By Doug Holder
It was the kind of
winter day you may remember from your childhood, before things became so
heated. Bone chilling winds whipped my face making my cheeks look like they
were reddened from deep embarrassment. On this morning I was to meet author Ed Hamilton at the Grey Dog Café in the Chelsea section of Manhattan to talk about the glory days of the
famed Chelsea Hotel in New York City.
Hamilton, 53, a longtime resident of the hotel, and author of the book Legends of the Chelsea Hotel, had an
interesting tale to tell about this bohemian flophouse.
The Chelsea Hotel on
23rd St. in the Chelsea section of Manhattan has a unique history.
Built in 1883 it originally was a residential hotel that housed the stars of
the theatrical world. But over the years it was also the home for an eclectic group
of literary, visual and musical artists of all stripes. The Welsh poet Dylan
Thomas stayed at the hotel and was taken to St. Vincent’s Hospital in the
Village where he died from the result of drinking himself to death mostly at the famed White Horse Tavern ,near the environs of the Chelsea. William
Burroughs reportedly wrote Naked Lunch at
the Chelsea, and Kerouac is rumored to have had a fling with Gore Vidal in one
of the rooms, and some believed he completed On the Road there. Arthur Miller hung his hat there in his pre and
post Marilyn periods, as well as noted Punker and Poet Patti Smith and
the photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. (As recounted in Smith’s acclaimed memoir
Just Kids). And of course Sid Vicious
and Nancy met their infamous end in a gone-to-seed room in the Hotel.
For many years the
hotel was run benevolently (more or less) by Stanley Bard. Since 1957 Bard had
made the Chelsea a welcoming refuge of sorts for young artists to make a go of
it in the big city. He provided rooms at a reasonable rate for aspiring
artists, and was often forgiving if they came up short with the rent. He
sometimes took payment in the form of a painting or labor. But Bard was pushed
out. Now with gentrification, condo conversion, astronomical real estate
prices, the days of the Chelsea Hotel and others if its ilk are certainly
numbered. With Bard’s removal the Chelsea is undergoing renovation and all the artwork
that gave the building its unique flavor has vanished. Many of the permanent
residents have been evicted. Hamilton told me a total of 58 have been forced
out. Sixty residential apartments are left. Hamilton said: “I was in court for five years,
but I finally won the right to stay because I have a Rent Stabilized apartment.” Indeed, Hamilton , who has been at the
Chelsea since 1995, is the last of the breed who came to this hotel and lived the
life of a bohemian writer, in a room lined with books, and a bathroom down the
hall. He and his wife have lived outside “The broad lawns and narrow minds of
the suburbs,” as Hemmingway once wrote.
According to Hamilton the building was bought
for 80 million dollars by a Moroccan family headed by real estate mogul Joseph
Chetrit. Hamilton said: “ It is a huge
conglomerate that bought the Sears Tower in Chicago and other far flung
interests…the Chelsea is only a mere speck of dust in the whole perspective of
things.” It seems that many of the tenants who were not evicted were bought out
for well below the market rate. Hamilton does not want sell, and certainly not
for a price that will not allow him to stay in Manhattan. Hamilton said he
tried to enlist famed punker and poet Patti Smith, the author the
awarding-memoir set in the Chelsea Just Kids, but she ignored him. Finally she came out of the closet, but
according to Hamilton, decidedly on the management’s side. She agreed to do a concert for the tenants
that was supposed to introduce them to the wonderful
new world of the Chelsea Hotel under
Chetrit. Hamilton feels she was working for the management, in spite of the
common knowledge of the evictions and the destruction of the interior of the
hotel. When the tenants threatened a book burning, in addition to the media
deluge spurred on from Hamilton’s Chelsea Hotel blog, Smith reneged.
Hamilton and his girlfriend
Debbie Martin came to the Chelsea after
Hamilton’s stint at the University of Maryland, where Hamilton was teaching philosophy
and working on his doctorate. But Hamilton did not really like the academic
life. He was a product of the suburbs, and he was horrified to think he would
wind up in a conventional lifestyle near some strip mall. Hamilton and Martin
always knew about the Chelsea and its rich history, and they were determined to
come to New York City to live there. According to Stanley Bard to gain entrance
into the Chelsea was harder than getting into an Ivy League college, but the
duo got in through a sublet. Since then, with the help of Martin, Hamilton
started the Chelsea Hotel Blog, and penned the book Legends of the Chelsea Hotel….
Hamilton made a point in his book to
write not only about the famous folks who lived there but the unsung holy fools
as well. Hamilton said: “The everyday folks who lived in the Chelsea brought
this weird energy to the place. I think this contributed to the creativity of
the Chelsea. I am sure some of the great works conceived here as well as the
obscure were fired by the sparks in the atmosphere.” Hamilton told me that many
artists, even after it was long apparent that they didn’t have the talent or
luck to make it on a big scale, stayed on. Most folks after achieving some sort
of success moved out. For the ones that stay it can be a negative experience… a
reminder of what they are not.
I asked Hamilton
about some of the long term residents who are still pursuing their passion. One
lady Bettina G. has been in the hotel for many decades. She is a visual artist,
and a young artist who lived in the Chelsea, Sam Bennett, produced a documentary
about her. According to a newspaper account she had her paintings stacked to
the ceiling, and she was partially living in the hallway. Gerald Busby a
current resident and a protégé of Virgil Thompson had early success (He wrote
the film score for Robert Altman’s 3 Women), then went into obscurity and now
has been rediscovered.
Since I always have
had an interest in the poet Charles Bukowski, I asked him if the Buk ever spent
time at the Chelsea. Hamilton thought Bukowski spent one night or so there—and the poet
mentioned the hotel in a poem and short story he wrote. Hamilton then went on
to tell me that Harry Smith, the noted archivist, ethnomusicologist,
experimental filmmaker, also known for his Anthology
of American Folk Music, was a resident as well. He died at the Chelsea in
1993.
I remember in the
late 70’s when I came to Boston I lived in a number of rooming houses in Boston
and Cambridge. One, the Irving Inn in
Cambridge, advertised itself for Lean
Pocket Transients. The other was on Newbury Street in the Back Bay of
Boston. Many young people and not a few artists were able to get a reasonably
priced room in the city to pursue their art or passion. When I came to the city
there were a number of these places. Now they have seemed to have disappeared.
Hamilton said this is true of New York as well. Rent Stabilization is
vehemently opposed by the current city administration, and tenants can’t stand
up to the moneyed interests they are in conflict with.
Hamilton, continues
to write fiction, his first love, and has had his work in online and print
journals such as Penduline and Omphalos. Some of his fiction is loosely
autobiographical and at times deals with is life growing up Catholic, and all
the repressive baggage that comes with it. Although Hamilton’s Legends of the Chelsea continues to sell
and sell well; he is having trouble finding an agent for his fiction.
Hamilton has hopes
for his fiction as well as for the last outpost of bohemia, the Chelsea Hotel.
He thinks the chances that he and his partner will remain in the Chelsea are
slim. But hope springs eternal…and he still holds a candle in the encroaching
darkness. Hamilton is a creature of the city—he needs to breathe the asphalt,
blink back at the blinking neon, and pursue that ephemeral light that the
artist seeks. And the city, this Naked
City—New York City, that has a million stories, is the one that will keep
the pilot light of his creative life burning.
Great interview and really enjoyed this.
ReplyDeleteThis was such an interesting interview of a wonderful writer and great spirit, Ed Hamilton. Had the pleasure of reading with Ed on several occassions, and once he kindly stepped in and guest-hosted my series at KGB. His book on the Chelsea Hotel is a fascinating read! Debbie is also a terrific person! Love to you both!
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