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Andy Warhol’s Ghostlike Presence In An American Family33 Union Square W, New York, NY 1000340.736850-73.9909400
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Filming Begins for An American Family222 W 23rd St, New York, NY 1001140.744370-73.9968901
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Future Punks Converge on Club 8282 E 4th St, New York, NY 1000340.726320-73.9897802
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Lance Loud and Kristian Hoffman Move to New York315 Bowery, New York, NY 1000340.725130-73.9918803
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Lance Loud Becomes a National Symbol of Moral Decay222 W 23rd St, New York, NY 1001140.744370-73.9968904
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Lance Loud Forms the Mumps240 Mercer St, New York, NY 1001240.727900-73.9954905
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Pat Loud Hangs with Hibiscus and Jackie Curtis315 Bowery, New York, NY 1000340.725130-73.9918806
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Pat Loud Sees Vain Victory at La MaMa74 E 4th St, New York, NY 1000340.726280-73.9902107
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The Downtown Rock Scene Coalesces Around the New York Dolls210 E 47th St, New York, NY 1001740.753540-73.9716408
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The Loud Family Goes To Reno Sweeney126 W 13th St, New York, NY 1001140.737050-73.9986609
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The Patti Smith Group Coalesce213 Park Ave S, New York, NY 1000340.736870-73.98831010
Andy Warhol’s Ghostlike Presence In An American Family
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The Loud Family Goes To Reno Sweeney
The buzz created by An American Family brought the Loud family to the attention of millions of people, including Lisa Jane Persky. The year it debuted, her father, Mort Persky, hired Pat Loud to write a piece about the show for Family Weekly, a newspaper insert that he edited. Lisa thought Lance Loud’s brother was cute, and a couple of months later, Mort introduced her to Grant Loud when he and the other Loud kids visited New York. She took them to see Holly Woodlawn perform at Reno Sweeney, an intimate cabaret located at 126 West Thirteenth Street in Greenwich Village. “Because of Warhol films like Trash and Off-Off-Broadway,” said Paul Serrato, who often accompanied Woodlawn as a pianist, “everybody wanted to see Holly perform at Reno Sweeney. It attracted everybody from the underground scene.”
From Chapter 32 of The Downtown Pop Underground — order online, or from a local independent bookstore