"Call
them freaks, the underground, the counter-culture, flower children or
hippies –
they are all loose labels for the youth culture of the 60s …"
Barry Miles, author of Hippie
“This is how I remember my life. Other folks
may not
have the same memories, even though we might have shared some of the
same
experiences.”
So begins David Crosby’s autobiography, Long
Time
Gone (co-written by Carl Gottlieb). As it turns out, quite a few
other
folks seem to remember some people in
Following that brief mention by Dickson,
Gottlieb
briefly explains to readers that, “Vito and his Freakers were an
acid-drenched
extended family of brain-damaged cohabitants.” And that, in an
incredibly
self-indulgent 489-page tome, is the only mention you will find of
“Vito and
his Freakers” – despite the fact that, by just about all other
accounts, the
group dismissed as “brain-damaged cohabitants” played a key role in the
early
success of
As Barry Miles noted in his biography of
Frank
Zappa, “The Byrds were closely associated with Vito and the Freaks:
Vito
Paulekas, his wife Zsou and Karl Franzoni, the leaders of a group of
about 35
dancers whose antics enlivened the Byrds early gigs.” In Waiting
for the Sun,
Barney Hoskyns writes that the early success of The Byrds and other
bands was
due in no small part to “the roving troupe of self-styled ‘freaks’ led
by
ancient beatnik Vito Paulekas and his trusty, lusty sidekick Carl
Franzoni.”
Alban “Snoopy” Pfisterer, former drummer and keyboardist for the band
Love,
went further still, claiming that Vito actually “got the Byrds
together, as I
remember – they did a lot of rehearsing at his pad.”
And according to various other accounts, The
Byrds
did indeed utilize Vito’s ‘pad’ as a rehearsal studio, as did Arthur
Lee’s
band. More
importantly, the Freaks drew the crowds into the clubs to see the
fledgling
bands perform. But as important as their contribution was to helping
launch the
careers of the Laurel Canyon bands, “Vito and his Freakers” were
notable for
something else as well; according to Barry Miles, writing in his book Hippie,
“The first
hippies in Hollywood, perhaps the first hippies anywhere, were Vito,
his wife
Zsou, Captain Fuck and their group of about thirty-five dancers.
Calling
themselves Freaks, they lived a semi-communal life and engaged in sex
orgies
and free-form dancing whenever they could.”
Some of those who were on the scene at the
time
agree with Miles’ assessment that Vito and his troupe were indeed the
very
first hippies. Arthur Lee, for example, boasted that they “started the
whole
hippie thing: Vito, Karl, Szou, Beatle Bob, Bryan and me.” One of David
Crosby’s fellow Byrds, Chris Hillman, also credited the strange group
with
being at the forefront of the hippie movement: “Carl and all those guys
were
way ahead of everyone on hippiedom fashion.” Ray Manzarek of The Doors
remembered them as well: “There were these guys named Carl and Vito who
had a
dance troupe of gypsy freaks. They were let in for free, because they
were
these quintessential hippies, which was great for tourists.”
If these folks really were the very first
hippies,
the first riders of that ‘counter-cultural’ wave, then we should
probably try
to get to know them. As it turns out, however, that is not such an easy
thing
to do. Most accounts – and there aren’t all that many – offer little
more than
a few first names, with no consensus agreement on how those first names
are
even spelled (“Karl” and “Carl” appear interchangeably, as do “Szou”
and “Zsou,”
and “Godot” and “Godo”). But for you, dear readers – because I
apparently have
way too much time on my hands – I have gone the extra mile and sifted
through
the detritus to dig up at least some of the sordid details.
By all accounts the troupe was led by one
Vito
Paulekas, whose full name is said to have been Vitautus Alphonsus
Paulekas.
Born the son of a Lithuanian sausage-maker circa 1912, Vito hailed from
Following his release from the service, circa
1946,
Vito arrived in
According to most accounts, it wasn’t really
the
Mayan-tomb decor of the studio that many of the matrons found so
exciting, but
rather Vito’s reportedly insatiable sexual appetite and John Holmesian
physique. In any event, Vito’s students also apparently included such
As for his erstwhile sidekick, Carl Orestes
Franzoni, he has claimed in interviews that his “mother was a countess”
and his
father “was a stone carver from
Franzoni, born circa 1934, hooked up with the
older
Paulekas sometime around 1963 and soon after became his constant
sidekick. As
previously mentioned, the group also included Vito’s wife Szou, an
ex-cheerleader who had hooked up with Paulekas when she was just
sixteen and he
was already in his fifties. Also in the troupe was a young Rory Flynn
(Errol
Flynn’s statuesque daughter), a bizarre character named Ricky Applebaum
who had
half a moustache on one side of his face and half a beard on the other,
most of
the young girls who would later become part of Frank Zappa’s GTO
project, and a
lot of other oddball characters who donned ridiculous pseudonyms like
Linda
Bopp, Butchie, Beatle Bob, Emerald, and
Also flitting about the periphery of the
dance
troupe were a young Gail Sloatman (the future Mrs. Zappa, for those who
have
already forgotten) and a curious character on the LA music scene by the
name of
Kim Fowley. The two were, for a time, closely allied, and even cut a
record
together as “Bunny and the Bear” that Fowley produced (“
Fowley, as with so many other characters in
this
story, has a rather interesting history. He was born in 1939, the son
of actor
Douglas Fowley, a WWII Navy veteran and attendee of St. Francis Xavier
Military
Academy. According to the younger Fowley’s account, he was initially
abandoned
to a foster home but later taken back and raised by his father. He grew
up in upscale
Nice story, Mr. Fowley. Thanks for sharing.
It’s probably safe to assume that childhood
experiences such as that helped to prepare Fowley for his later
employment as a
young male street hustler, a profession that he practiced on the seedy
streets
of the city of angels (by Fowley’s own account, I should probably add
here,
just as it was James Dean himself who claimed to have worked those same
streets
with Nick Adams). Following that, Fowley spent some time serving with
the Army
National Guard, after which he devoted his life to working in the LA
music
industry as a musician, writer and producer – as well as, according to
some
accounts, a master manipulator.
Around 1957, Fowley played in a band known as
the
Sleepwalkers, alongside future Beach Boy Bruce Johnston. At times, a
diminutive
young guitarist named Phil Spector – who had moved out to LA with his
mother
not too many years earlier, following the suicide of his father when
Phil was
just nine – sat in with the group. During the 1960s, Fowley was best
known for
producing such ridiculous yet beloved novelty songs as the Hollywood
Argyles’
“Alley Oop” and the Rivington’s “Papa Oom-Mow-Mow,” though he also did
more
respectable work, such as collaborating on some Byrds’ tracks and
having some
of his original songs covered by both the Beach Boys and the Flying
Burrito
Brothers.
In
1975, Fowley had perhaps his greatest success when he created the
Runaways,
further lowering the bar that Frank Zappa had already set rather low
some years
earlier when he had created and recorded the GTOs. The Runaways
featured
underage versions of Joan Jett and Lita Ford, whom Fowley tastefully
attired in
leather and lingerie. As he would later boast, “Everyone loved the idea
of
16-year-old girls playing guitars and singing about fucking.”
Especially, I
would imagine, their mothers and fathers. Some of the young girls in
the band,
including Cherie Curry, would later accuse Fowley of requiring them to
perform
sexual services for he and his associates as a prerequisite for
membership in
the group.
Prior
to assembling the Runaways, one of Fowley’s proudest accomplishments
had been
producing the 1969 album “I’m Back and I’m Proud” by rockabilly pioneer
Gene
Vincent, featuring backing vocals by Canyonite Linda Ronstadt. Just two
years
later, Vincent – a Navy veteran raised in that penultimate Navy town,
Norfolk,
Virginia – permanently checked out of the Hotel California on October
12, 1971
(there’s that date again), due reportedly to a ruptured stomach ulcer.
Not long
before his death, Vincent had been on tour in the
One other accomplishment of Fowley’s bears
mentioning here: he received a guest vocalist credit on the Mothers of
Invention album “Freak Out,” as did both Vito Paulekas and his
sidekick, Carl
Franzoni, to whom the song “Hungry Freaks, Daddy” was dedicated (some
sources claim
that Bobby Beausoleil also provided guest vocals on Zappa’s debut
album, though
his name does not appear in the album’s credits).
By at least as early as 1962, not long before
Carl
Franzoni joined the group, the Freak troupe was already hitting the
clubs a
couple nights each week to refine their unique style of dance (perhaps
best
described as an epileptic seizure set to music) and show off their
distinctively unappealing, though soon to be quite popular, fashion
sense. In
those early days, they danced to local black R&B bands and to a
band out of
Fresno known as the Gauchos, in dives far removed from the fabled
Sunset Strip
– because, Franzoni has said, “There were no white bands [in LA] yet,”
and
“There were no clubs on Sunset Boulevard.”
That, of course, was all about to quickly
change. As
if by magic, new clubs began to spring up along the legendary Sunset
Strip
beginning around 1964, and old clubs considered to be long past their
prime
miraculously reemerged. In January 1964, a young
Ciro’s reopened in early 1965, just before
The Trip
opened its doors and just in time, as it turns out, to host the very
first club
appearance by the musical act that was about to become the first Laurel
Canyon
band to commit a song to vinyl: The Byrds. By 1967, Gazzaris had opened
up on
the Strip as well, and in the early 1970s Valentine would open yet
another club
that endures to this day, The Roxy. Smaller clubs like the London Fog,
where
The Doors got their first booking as the house band in early 1966,
opened their
doors to the public in the mid 1960s as well.
The timing of the opening of Valentine’s
first two
clubs, and the reopening of Ciro’s, could not have been any more
fortuitous.
The paint was barely dry on the walls of the new clubs when bands like
Love and
The Doors and The Byrds and Buffalo Springfield and the Turtles and the
Mothers
and the Lovin’ Spoonful came knocking. The problem, however, was that
the new
clubs were not yet well known, Ciro’s had been long left for dead, and
nobody
had the slightest idea who any of these newfangled bands were. What was
needed
then was a way to create a buzz around the clubs that would draw people
in and
kick-start the Strip back to life, as well as, of course, launch the
careers of
the new bands.
The bands themselves could not be expected to
fill
the new clubs, since, besides being unknown, they also – and yeah, I
know that
you don’t really want to hear this and I will undoubtedly be deluged
with
letters of complaint, but I’m going to say it anyway – weren’t very
good, at
least not in their live incarnations. To be sure, they sounded great on
vinyl,
but that was largely due to the fact that the band members themselves
didn’t
actually play on their records (at least not in the early days), and
the rich
vocal harmonies that were a trademark of the ‘Laurel Canyon sound’ were
created
in the studio with a good deal of multi-tracking and overdubs. On
stage, it was
another matter entirely.
Enter then the wildly flamboyant and colorful
Freak
squad, who were one key component of the strategy that was devised to
lure
patrons into the clubs (the other component of the strategy, hinted at
in one
of the quotes near the top of this post, will be covered in installment
#7).
Vito and Carl’s dancers were a fixture on the Sunset Strip scene from
the very
moment that the new clubs opened their doors to the public, and they
were, by
all accounts, treated like royalty by the club owners. As John
Hartmann,
proprietor of the Kaleidoscope Club, acknowledged, he “would let Vito
and his
dancers into the Kaleidoscope free every week because they attracted
people.
They were really hippies, and so we had to have them. They got in free
pretty
much everywhere they went. They blessed your joint. They validated you.
If
they’re the essence of hippiedom and you’re trying to be a hippie
nightclub,
you need hippies.”
As the aforementioned Kim Fowley put it, with
characteristic bluntness, “A band didn’t have to be good, as long as
the
dancers were there.” Indeed, the band was largely irrelevant, other
than to
provide some semblance of a soundtrack for the real show, which was
taking
place on the dance floor. Gail Zappa candidly admitted that, even at
her
husband’s shows, the real attraction was not on the stage: “The
customers came
to see the freaks dance. Nobody ever talks about that, but that was the
case.”
Frank added that, “As soon as they arrived they would make things
happen,
because they were dancing in a way nobody had seen before, screaming
and
yelling out on the floor and doing all kinds of weird things. They were
dressed
in a way that nobody could believe, and they gave life to everything
that was
going on.”
For reasons that clearly had more to do with
boosting attendance at the clubs than with any actual talents displayed
by the
group, Vito and Carl seem to have become minor media darlings over the
course
of the 1960s and into the 1970s. The two can be seen, separately and
together,
in a string of cheap exploitation films, including Mondo Bizarro
from
1966, Something’s Happening (aka The Hippie Revolt)
from
1967, the notorious Mondo Hollywood, also released in 1967, and
You
Are What You Eat, with David Crosby, Frank Zappa and Tiny Tim,
which hit
theaters in 1968. In 1972, Vito made his acting debut in a
non-documentary
film, The White Horse Gang.
Paulekas reportedly also popped up on Groucho
Marx’s
You Bet Your Life, and Franzoni made an appearance on a 1968
Dick Clark
TV special. The golden child, Godot Paulekas, was featured in a photo
in Life
magazine circa 1966, and the whole troupe showed up for an appearance
on the Tonight
Show. According to Barry Miles, Vito also “appeared regularly on
the Joe
Pyne Show and in between the bare-breasted girls in the late fifties
and early
sixties men’s magazines.”
Joe Pyne, for those of you too young to
remember
(myself included), is the guy that we have to thank for paving the way
for the
likes of Bill O’Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Michael Savage,
Don Imus,
Morton Downey, Jr., Jerry Springer and Wally George. For Mr. Pyne, you
see, was
the guy who pioneered the confrontational interview style favored by so
many
gasbags today. The decorated Marine Corps veteran debuted as a
talk-radio host
in 1950 and quickly became known for insulting and demeaning anyone who
dared
to disagree with him, guests and listeners alike. In 1957, he moved his
show to
LA, and by 1965, he was nationally syndicated both on the radio and on
television.
His favored targets, as you may have guessed, included hippies,
feminists,
gays, and anti-war activists, and his interviews frequently ended with
his
guest either walking off or being thrown off the stage. Nearing the
peak of his
popularity, Pyne died on
To Be Continued …