INTRODUCTION

2014 marked the 50th anniversary of Andy Warhol’s fabled and infamous Silver Factory. Ever wonder what all the fuss was (and still is) about? So much has been written of this art colossus—his obsession with celebrity, his sloppy silk-screens of Marilyn and Liz and Brando, his endless Campbell soup cans and Coca-Cola bottles, his mind-numbing movies—that more than a few feel his fifteen minutes of fame should have been up long ago. Instead, he has become a lasting icon of popular taste. As The New Yorker’s art critic Peter Schjeldahl wrote in his review of the Metropolitan Museum’s huge 2012 show of Warhol and his impact on sixty other artists: “Like it or not, we are all Warholian.”

But what about the forgotten Factory people behind Warhol’s unprecedented rise to spectacular success, who linked their destinies to his, when, as a frustrated graphic artist, he decided to “start Pop art” because he “hated” Abstract Expressionism …

In a tale reminiscent of ‘Lord of the Flies,’ this book uncovers what is left of the shroud of secrecy and mystique that surrounded this enigmatic personality, and exposes the bizarre, exploitive inside world of the shy, physically fragile, fanatically self-absorbed man that some say was not just a creator of art, but also a destroyer of art—and of people. Only those who survived really knew what lay beneath the pale make-up and fright wig.

For them, it all began in the early sixties. A slight, fey, blotchy-faced character from the Mad Men world of advertising had decided to ‘go downtown,’ where he would encounter and enlist the help of those soon to become his colorful entourage of misfits and muses—culled from the cutting edge of New York’s art scene—destined to create his Silver Factory … This wild collection of characters became the first to be dubbed “Famous for Fifteen Minutes.”

The ‘Andy Warhol’s Factory People’ book, based on my three-hour documentary series of the same name, is the culmination of shooting fifty hours of their interviews, screening over a hundred hours of Warhol’s movies and screen tests, collecting rare archive and news footage, sifting through thousands of candid photos, and running up copious bar tabs in New York, Los Angeles, Paris and London.

Clockwise: Andy with Nico’s son, Ari, Lou Reed, Nico, John Cale, Mo Tucker, Mary Woronov, Sterling Morrison and Gerard Malanga (Photo: Billy Name)

Though much of Warhol’s life and career may have been already minutely examined by a multitude of worthy and worldly experts, ‘Factory People’ deals with those essential early dreamers, the amphetamine-fueled avant-gardes who had been at the Silver Factory from the beginning and had followed Warhol’s phenomenal trajectory into fame and notoriety. Finding some of them proved to be elusive, since they had rarely reaped any material and social benefits from their proximity to the man considered to be “one of most influential artists of the 20th century.”

Perhaps the most important person you’ll meet is Billy Name, who created Warhol’s cavernous work space, slathered it all in aluminum foil, and became the official in-house photographer, the only one allowed to actually live there. He helped to create the essence of this book, with his cache of candid photographs taken in the throes of around-the-clock work marathons, all-night filming marathons, and, of course, bacchanalian parties. Poet and handsome ‘Factory stud’ Gerard Malanga, also in thrall to serious speed, worked full-time as Warhol’s main assistant, while recruiting future ‘Superstars’ of all sexes for Warhol’s home movies, which often featured Ondine, the wild mad jester of Warhol’s royal court, puckish Taylor Mead, reigning underground star, an abundant, ever-changing assortment of accommodating males, and an abundance of heiresses and over-the-top females, among them edgy cult star Mary Woronov, sultry raven-haired Ultra Violet, loopy fashion model Ivy Nicholson, blonde, big-haired Baby Jane Holzer, baby-faced Bibbe Hansen, the charismatic and doomed Edie Sedgwick, ethereal ice queen Nico, chubby, hilarious Brigid ‘Polk’ Berlin and beautiful clever Viva, all of whom need no introduction. (If they do, you may want to stop about now.) Their pithy comments on “Life with Andy” made the film possible. As Viva, the vivacious (sometime vicious) ‘Lucille Ball of underground movies’ would cackle: “Andy? He’s the Queen of Pop Art!” As six-foot Mary ‘Whips’ Woronov would snarl: “Oh, this is fabulous, a soup can, ha ha ha! I hate it, now.”

The Warhol soup cans—along with the cokes, cows, fatal car crashes, flowers and Brillo boxes—became ubiquitous in our ‘Factory People’ project, which spanned the years 1964 to 1968, arguably Warhol’s busiest and most creative period. Not coincidentally, it also took us four frenzied years to complete our TV show, waaaaay past our network’s deadline, having endured a stunning series of mishaps, meltdowns and sheer madness—documented here in gory detail—that felt downright ‘Warholian,’ and made me want to take up drugs again.

Instead, I decided to write about it, and remember my own fifteen minutes in 1966, when Andy, Nico with her toddler son Ari, and the Velvet Underground came to Cape Cod, to Provincetown for a concert (cancelled) and wound up staying with me.

The Silver Factory, 231 E. 47th Street (Photo: Billy Name)

The different entourages that dominated the sixties, like Leary’s, or Ginsberg’s, or Warhol’s or Dylan’s, had to do with drugs and people’s attitudes toward drugs.

—Victor Bockris, Biographer, ‘Andy Warhol’

In the sixties, I had the strange luck (and no lack of drugs) to drop in and out of those fluctuating entourages following Leary, Ginsberg and Dylan. Yet in the summer of ’66 I found myself inadvertently a part of Warhol’s ‘Family’ when the Silver Factory came to Provincetown, Mass. A mellow folk-singing stint at the Blues Bag had given me the chance to befriend Richie Havens and Muddy Waters and learn open E-chord tuning (one could smoke and not screw up). Then Warhol and the Velvet Underground, (as The Exploding Plastic Inevitable) came to play the Chrysler Museum. Not so mellow—the police closed the show. I didn’t care; I was just thrilled to have them visit my place on the beach. It turned out that the toilets in their rental house had backed up, so they basically needed facilities. The Velvets did appear a bit sinister for summer, all dressed in black and “looking like the death crew,” as Warhol star Mary Woronov would say. They had nothing but amused disdain for our tie-dyed psychedelica, Buddhist bells and sandals. But that’s what was wonderful and indicative of the time—you could change, at a moment’s notice, into someone else, even if you were already famous. Steve McQueen was racing Walter Chrysler’s prototype Turbo down the road to Land’s End, where Marlon Brando was holed up with his pal Wally Cox. We somehow all wound up there. Warhol was not a fan of hippies, or of a certain Dylan song that had supposedly been directed at him. Our ‘Napoleon in Rags’ sequestered himself in the bathroom and powdered his blotchy, pockmarked face and blonde wig with talcum, leaving a residue which I mistook for cocaine and snorted off the toilet seat. I didn’t realize at the time that Warhol considered himself unattractive, and was thus drawn to pale, frail-looking people like himself (Edie Sedgwick), or aloof Teutonic blondes (Baby Jane Holzer, Nico) because he wanted to literally be them. Well, we all wanted to be Nico, except, it turned out, Nico. Born in Nazi Germany, she’d escaped to Paris and Rome, and appeared in Fellini’s ‘La Dolce Vita’ at fifteen. I worshipped Nico—the Irish tend to get on with Germans for reasons best left to British history—and took her succinct advice about wayward boyfriends and babies. I was happy to babysit Ari, her toddler by French actor Alain Delon, who would toddle off toward the ocean and worry everyone except his nonchalant mother. Nico, like the whole Warhol crowd, was older, mysterious, impossibly cool. Her flat baritone and surreal beauty seemed in perfect sync with Lou Reed’s nihilistic lyrics. We copied her platinum curtain of hair, bleaching and ironing our locks into submission until the dank marine layer moved in and undid it all … Warhol had no such problem; I was told he wore his wigs attached to imbedded clips, and had a peroxide bottle handy for infection, which everyone used.

Lights! Cameras! Multimedia! The Velvet Underground as ‘The Exploding Plastic Inevitable.’

The Velvet Underground at a performance at the Dom on St. Mark’s Place in Greenwich Village. (Photos: Billy Name)

… Warhol’s previous gilded ‘Girl of the Year’ Edie Sedgwick, with her tiny dresses, boyish hair, and huge chandelier earrings had dropped from favor. According to Warhol, who equated stardom and glamour with its inevitable demise, the anointed ‘Girl of the Year’ would only last that long in the spotlight before succumbing to exhaustion, drugs, or insanity. He was usually proven right. His women were beautiful and usually from good families, generous free spirits who ran through their trust funds with wild abandon. The men, on the other hand, were for the most part itinerant hustlers, juvenile delinquents and rent boys from poor backgrounds. The exceptions were Warhol’s trusted trilogy of Billy Name, Gerard Malanga, and Ondine, who comprised a kind of royal court for their ‘King of Pop Art.’ I didn’t get Warhol’s art. A Brillo Box? A silk-screen of a soup can? I thought anyone could do it. But no one else did do it, so Marcel Duchamp was right all along about him.

At the end of that eventful summer, I went back to college in sunny Mexico, to Timothy Leary, marijuana and mescaline. Money was scarce, but psychotropics plentiful. Warhol and the Velvets went home, back to the New York underground, amphetamine and heroin. Hop scotching (well, tripping) through a couple of years, I would not see them again until early ’68 in Max’s Kansas City on Union Square, near Warhol’s new ‘White Factory.’ The back room had become the Factory ‘commissary,’ but Max’s served as a second home for the rest of us—a lax one—where we could leave all cares and inhibitions (and sanity) at the door.

But for the Silver Factory coterie, much had changed. Their ranks had been decimated by overdoses, suicide, banishment, or a falling-out over money. Warhol had talked Taylor Mead into coming back from his wilderness years in Paris to star in films with Viva, where he played the perfect foil to her deadpan proclamations on life and love. Though he wasn’t paid any better, Taylor got to hang out at Max’s with emerging Superstar transvestites Holly Woodlawn, Jackie Curtis and Candy Darling, and charge it all to Andy, who sat nearby with Nico, now estranged from The Velvet Underground. I didn’t recognize her at first—the glorious sheaf of golden hair had been dyed a dirty orange mat, her skin looked sallow, her eyes haunted. Nico had considered her spectacular beauty a curse, distracting from her true passion: singing. Now she sat between Warhol and Ondine, chain-smoking, stoned, staring into space. Edie Sedgwick was also gone, also wasted on heroin. As other Factory members met the same fate, the wags were blaming Warhol. His image of ‘father figure’ to misfits had morphed into something sinister. He was called a vampire, a voyeur, a corrupter of youth. He’d become his own bogeyman, berating himself to confidants over his apparent lack of empathy, but doing little to convince detractors otherwise. According to those close to Warhol, “People had begun to actually hate him.”

Susan Bottomly (International Velvet) and Mary Woronov, (Hanoi Hannah) toy with their prey in ‘Superboy,’ circa 1966. The cast also included an unidentified surfer and Ed Hood. Susan and Mary would soon star, but not necessarily get along, in ‘Chelsea Girls,’ 1966. (All Photos: Billy Name)

Edie Sedgwick, the heiress who had it all, films her life in the Silver Factory, 1965. That year she would star in ‘Vinyl,’ ‘Bitch,’ ‘Poor Little Rich Girl,’ ‘Face,’ ‘Kitchen,’ ‘Restaurant,’ ‘Afternoon,’ ‘Beauty 1,’ ‘Beauty 2,’ ‘Space,’ ‘Factory Diaries,’ ‘Outer and Inner Space,’ ‘Prison,’ ‘The Andy Warhol Story,’ and ‘Lupe.’

Andy and Nico in the back room of Max’s Kansas City, circa 1967. By this time, she had been filmed in the ‘Screen Tests,’ ‘The Velvet Underground and Nico: A Symphony of Sound,’ ‘Chelsea Girls,’ ‘I, A Man,’ ‘****,’ aka ‘Four Stars’ aka ‘The 25 Hour Movie,’ and ‘Sunset.’

Taylor Mead and Viva converse, sort of, in ‘Nude Restaurant’ (1967). They also starred in ‘Tub Girls,’ ‘Lonesome Cowboys,’ and ‘San Diego Surf.’ As early as 1963, Taylor was filming with Warhol in ‘Tarzan and Jane regained, Sort Of … ,’ followed in 1964 by ‘Batman Dracula,’ ‘Couch,’ and ‘Taylor Mead’s Ass.’ Viva’s films included: ‘The Loves of Ondine’ and ‘Bike Boy’ with Joe Spencer.

Even before Warhol was shot by a disturbed Valerie Solanas in 1968 (effectively bringing to an end the Silver Factory era), we could feel the difference in the air, that uneasy combination of dread and malaise. The ‘Summer of Love’ slid into something mean and scary, though for a long while we put it down to overactive imagination. But the truth was that soft drugs had gotten hard, and so had a lot of the people.

When 1969 arrived, the hippies among us headed for Woodstock, free love and naked groveling in the mud. Warhol and company, in an attempt to generate income, staged a series of male porno films at a hardcore film house. The expected clientele would come to ‘Andy Warhol’s Theater: Boys to Adore Galore,’ and leave at the happy ending, but in an effort to go a bit upscale and have cleaner floors, he and Paul Morrissey began work on the aptly named ‘Trash’ and ‘Flesh.’ Those hilarious, heartbreaking films, and a retrospective of the art he had done when he “retired” from painting in 1966, would finally bring Warhol his ‘overnight success’ as a filmmaker. Jonas Mekas, revered father of underground film, compared Warhol to Godard, Renoir, and Eisenstein, but most people could barely sit through the endless hours of poorly lit, improvised, unedited, and sometimes pornographic footage that comprised a Warhol work. I know the feeling—I watched at least 100 hours of films to find the few minutes used in our documentary. Jonas had a point. No one could make movies like Andy Warhol …

Fast forward forty or so years, and I don’t think anyone could make a movie like ours, either. After countless career changes, countries, husbands, wives and lovers blah blah (This book is about Warhol, not us), your filmmakers found themselves together again at last in Paris, home of Cinéma Vérité, writing and making movies and documentaries with more freedom—and government money—than one could possibly hope for in the Hollywood studio system to which I’d been tethered for decades. (If you’re packing your bags, it does help if you speak the language and have an E. U. Passport.) We’d already been working awhile when approached by a TV network to do a series on the arts, and Warhol in particular. So, voila! With my fifteen-minute memory of Warhol, I worked up a proposal covering what could be considered the most pivotal period in Warhol’s artistic career—The Sixties.

When we first decided to make this documentary, we felt that it would be more interesting (and probably a whole lot more entertaining) to hear, not just from the ‘experts,’ but also from those dreamers and muses who had been part of the Factory from the beginning. We were rarely disappointed. Any preconceptions of Warhol that we may have harbored were jettisoned—along with our initial budget—when we began interviewing those who worked with him, amused him, abused him, loved him, and, indeed, feared him. Our resultant film series disclosed new insights into this complex artist’s life, and opened a veritable Pandora’s Box of contradictory stories remembered by his many muses, his many foes, his few close friends and fewer confidants.

This ‘picture-book,’ unlike an in-depth biography of Warhol—of which there are way too many anyhow—may sometime skimp on technical detail. A drive down memory lane, when dealing with drugs and the sixties, will have more than a few potholes. But this is their story, and it may change your opinion of ‘Drella’ (Dracula/Cinderella), the nickname bestowed on this enduring enigma of a man, whose deadpan sense of humor and singular personality, or deliberate lack of one, only made him more fascinating to me as a writer.

I’ve been told it’s impossible to unearth the true character of any man, woman or transvestite without talking to them, but I’ve often felt myself to be in dialogue with the elusive ‘Drella,’ especially at trying moments in this project (the theft of original masters, the disappearance of money, the breakdown of umpteen editing bays, the screaming fits and firings of assorted editors, oh, I could go on). Fortunately, we were saved by Warhol’s ‘Factory Family’ and their formidable collective memories. Because they had, indeed, talked with him, All the Time, we were given an indelible portrait, and quite a complicated one it is. The finished series was not what we expected, but it must work—since we completed and aired ‘Factory People,’ other Warhol ‘specials’ have cropped up using our format. Is imitation the sincerest form of flattery? Oh, Warhol would probably approve; he loved repetition …

At the end of the day, what did we learn from our Factory People? We learned how easy it was to create an Andy Warhol work of art, how easy it was to steal an Andy Warhol work of art, and how easy it was to literally become Warhol himself, and to get away with it. All, it would seem, with his tacit approval and tolerance. As for the odd circumstances behind Warhol’s horrific, near-fatal shooting, which appears to be a probable cause of his subsequent decline as an artist (and premature death), those Warholian moments became clear in our interviews, when the most oft repeated words were ‘Fame,’ ‘Fifteen,’ and ‘Superstar.’

So, was Warhol a hated demon, as often portrayed, or a beloved savior to his motley group of creative misfits? Both, it seems. In certain families (or cults) it can be a slippery slope from initial attraction to eventual abuse, and those who were part and parcel of Warhol’s collective success were, in the end, betrayed. His muses, his knights and princesses and trolls, were summarily ejected from the Factory—not a fairy tale ending for anyone, least of all Warhol.

Andy Warhol contemplates the sixties from the safety of his ratty red velvet sofa, found on the street by Billy Name. Star of numerous films, it achieved lasting notoriety in ‘Couch’ (1964).

Andy is always the center at a Silver Factory event. Artist/Sculptor Marisol seated at left, Factory screenwriter Ron Tavel standing at right. (Photos: Billy Name)

Some would say—ourselves among them—that Warhol’s work after the Silver Factory rarely if ever reached the marvelous heights of madness and brilliance achieved through the collaborative efforts of all those loony drugged geniuses that floated through his grungy freight elevator doors on 47th Street. One by one, they left the fold, under the watchful, if comically inept, surveillance of the F.B.I., who had been busy hounding them for more than a year, trying to pin charges of pornography, rape, and drug abuse on ‘Drella’ and entourage. The Silver Factory era officially ended with the shooting of Andy Warhol in 1968 by Valerie Solanas, the unstable lesbian feminist writer whom Ultra Violet thought “demented, of course, but with an interesting philosophy.” Warhol had tried to supplicate Solanas by putting her to work ‘acting’ in the film ‘I, A Man.’ Her strange footage, which we included in our series, is revealing in a most unexpected way. Unfortunately for both, Warhol had forgotten to return (or simply mislaid) a screenplay she’d given him, entitled ‘Up Your Ass.’ Grounds for murder? Well, as Taylor Mead put it, “Andy did make promises. I wrote a critique of the movie ‘I Shot Andy Warhol,’ and I titled it ‘I Would Have Shot Andy Warhol.’” Taylor was half-joking, but in Warhol’s over-the-top world of bisexual, bipolar fantasies, the fabulous craziness had finally spilled over into pathology. Hence the arrival of the suits to the new ‘White Factory’ on Union Square, nice people, hip and efficient, and certainly more practical, and since they upon occasion suffered the same ‘palace’ intrigues as the old court, it would be churlish to resent their astounding success with packaging and selling Warhol. But hey, this isn’t their story—that would be a bit predictable.

A grateful “Merci” to the Warhol Museum, to the wonderful, weird archival footage folk who dug up buried treasures from the ‘Happening Sixties,’ especially when Warhol and his Silver Factory made the news, and to Vincent Fremont, founding director of The Andy Warhol Foundation For The Visual Arts, for his expertise and help with the Warhol Foundation … Most of all, a “Merci bien” to Billy Name and the Factory Family, who gave to Andy so much of their productive lives, and who graciously gave to me so much of their time. For a while I was privileged to become a part of that family, celebrating their late-in-life accomplishments, and, for some, attending their funerals. Their lives were a celebration. At the end of the day, how many of us get a page and photo-op in the obits of the New York Times?

—Catherine O’Sullivan Shorr, Paris, France, 2015