Current:Home > NewsKenneth Anger, gay film pioneer and unreliable Hollywood chronicler, dies at 96 -Zenith Profit Hub
Kenneth Anger, gay film pioneer and unreliable Hollywood chronicler, dies at 96
View
Date:2025-04-13 13:40:22
Filmmaker and author Kenneth Anger was a legendary Hollywood character, a visionary inheritor of an international avant-garde scene. But he also reveled in the vulgar and esoteric and essentially disappeared from the public eye for nearly a decade before his death.
Anger's death was reported Wednesday by the Sprüth Magers gallery, which has represented Anger's work since 2009. Spencer Glesby, who was Anger's artist liasion, told NPR that the filmmaker died on May 11 in Yucca Valley, California, of natural causes.
A child of sunny southern California, Anger achieved notoriety as an irreverent chronicler of its shadows. He made pioneering underground movies for decades, and claimed to have gotten his start in the industry as a child actor in the 1935 production of A Midsummer Night's Dream that starred James Cagney and Mickey Rooney.
In 1947, when he was still a teenager, Anger directed a short gay art film that got him arrested for obscenity. Fireworks, which has no dialogue, shows men flexing for each other in a bar, unzipping their trousers, lighting cigarettes with flaming bouquets of flowers, and a little surreal sadomasochism. Fireworks and Anger's other experimental movie are now revered as counterculture classics.
The director of Scorpio Rising was also notoriously fascinated by the occult. Kenneth Anger was friends with the Rolling Stones, enemies with Andy Warhol and author of a bestselling book, Hollywood Babylon, which spawned a sequel, a short-lived TV series and a season of the popular podcast You Must Remember This. Many of its since-debunked stories purported to expose scandalous secrets of dead movie stars from the silent and golden eras.
veryGood! (569)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- One way employers drive workers to quit? Promote them.
- Russian missile attack kills policeman, injures 44 others in Zelenskyy’s hometown in central Ukraine
- Shenae Grimes Claps Back at Haters Saying Her Terrible Haircut Is Aging Her
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Grammy Museum to launch 50 years of hip-hop exhibit featuring artifacts from Tupac, Biggie
- AP Week in Pictures: Latin America and Caribbean
- AP Week in Pictures: Global | Sept. 1-7 2023
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- The Photo of the Year; plus, whose RICO is it anyway?
Ranking
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Tahesha Way sworn in as New Jersey’s lieutenant governor after death of Sheila Oliver
- Indonesia says China has pledged $21B in new investment to strengthen ties
- Lainey Wilson leads CMA Awards 2023 nominations: See full list
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- The Surprising Ways the Royal Family Has Changed Since Queen Elizabeth II's Death
- Fulton County D.A. Fani Willis accuses Jim Jordan of unjustified and illegal intrusion in Trump case
- A menstrual pad that tests for cervical cancer? These teens are inventing it
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Residents and fishermen file a lawsuit demanding a halt to the release of Fukushima wastewater
Climate Change is Making It Difficult to Protect Endangered Species
Germany will keep Russian oil giant Rosneft subsidiaries under its control for another 6 months
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Country music star Zach Bryan arrested in Oklahoma: 'I was out of line'
A magnitude 5 earthquake rattled a rural area of Northern California but no damage has been reported
Remains identified of Michigan airman who died in crash following WWII bombing raid on Japan