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Eric Emerson
Eric Emerson (1945 – 1975 May 28) was an associate of American artist Andy Warhol and an actor in several of his films.
Career[edit]
His film debut, in 1967, was in Chelsea Girls. He is first seen with Nico and her son Ari in a black and white sequence; he appears again later in the film in a colour sequence delivering a monologue to an off-screen presence and performng various ballet routines. Eric had trained as a ballet dancer when he was younger and he talks about his dancing career in this film as well as in the movie Lonesome Cowboys, made in 1968 and released a year later. He became a regular, along with the other 'superstars', at Max's Kansas City where he earned the nickname 'The Patron Saint of Max's Kansas City'. He was well-known to be bisexual and had relationships with many of the regulars. One such relationship resulted in the birth of his first son.
In 1971, Eric appeared in the Jackie Curtis play Vain Victory: Vicissitudes of the Damned costarring with Ondine, Holly Woodlawn and Candy Darling, with music by Lou Reed. After this, he began his musical career, first performing solo and then forming the band Eric Emerson and the Magic Tramps, one of the early Glitter rock groups, along with The New York Dolls, to emerge from New York City. In 1972 he filmed his last movie for Warhol, the Paul Morrissey directed Heat. At this time he began a relationship with model and actress Jane Forth, who had appeared in Warhol's Trash. Together, the two had one child which they named Emerson Forth.
The song "Eric's Trip" by the band Sonic Youth was inspired by Eric's LSD-fueled monologue in The Chelsea Girls. The song appears on the recording Daydream Nation. He died at 30 of an overdose of drugs in 1975. [1]
Filmography[edit]
- Chelsea Girls, directed by Andy Warhol(1967)
- **** aka FourStars, directed by Andy Warhol (1968)
- Andy Makes A Movie, directed by Robert Emmet Smith (1968)
- The Mindblowers, directed by Harlan Renvok (1968)
- Lonesome Cowboys, directed by Andy Warhol(1967)
- Heat, directed by Paul Morrissey (1972)
External links[edit]
This article is based on a GNU FDL LGBT Wikia article: Emerson Eric Emerson | LGBT |