Showing posts with label Jayne County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jayne County. Show all posts

Thursday, February 08, 2018

Song of the Day: 'Max's Kansas City' by Wayne County and the Backstreet Boys (aka Jayne County)


 I wonder if the trans kids of today even know who Jayne County is. While Holly Woodlawn and Candy Darling seem to have gotten a fair amount of recognition over the years -- Holly’s immortalized in “Walk on the Wild Side,” and the documentary "Beautiful Darling" was one of my favorite films of 2011 -- you hear very little about Jayne (as she later chose to call herself). She was a Warhol Factory darling — she appeared in his film "Femme Fatale" and then wrote and starred in the play "Birth of a Nation: The Castration of Man,” playing both Florence and sister Ethel Nitingale! — as well as an influential force in the early punk days with Wayne County and the Backstreet Boys (her first, short-lived band) and then Wayne County and the Electric Chairs. (She's been called the "John Waters of rock" because of her silly, offensive, angry and campy songs that include "Are You Man Enough to Be a Woman," "Stuck on You" and "Fuck Off"!) Fortunately, rock's first openly transgender singer is finally getting a moment, with her first career retrospective going on now at Participant INC through March 11. Listen to this ode to the coolest club ever and tell me Loud Reed's got anything on Ms. County ...



Learn more HERE.

Wednesday, February 07, 2018

Song of the Day: 'Like an Eagle' by Dennis Parker

. . #DennisPosa, aka #DennisParker but better known as #WadeNichols (October 28, 1946 – January 28, 1985) was an actor and singer who started his career in adult film. Posa died of AIDS in NYC aged 38. . Posa, born in Manhattan and raised in Freeport, attended the @philamuseum College of Art, studying Pottery and Design. He later attended @nyuniversity and the @hbstudionyc. . Posa's first appeared in gay adult film but went on to star mostly in straight adult films. He was credited as Wade Nichols in most of the adult films in which he appeared. . In 1979, using the name Dennis Parker, he recorded a disco album on @casablancarecords entitled ‘Like an Eagle.’ The album was produced by #JacquesMorali who later died in Paris of AIDS in 1991 . Posa (still as Dennis Parker) joined the cast of the soap opera #TheEdgeofNight in 1979, as Police Chief #DerekMallory. Seriously ill by October 1984, Posa was unable to continue working and his character was written out of the show. . There were rumours that Posa died because he shot himself with a gun. However, his brother Richard in a recent interview with The Rialto Report said: . “On his 38th birthday in October 1984, he told me he was determined that this would not be his last birthday. He said he would have other birthdays. He died 3 months later to the day on January 28th, 1985. He died in the same rent-controlled apartment in New York where he’d been living since the late 1960s. He did not kill himself as some have suggested. I have a photo taken of him on his deathbed. It was so sad.” . #whatisrememberedlives #theaidsmemorial #aidsmemorial #neverforget #endaids .
A post shared by THE A I D S M E M O R I A L (@theaidsmemorial) on

I had never heard of Dennis Posa until his sexy mug popped up on the AIDS Memorial Instagram page the other day. With his hairy chest and mustache, not to mention his cause of death, I assumed he was a porn star -- and I was right. Known as Wade Nichols, he starred in mostly straight but also some gay films including "Captain Lust," "Jawbreakers" and "Maraschino Cherry." 


But what I was shocked to learn was that he had also "crossed over" -- pre-Traci Lords -- into acting (the soap opera "The Edge of Night") and singing, using the stage name Dennis Parker. His 1979 debut album for Casablanca Records was produced by Jacques Morali (who created and produced the Village People). But after watching these two videos for the title track, "Like an Eagle," I wasn't that surprised to learn that Morali was also his boyfriend at the time -- because only someone truly in love could have been blinded to how embarrassing this is, even by the day's standards. (The song's not great, either, almost stealing the music from Neil Sedaka's "Love Will Keep Us Together" at times.) I know I'm the most painfully self-conscious person in the world. But tell me if you can watch either of these all the way through -- the endless pantomiming and soaring over the Manhattan skyline in an Evel Knievel jumpsuit -- without crawling into a corner cringing! Morali, sadly, died of AIDS in 1991. But whoever uploaded the song to YouTube calls it a "rather cerebral" disco hit, so it's nice to see Parker still has his fans -- God knows he was awfully handsome.


Worth noting that Parker worked on his soap opera (as Police Chief Derek Mallory) at the same time as hunky Joel Crothers, whom I wrote about last week. I'll bet (or hope!) there was a sexy story there.


Parker also starred in "Punk Rock," a rather fascinating 1977 X-rated film that doubled as a crime drama, notable for its inclusion of Elda Stiletto from Elda & and Stilettos -- a group best known for once featuring a pre-Blondie Debbie Harry and Chris Stein.


And "Punk Rock" features the inside of the famed Max's Kansas City, where Patti Smith, Robert Mapplethorpe and the Factory crowd hung out back in the day and Debbie Harry once worked as a waitress. 



If you thought his street moves were alarming ...



Wait'll you see him fly at all hours of the night -- and day!


Monday, February 05, 2018

Remains of the Day (02/05)


Newsweek: Wasn't it awful when the police used tear-gas and billy clubs on people rioting in the streets of Philadelphia last night after the Eagles won? Oh, wait -- they didn't. They were just white "revelers"

NewNowNext: Is this why my friend had three transgender kids in a class he taught of 15?

KIT212: Christie Brinkley's son is incredibly fuckable

Matthew's Island of Misfit Toys: Gratuitous shirtless football photos






The New Yorker: How to survive a cold



The Washington Post: Dow drops more than 1,500 points in second day of significant market sell-off














Hornet: Former Bloomberg reporter documents racism in gay dating apps