Piero Heliczer

Piero Heliczer
Born Piero Giorgio Heliczer
June 20, 1937
Rome, Italy
Died July 22, 1993
Near Rambouillet, France
Occupation poet, publisher, actor, filmmaker

Piero Heliczer (1937–1993) was an Italian-American poet, publisher, actor and filmmaker associated with the New American Cinema.

Life and career

Heliczer was born in Rome to a German mother and a Polish father. His film career began at the age of four when, ironically, he won a contest for the "most typical-looking Italian child." Acting under the name "Pier Giorgio Heliczer," he played minor roles in Italian films as a child, including, by his own account, an uncredited supporting role in Vittorio De Sica's The Bicycle Thief (1948). When Heliczer was seven years old, his father, a doctor and resistance fighter, was tortured and executed by the Gestapo.[1] The boy emigrated with his mother to the United States in the 1940s, graduated high school at the top of his class, and enrolled at Harvard in 1955.[2] After two years he dropped out and moved to Paris, where he co-founded the Dead Language Press with his high school friend, the poet and composer Angus MacLise.[3]

The Dead Language Press

Heliczer published "alternative" authors, including himself, MacLise, the Finnish poet and translator Anselm Hollo, the Beat poet Gregory Corso, and the underground filmmaker Jack Smith, in whose film Flaming Creatures Heliczer appeared in 1963.[1][2]

Underground films

In 1960 Heliczer moved to London, where he collaborated on his first film, Autumn Feast, with Jeff Keen. After moving to New York in 1962 he became involved with the Film-Makers' Cooperative, appearing in films by Jack Smith and Andy Warhol. Eventually he bought his own 8mm camera and resumed making experimental films, including Satisfaction, Venus in Furs, Joan of Arc (in which Warhol appeared), and an "unfinished three-hour epic," Dirt.[1] With their primitive technique, anti-Catholic bent, and depictions of alternative sexuality, his films are often compared to those of Jack Smith.[2]

Most of Heliczer's films were silent, with sound added later. In some cases he used live musicians to provide a soundtrack. One band, the Falling Spikes, who played for a Heliczer show called The Launching of the Dream Weapon in early 1965, later changed their name to the Velvet Underground. At Heliczer's multimedia shows, which he called "ritual happenings," his films were projected through veils hung in front of the screen with colored lights and slides superimposed on them, while dancers performed onstage and musicians played in the background.[4] Andy Warhol began organizing similar events in 1966; his Exploding Plastic Inevitable incorporated many of the same techniques and performers.[5]

In November 1965, during the filming of Venus in Furs, the Velvet Underground and Heliczer were featured in a CBS News segment titled "The Making of an Underground Film," which aired the following month.[3] This brief appearance turned out to be the only network television exposure for either Heliczer or the band.[2][3] Venus in Furs was named after a Velvet Underground song inspired by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch's eponymous sadomasochistic novella. It features Barbara Rubin, another underground filmmaker, dressed as a nun. Angus MacLise, who at the time was still the drummer for the Velvets, also appears in the film. MacLise contributed numerous soundtracks for Heliczer's films, and appears in at least one other, Satisfaction, along with John Cale.[3]

In December 1965, Heliczer's The Last Rites was included in the New Cinema Festival (also known as the Expanded Cinema Festival), an extensive series of multimedia productions in New York presented by Jonas Mekas and featuring the work of such artists as Robert Rauschenberg and Claes Oldenburg.[6] Afterwards Mekas wrote in the Village Voice, "Three new film-makers have appeared on the scene with glimpses of beauty and promises for the future: Andy Meyer, Robert Nelson, and Piero Heliczer."[7] The Last Rites also made a lasting impression on the playwright Richard Foreman, who recalled it years later as one of his favorites.[8]

Mekas was even more impressed by Dirt, writing in the Village Voice:

Among all the new movies (it has been quiet lately on the underground scene) Piero Heliczer's Dirt touched me most deeply. Its beauty is very personal and lyrical. And every frame of it is cinema. I cannot do justice to this beautiful work in one paragraph. It was shot on 8mm and much of its beauty and its cinema come from 8mm properties of camera and film. It is all motion. Together with Brakhage's Songs, Branaman's abstractions and Ken Jacobs's not yet released work, Heliczer's Dirt is one of the four works that use 8mm film properly and for art's sake.[9]

Later years

Many years after the murder of his father, Heliczer was awarded a sum of money by the German government in compensation. He gave much of it away to fellow artists, but kept enough to try and establish a filmmaker's cooperative in Paris like the one in New York. He also bought a small house in Normandy. The filmmaker's cooperative was not a success, so he moved to Amsterdam, where he lived on a houseboat for a time. Vandals sank the boat, leaving him homeless, and he spent some time living on the streets of New York.[3] In 1984 he returned to Normandy, where he spent his remaining years working in a secondhand bookstore. The 56-year-old filmmaker was killed in July 1993 when his moped was hit by a truck[1][2] near Rambouillet. He is buried in Préaux-du-Perche, France.

Legacy

Of the many films Heliczer made, some are lost, in full or in part, and only a few are still in circulation. Heliczer's publications are also hard to find. In 2001, the poet Gerard Malanga assembled a collection of Heliczer's poetry titled A Purchase in the White Botanica.[2] A collection of Heliczer publications was exhibited at the Boo-Hooray gallery in New York in 2014.[10]

His daughter Thérèse Casper (née Heliczer) began making a documentary film about his life in 2013.[11][12] Another daughter, Wynn Heliczer, is an actress.[13]

Filmography

Year Film Description
1961 Autumn Feast with Jeff Keen, Angus MacLise, Tony Conrad, et al.
1964 The Soap Opera with Angus MacLise, Jack Smith, La Monte Young, Marian Zazeela, et al.
1965 Dirt with Angus MacLise, Mario Montez, Harry Smith, Gerard Malanga, Andy Warhol, Charles Henri Ford, Barbara Rubin, Jack Smith, Bobby Driscoll, Edie Sedgwick, Sally Kirkland, John Cale, Marian Zazeela, La Monte Young, Storm de Hirsch, Jonas Mekas, et al.
1965 The Last Rites a multimedia "happening"
1965 Satisfaction with Sally Kirkland, Barbara Rubin, Gerard Malanga, Jack Smith, Angus MacLise, John Cale, Mario Montez, et al.
1965 Venus in Furs with Barbara Rubin, Lou Reed, John Cale, Angus MacLise, Sterling Morrison, Maureen Tucker, et al.
? Joan of Arc with Tony Conrad, Tuli Kupferberg, Andy Warhol, et al.
? Stone Age with Tom Raworth, Jackie Curtis, Viva, Jack Smith, Gerard Malanga, et al.
? New Jerusalem with Tony Conrad, Antoine Perich, et al.
? Bessie Smith
1968 Don Byron with International Velvet, Gerard Malanga, et al.
? The Naked Lunch with sound by William Burroughs
? Session at New Palz
? St. Therese de L'Enfant
1969 St. Therese Part 2
1970 Acquarium [sic]
? Cocaine Fancy
? Robin Hood
? Rein
? Allez Allez Les Morts
? U.S.A. vs. Piero Heliczer
? I'm In With the In Crowd
? The Plays of Piero Heliczer
1975 Opal

Publications

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Raworth, Tom (August 11, 1993). "Obituary: Piero Heliczer". The Independent. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Lewis, David. "Piero Heliczer". allmovie.com. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Unterberger, Richie (2009). White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day by Day. Jawbone Press. ISBN 978-1-906002-22-0.
  4. Watson, Steven (2003). Factory Made: Warhol and the Sixties. Pantheon Books. p. 210. ISBN 978-0679423720.
  5. Landemaine, Olivier. "The Velvet Underground Live performances and rehearsals". olivier.landemaine.free.fr. Retrieved 1 November 2014. See Sterling Morrison quote.
  6. Comenas, Gary. "Expanded Cinema?". warholstars.org. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  7. Mekas, Jonas (January 13, 1966). "Village Voice Critics Choose Best Films of 1965". The Village Voice. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
  8. Davy, Kate (1981). Richard Foreman and the Ontological-Hysteric Theatre. ISBN 978-0835712200. Foreman remembers the New Cinema Festival vividly....The works that particularly impressed him include: (1) The Rites of the Dream Weapon by Angus MacLise; (2) a piece by Jerry Joffen [sic]; (3) Piero Heliczer's The Last Rites; (4) the music of LaMonte Young; (5) Ken Jacobs's 'shadow play'; and (6) Jack Smith's Rehearsal for the Destruction of Atlantis.
  9. Raworth, Tom. "Piero Heliczer Web Page". tomraworth.com. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  10. "Piero Heliczer & The Dead Language Press". Boo-Hooray Gallery. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
  11. "A Documentary Film About Piero Heliczer". PieroHeliczer.com.
  12. "WIP - The Underground Life of Piero Heliczer". HeyEvent. January 26, 2016.
  13. "19 JANUARY – PIERO HELICZER". Eye On Art. January 15, 2016.
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