Andy Warhol "superstar," underground movie actor, album cover model (that's apparently his crotch on the front cover of the Rolling Stones' "Sticky Fingers") and all-around counterculture icon, Joe ...
Joe Dallesandro starred in Andy Warhol movies and graced the cover of the first Smiths record. As for the cover of The Rolling Stones' 1971 Sticky Fingers album, the one with the crotch and moveable ...
Just as a bisexual relative and I were lamenting the lack of bisexual representation in the LGBTQ spectrum, EarlyBirdBooks.com releases the e-book that celebrates the life and career of the world's ...
Hagiography can’t get more one-sided than “Little Joe,” Nicole Haeusser’s celebratory look at Joe Dallesandro produced by the man himself alongside his stepdaughter. Docu doesn’t sully the “Joe by Joe ...
They're cool, they're unique, they're counterculture icons, they hung out with Andy Warhol, they used to like taking their shirts off, and they were punk before "punk" was a thing. They're Iggy Pop ...
Film Review: Little Joe He became famous in the 1960s as Andy Warhol's naked muse in several Paul Morrissey movies and he was immortalized in song by Lou Reed but, as the new documentary "Little Joe" ...
More stories by Gary M. The rare and wondrous film “Je T’aime Moi Non Plus” is screening at the Film Society of Lincoln Center January 30 at 6:30 pm as part of the “Jane and Charlotte Forever” program ...
Joe Dallesandro became famous as a shaggy-haired blond Adonis in the iconoclastic and transgressive Andy Warhol-produced films Flesh, Trash, and Heat, in which he helped to rewrite the rules for ...
The Dandy Warhols have shared their music video for "You Are Killing Me." Watch it below. The track is from their upcoming full-length, Distortland, out April 8. The Mark Helfrich-dircted video stars ...
FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Booklet featuring new writing on the film by Roberto Curti, author of Italian Crime Filmography, 1968-1980 ...
Some of the songs covered in our Retro Record column are important to the LGBTQ+ community because of rather subtle connections—be they suggestive lyrics or perhaps the fact that the musician has a ...