INTRODUCTION TO THE REVISED EDITION

by Victor Bockris

Some things should be made clear about With William Burroughs: A Report from the Bunker, which focuses on Burroughs’s life in New York from 1974 to 1980.

Burroughs returned to New York City from London in 1974 after twenty-five years of self-imposed exile from the United States. Like all the significant geographical moves he has made during his career—from Mexico to Tangier in 1953, from Tangier to Paris in 1958, from Paris to London in 1962—it signaled a new departure in his work as much as it signaled a new period in the cultures in which he is a powerful force.

In 1974 the New York punk rock movement was struggling to its feet. In fact, the first person who told me that Burroughs was back in town was Patti Smith. She announced his arrival from the stage of the St. Marks Poetry Project as if it were a move of military significance. “Mr. Burroughs is back in town,” she whooped. “Isn’t that great!” Patti understood more than most his full significance. Not only did Burroughs dream the prophetic vision of the sixties as a “love generation,” he provided the punk rock movement, wittingly or unwittingly, with its basic credo: Nothing is true, everything is permitted. So far as I know, he is the only writer who sent a letter of support to The Sex Pistols when they released “God Save the Queen.” His own piece, “Bugger the Queen,” had been written three years earlier. There was a profound connection between the punks and William Burroughs: They were his children.

William’s arrival on the downtown scene came into prominence in 1978, when a three-day international conference, the Nova Convention, organized around the principle of celebrating Burroughs’s influence, took place in New York.

My book and my role in Burroughs’s life started in 1974 with conversations that took place during the course of several dinners at his place on the Bowery, referred to by Bill as the Bunker, and my apartment at 106 Perry Street in the West Village. They were taped for a profile in People magazine that was never published. One of our first dinners included Bill Wyman of the Rolling Stones, who showed up three hours late, making a bad impression on a man whose impeccable etiquette was leftover from a different era. But it was not until 1978 that I was able to really get involved with Burroughs. I first worked for him as an aide during the Nova Convention and progressed from being an interviewer to a colleague. Gradually, I became a part of his inner circle, that with tongue firmly in cheek may be called the Bunker Mafia.

The Bunker was a large three-room space that had originally been the locker room of a gymnasium on the second floor of 222 Bowery in the heart of the Lower East Side. The windowless, totally white, starkly lit cavern of a space was three blocks south of CBGB and across the street from a block-long heroin supermarket, where among other blends was one called Dr. Nova in honor of Burroughs’s 1964 novel Nova Express. To get into the Bunker one had to pass through three locked gates and a gray bulletproof metal door. To get through the gates you had to telephone from a nearby phone booth, at which point someone would come down and laboriously unlock, then relock three gates before leading you up the single flight of gray stone stairs to the ominous front door of William S. Burroughs’s headquarters. Often, the phone would be engaged and you would find yourself on a dark, cold, wet night freezing your ass off while desperately trying to get through, furtively glancing around for potential muggers.

It was, however, always more than worth the wait, numb though you might become, for upon admittance you entered a world as hermetic, individual, and electric—as full of love and tension—as Elvis Presley’s Graceland.

Like Elvis, William had always surrounded himself with a small, protective group of men who catered in every way to his need to work. The core group of the Bunker Mafia centered around its foreman, James Grauerholz. James, in his early twenties, was from Burroughs’s home state, Kansas, and had been introduced to William by Allen Ginsberg. William immediately spotted in him all the qualities—patience, perseverance, energy, a sense of humor—that would make him Burroughs’s most efficient long-term collaborator. After James came John Giorno, the poet, performer, inventor of the Giorno Poetry Systems, and later founder of the AIDS Treatment Project, who lived upstairs and collaborated with James on many Burroughs events. Next in line were: Stewart Meyer, whose novel The Lotus Crew was written during his apprenticeship with Burroughs; Howard Brookner, whose documentary, “Burroughs,” was filmed at the same time this book was written; and Ted Morgan, a longtime friend who would become Burroughs’s biographer. I was the sixth man on the team. There was a large assorted cast of others who came and went with the regularity that a constantly growing organization demands.

Early on in my relationship with Burroughs I was struck by the remarkable difference between being with him in private and public. In private William revealed himself as a classic racounteur as well as having the sweetest and most endearing intelligence I have ever encountered, apart from that of Andy Warhol, with whom Bill had a lot in common. In public, however, I saw an altogether different animal. It wasn’t so much that Burroughs himself would change. Indeed, like Keith Richards, there is little difference between William on and off stage—he is who he appears to be. It was the fans. Everybody who approached him did so with such a mixture of reverence and fear that they were often shaking and unable to speak. People would often ask me, for example, to ask William to sign a book for them. When I encouraged them to ask him themselves, hastening to add that he would not bite, they turned ashen, and trembled, mumbling, “No … No!” as if by making contact with him they would evaporate.

That’s when it struck me: A book was needed to introduce William to his public as a humorous, sharp-minded individual, not some heavy metal character like the dread Dr. Benway himself. I thought such a book would allow people to hear the tone of his voice as they read and so find the writer and his books less threatening. To accomplish this, I took sound advice from Andy Warhol, for whom I was working at the time at Interview magazine, edited by Bob Colacello. From the outset I saw William as a great collaborative artist. I always felt that his brand of conversation—intellectual but laced with liberal doses of humor—was a form of collaboration in itself. Andy said that, rather than interview someone with an agenda of questions, it was better to introduce him to another equally famous and intelligent person and record their conversation. Eventually I used this strategy to introduce Bill to some of the greatest luminaries of the time: Warhol himself, Lou Reed, Joe Strummer, Susan Sontag, David Bowie, Terry Southern, Jean Michel Basquait, Patti Smith, Nicholas Roeg, Christopher Isherwood, Tennessee Williams, Debbie Harry, and Mick Jagger.

It was the most enjoyable work I have ever done. Often, when I transcribed the tapes the following morning, or hammered out my notes on the typewriter, I would fall off my chair and roll around on the floor laughing. I could just as well have called these manic remembrances Secret Mullings About Bill if Jack Kerouac had not already come up with that title for his prospective book about the man.

In retrospect, I hope that the book can serve more purposes than it did when originally published in 1981 in New York, London, Paris, Tokyo, and Milan. It is, for example, something of a chronicle of the novel Burroughs was writing from 1974 to 1980, Cities of the Red Night. This book, the first in a trilogy that would include The Place of Dead Roads and Western Lands, marks a pivot in his career.

When he first moved back to New York in 1974, Burroughs confided to Grauerholz that he did not know whether he had it in him to still write fiction. James replied, “Oh, man, don’t say that.” There, in miniature, is the Burroughs-Grauerholz relationship. Grauerholz, who played by far the most important role in Burroughs’s life and work during these years, encouraged Burroughs to go on. Not only did he guide him through the six years of writing Cities, he also opened up a whole new world to Burroughs by encouraging him, for the first time in his life, to do a series of public readings. These performances, apart from putting much-needed dollars in his bank account, brought Burroughs into contact with a large international audience he had not known existed. This audience, more than anything, perhaps, gave William the energy to once again unload his word hoard. And what a word hoard it was. Over the next twenty-odd years Burroughs would publish thirty-seven books around the world.

Burroughs’s active presence in New York also played a significant role in bringing the Beats back into prominence. He supported the punk rock movement and developed relationships with artists from many genres: Frank Zappa, Joe Strummer, and David Bowie in music; Keith Haring, Warhol, and Jean Michel Basquait in visual arts; Lester Bangs and Robert Palmer in rock criticism; and Allen Ginsberg, John Giorno, and Anne Waldman in poetry. Several newfound relationships opened paths that would carry William to an ever-growing public in the eighties and nineties. He appeared in Gus Van Sant’s Drugstore Cowboy and David Cronenberg filmed Burroughs’s own novel Naked Lunch. He expanded his recording career, producing more than ten albums of his readings, often accompanied by like-minded musicians. Then, following the death of his greatest collaborator of the 1950s and 1960s, the artist Brion Gysin, Burroughs developed a career as a painter. He also wrote opera lyrics with Robert Wilson and Tom Waites.

It is startling to see what happened to the cast of characters that originally appeared in With William Burroughs. Many, geniuses all, died: Brion Gysin, Terry Southern, Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Jean Michel Basquait, to name but a few. Several others seemed to fade but then made incredible comebacks, like Patti Smith. Still others kept going with prodigious productivity: Lou Reed, Allen Ginsberg, and John Giorno. But what can be said of the éminence grise himself?

Ten years after the publication of With William Burroughs, I went to interview William in Kansas, where he had relocated in 1981. Since I’d last supped with him at the Bunker, Bill had poured forth a stream of books, records, films, and paintings that would have left a man half his age exhausted. He still had more energy than I did. On top of that, I was stunned by the enormous international growth of his audience. When I had first met him in 1974, some people had given Bill up for a burned-out case. Now, as I write in the spring of 1996, he is more celebrated internationally than ever before, but he is the same Bill as the one I had known at the Bunker. Considerate. Enthusiastic. Open. Helpful. Full of stories. Yet as Allen Ginsberg has recently pointed out, Burroughs was also still drenched in grief for events—from the death of his wife to the death of his son—too awful to recount.

Living in the same time as William Burroughs is, for me, like I imagine living in the same time as Dickens or Shakespeare must have been, although William has always insisted that he is “just a technical sergeant in the Shakespeare Squadron.” If this book may give his new, mostly young, growing audience of Burroughsians (people who share his enlightened visions of how to live) the feeling of what it would be like to simply have dinner with Bill, it will have served the purpose of its second incarnation.

—Victor Bockris

106 Perry Street

New York City

1996