and woke up bloated and miserable and had to apologize and say he loved you, the alcoholic’s ancient saving grace. Jim drank and got drunk and then was so uncool he had to walk home.

I never saw him drive – he was always on foot in L.A. He didn’t dare drive himself anywhere. He knew in his worst blackouts to put my diaphragm in and take my contact lenses out.

Jim drank, got drunk, and wanted to be shown the way to the Nest Whiskey Bar. Whereas the Rolling Stones were ripping off Otis and Robert Johnson and Chuck Berry and the cool and hip Buffalo Springfield were riffling through Wood Gutherie and Hank Williams with folkie touches or else trying to achieve soul, Jim was ripping off Kurt Weill, Bertolt, Jean Cocteau, and Lawrence Durrrell. While the Rolling Stones were making it cool to be black and folk rockers were making it cool to be white trash, Jim was making it cool to be a poet. If Jim had lived in another era, he would have had a schoolteacher wife to support him while he sat around writing “brilliant” poetry.

One night I was in the bungalow of Ahmet Ertegun ( this was when I wised up and quit aiming at rock stars and went for record company presidents instead – but cool ones, not Clive Davis. It was the night of the 1971 moon landing and when I came in wearing my divine little black velvet dress, my tan, my blond art nouveau hair, and my one pair of high heels I used for whenever Ahmet was in town, who should be sitting in front of the TV watching the moon landing but Jim, a Scotch and Coke (no ice) in his hand.

Ahmet proceeded to tell a rather gross story about midgets in India, and when he was through, Jim rose to his feet and bellowed, “You think you’re going to win, don’t you?! Well, your not, your not going to win. We’re going to win, us – the artists. Not you capitalist pigs!”

You could have heard a pin drop in this roomful of Ahmet’s fashionable friends, architects from France, artists, English lords, W-type women. Of course, Ahmet was a capitalist pig but still, he did write some Drifters lyrics and produce records and his acts sang in tune. Anyway, everybody was silent (except the moon landing reporter on the TV I until I stood up and heard myself say, “But Ahmet is an artist, Jim!”

I became so embarrassed by how uncool I was, I ran down the hallway and into the bathroom, where I stood looking at myself in the mirror and wondering why I didn’t get married and move to Orange county and what was I doing there.

There was a knock on the door. I opened it and Jim came in and shut the door behind him. “You know,” he said, staring straight into my eyes, “I’ve always loved you.”
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Later that night he came back and apologized to Ahmet. But it was too late; by then he was too fat to get away with it. The people who were there refused to remember that it had happened. It was one of those tricky nights when Ahmet was trying to make up his mind whether he was going to seduce Jim away from Elektra Records (whose contract was nearly up). Ahmet had lured Mick away from his label the year before, Ahmet bespoke elegance, Cote d’ Azur loafers with no socks, Bentley’s and Rolls Royces. Ahmet knew everybody. Jac Holzman of Elektra was an awkward bumpkin compared with Ahment. Jac was a Virgo, Ahmet the world’s most sophisticated Leo. Ahmet had Magrittes in his living room in New York, his wife was on the Ten Best Dressed list, he’d been everywhere, done everything, and spoke all these languages. Jac liked camping.

Of course, today Ahmet might deny this was going on, but at that time Ahmet never saw a rock star who made money whom he didn’t want. Especially if he could sing in tune. Jim might also have denied anything was going on, or maybe he did notice he was being seduced, maybe that’s why he was so on about the capitalist pigs not winning. But then, Jim was drunk and uncool, so maybe what he said wasn’t about anything. That’s the thing with alcoholics: There resentments are a condition of their disease and not really political at all. A condition of their allergy to alcohol – and allergies mean if you’re allergic to strawberries and eat them, you break out in hives. If Jim drank Scotch, he broke out in f**kups.

But as long as Jim was on foot in L.A. – as long as be was signed to Elektra and in a world where if he fell, it would be into the arms of emergency rooms or girls who knew and loved him – he was, if not okay, at least not dead. There was always somebody around who would break down the door. He could never get away with killing himself in L.A.

Someone in Paris told me that when he met Jim at a party after he had moved there, he looked into her face and said, “Would you mind scratching my back? It itches.” Her arm went around him, their bodies facing as she scratched. Then Jim said, “You know what? I can’t feel a thing.” Which was really humiliating to her, since having your arm around someone who says he can’t feel it is….well, it sound like one of Pamela’s tricks.

Jim burned his bridges in Paris. He got fatter and fatter, drank more and more, sampled Pamela’s heroin and piled up suicide notes on a table in their rooms. Since Jim had rheumatic fever in his youth, his heart was not in condition for what he did to it there – combining insult with f**kups until finally one day Pamela came into the bathroom and Jim wasn’t kidding.

She pulled him out of the tub and there she was – stuck in Paris in early July, forced to put him into a too-small coffin wearing a too-large suit. (Since no one in those days had suits, she had to buy one for him. She didn’t know his size.)

Pamela told me she fled to Morocco with an eighteen year old French count, a junkie who also OD’d on her and died. And then, having worn out her stay abroad, she returned to the West Coast and sued for her share of Jim’s estate until she got it and then, since three years had passed and she was now the same age as Jim when he died, she, too, OD’d and died.

She left behind a VW Bug, two fur coats, and Sage, Jim’s dog. A quarter of the group’s estate was split between her family and his, and her father saved Jim’s “poems” and put them in a safe place in Orange County. The wonderful Julia Densmore Negron who had divorced the drummer, John, was given royalties as a settlement because, as she said, “By 1971 they were worth practically nothing. But they’ve gone up more than 1500 percent in the past eleven years.” Since she was only married to John during the last two years of the Doors, when their records didn’t sell much anyway, sales much have really gone up, but why?

Because Francis Ford Coppola used the song “The End” to make Jim a star in Apocalypse Now, which came out in 1979. And now Vietnam’s about to do it again for Jim.

If, in the 60’s, you were white and political and had noblesse oblige drummed into you (Yale’s big selling point), you might have gone to Vietnam as a soldier, as Oliver Stone did, so you could come home and write a book the way Kennedy did and then be elected president.

Being Kennedy was not entirely uncool, but I knew a guy who went to Yale and then officer school at Annapolis and then Guam and then a ship in the harbor at Saigon (if it has a harbor, I don’t know; it was someplace with a harbor.) And all he did there was drink, and when he got home and went into seclusion to write his book like Kennedy, he couldn’t write it. It was one thing being a World War II hero and writing a book. In Vietnam there weren’t any heroes.

In Salvador (one of the last Oliver Stone movies I’ve ever going to see), he created two sleazeballs who can’t handle women, who are so incapable of having a real life in a real place that they have to slop down to hell, where they are the richest and most powerful people around. And still these guys manage to make victims out of themselves. Stone’s heroes always wind up as victims, no matter how sleazy they are.

It has been rumored around L.A. that Oliver Stone is asking everyone in connection with the Doors movie if Jim was impotent, and it makes you think Oliver Stone doesn’t know much about Jim’s main disease. You’d think he’d at least read up on the symptoms that show up in a person who takes depressants as a cure for depression. Taking Seconal and Tunial and drinking brandy will bring your sex life to a grinding halt. But what I want to know about Oliver Stone is not whether he can get it up or not, but why anyone on the 60’s would join the Army, would go to Vietnam and become part of the war and murder and atrocity, when the action for Real Men was on Sunset Strip, the Lower East Side, and in San Francisco. Why did he join them, and why is he now in love with our Jim?

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The thing is, we in Los Angeles have always been willing to give a lot of slack for looks – for beauty – but Oliver Stone doesn’t have any. He doesn’t even like it. His movies are always about horrible men doing awful stuff, horrible men who are too far from their vileness to look beautiful. It’s a though everything he’s done is against the very premise of looks; he can’t even show Daryl Hannah and understand what’s she’s about. His idea of a good thing is a man bellowing about how being stupid is not that bad. (But it is.)

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If being stupid is not that bad, then Jim’s poetry would be okay, but it’s not. Fortunately Jim had looks.

Maybe like Jim’s other nerdy fans, Oliver Stone really believes that Jim was “serious” about breaking on through to the other side, But what does that mean – death, the way it sounds? It meant death to Jim personally, if what Pamela told her neighbor Diane Gardiner is to be believed, if he really died in Paris, his suicide note against a lamp, “Last Words, Last Words, Out.”

By the time Jim left L.A., everyone thought he was a fool; he was fat, getting fatter, and even his fans were unwilling to look at his thingy. He didn’t have enough ideas in his head to keep people interested any longer. Underneath his mask, he was dead. But then, by 1971, who wasn’t.

I certainly had washed ashore, without illusions. Everyone was afraid of Manson (Jim looked like him in his obit picture in the Los Angeles Times), acid had suffered defeat, and cocaine was up for a long, ugly ride. Until Jim died, I had made a living doing album covers – psychedelic valentines for groups I loved, like Buffalo Springfield. I was in France in 1962 when Marilyn Monroe died, and now Jim was in France, dead, and I was nearly twenty-right, unmarried, no future, no going forth in glory, only waking up at 3:00am with free floating anxiety (which someone said was “the only thing floating around free anymore”).

Some said the 60’s was drugs and the ‘70’s was sex, but for me the 70’s was staying home. It was a time when I began to write for a living and though I never wrote movies, they began seeming not that bad to me. Actors suddenly became okay (at least from afar). I began running into women who kept Jim alive – as did I – because something about him began seeming great compared to everything else that was going on. He may have been a film school poet, but at least he wasn’t disco.

People began trying to make a movie about Jim and everyone I ran into who tried either died or would up in AA. They wanted….John Travolta! Casting anyone to play Jim was just totally ridiculous to me.

My incredibly beautiful neighbor, Enid Karl, had two children by Donovan in the 60’s and their son also Donovan, worked as an extra in the Doors movie (the daughter, Ione Skye, is an actress, too, but she was in a play in New York during the filming). The experience left Donovan thrilled, excited and completely on Oliver Stone’s side. (Everyone I talked to who worked on the movie – wardrobe women – actors – was on Oliver Stone’s side. Le tout L.A.)

“In the first scene at the Whisky, I played my father – because I asked. There were four hundred extras, but I got to sit in front and wear a caftan like my father wore. I thought I was going to end up lost in the crowd with a A.D. in front of me and not in the movie, but Oliver saw me and called out from the stage, ‘Donovan! Donovan! And suddenly they put me in the front row.”

Then they gave Donovan a blond wig to wear as an extra in the Ray Manzarek wedding scene, and once he added muttonchops and a moustache he looked so much like Ray’s brother that they let him sit with the wedding party. “The extras were all too young to have been around in the 60’s,” young Donovan reports, “but really, it felt like everyone loved the Doors, and it was happening. You didn’t feel you were on a movie set.”

I heard that once shooting began, Val Kilmer sent around a memo demanding that no one speak to him except as Jim. And than no one was allowed to come with ten feet of him. Plus, he wore a sweat shirt with a hood so he could hide his face. Not at all like Jim, who was all things to all people, like, Marilyn, but how else can a boy stay in character if he’s not actually Jim? (When Dustin Hoffman arrived on the set of Marathon Man looking worn and exhausted because he had deliberately avoided sleep for two nights, Laurence Olivier remarked, “Dear boy, you look absolutely awful. Why don’t you try acting? It’s so much easier.”)

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According to everyone, Val Kilmer is supposed to have gotten Jim’s looks exactly right, but what can Val Kilmer know of having been fat all of his life and suddenly one summer taking so much LSD and waking up a prince? Val Kilmer has always been a prince, so he can’t have the glow; when you’ve never been a mud lark it’s just not the same. And people these days, they don’t know what it was to suddenly possess the power to f**k every single person you even idly fancied, they don’t know the physical glamour of that – back when rock ‘n roll was in flower and movies were hopelessly square. And we were all so young.

Credit and Sources:
All text by Eve Babitz for Esquire Magazine March 1991 posted by Dark Star at this link
http://forum.johndensmore.com/index.php?showtopic=2340
photos from various pages on tum. Please look at previous posts for credits.


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