John Waters' Baltimore
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, September 13, 2024


John Waters' Baltimore
John Waters holds the camera he used in “Eat Your Makeup” to film the re-enactment of the Kennedy assassination on his parents’ front lawn, to the horror of neighbors, at his home in Baltimore, May 25, 2022. (Sinna Nasseri/The New York Times)

by Megan McCrea



NEW YORK, NY.- The 1998 John Waters film “Pecker” ends with an unlikely crowd carousing in a seedy basement bar/impromptu photo gallery in Baltimore. Strippers and one busty, enthusiastic art collector dance on tables as a talking Virgin Mary icon watches. It’s a jubilant, chaotic and naughty party open to anyone with a sense of humor, just the way the director likes it.

Waters, 78, gained a cult following in the 1970s with delightfully shocking films including “Multiple Maniacs,” “Female Trouble” and, of course, the raunchy “Pink Flamingos” before breaking big with “Hairspray,” in 1988.

Since then, Waters has built an empire of camp, now comprising more than a dozen films, spoken-word shows and numerous books, including his 2022 debut novel, “Liarmouth,” which has been optioned for a movie that Waters hopes will star Aubrey Plaza.

Waters, a Baltimore native, grew up in Lutherville, Maryland, a suburb he described in a recent phone interview as “upper-middle-class everything.” Yearning for escape, he had his mom drop him off at a Baltimore beatnik hangout called Martick’s, even though he was underage. “She said, ‘Maybe you’ll meet your people here,’” he recalled.

“I did find my people — bohemia!” he said.

Since those days, Waters has become an unofficial spokesman for all things Baltimore, which was one of The New York Times’ 52 Places to Go in 2024. The city has embraced him, too. It honored him with an official day, Feb. 7, 1985 (it was a one-off), and the all-gender restrooms at the Baltimore Museum of Art, the institution to which he has bequeathed his sizable art collection, are named for him.

Although Waters has apartments in San Francisco and New York and spends summers in Provincetown, Massachusetts, he lives primarily in North Baltimore and has no plans to change that. “If I had to give up everywhere,” Waters said, “this is where I’d live.”

Here are his five favorite places in Baltimore.

1. The Charles Theater

A neon marquee graces the brick facade of the Charles Theater. First opened as an all-newsreel cinema, the Charles now screens primarily independent movies and hosts periodic revival series. Waters has a special place in his heart for the theater, which his friend Pat Moran managed for years. “That’s where ‘Polyester’ opened,” Waters said, referring to his 1981 film. A major Easter egg awaited those at the premiere, since a scene in the film had been shot at the theater. In the movie, the heroine’s philandering husband owns a porn theater, and a flashback shows its exterior. “‘My Burning Bush’ was the title on the marquee,” Waters said, and people were coming out “zipping up their zippers.”

2. Peter’s Inn

When he first started visiting Peter’s Inn, Waters knew it as Motorcycle Pete’s, after the owner, his friend, Peter Denzer. “He was a biker, and he was in ‘Desperate Living,’” Waters said, recalling his 1977 dark comedy. “He played one of Edith Massey’s goons.” Denzer later sold the place to Bud and Karin Tiffany, who transformed it from dive bar to locally sourced eatery. Today, Waters said, “it still looks like a biker bar,” but “the food is absolutely amazing.” A mounted blue marlin hangs behind the bar (Bud Tiffany caught it on his 16th birthday, Karin Tiffany said) and Karin Tiffany writes the menu by hand. But Peter’s also makes a mean martini and serves a pâté — beloved by Waters — that arrives in a lidded glass container, its smooth surface artfully arrayed with herbs and fruit.

3. Club Charles

With its Art Deco sign, neon-bathed interior and well-curated jukebox (including David Bowie and Björk), the 7-decades-old Club Charles — across the street from the Charles Theater — is “still the coolest place in Baltimore,” Waters said. He loves the no-nonsense bartenders (“They’ve been there forever and ever”) and “unpredictable” patrons. Waters started frequenting the bar in the 1970s, when it was called the Wigwam and had a rough reputation. The owner, an Indigenous woman named Esther Martin, ran it, Waters said, buzzing in only people who didn’t seem rich: “It was Studio 54 in reverse.” Once, Waters recalled, “I saw somebody bite somebody’s nose off in there. It was scary. But it was jumping!”

4. Metro Baltimore

On any given night at the performance space Metro Baltimore — formerly known as the Metro Gallery — you never know quite what to expect. Which is why Waters loves it. In February, he attended “anti-Valentine’s gay night,” a dance party crowded with young LGBTQ people and heavy metal fans. “So the gay people there are the ones that do not fit in gay bars,” Waters said. “I’m one of them. The first time I ever went to a gay bar, I thought, ‘I might be queer, but I ain’t this,’ because I was looking for bohemia.” The Metro, he said, feels like a modern bohemia. The program (think acts with names like LustSickPuppy and Pansy Division) is as motley as the crowd, and includes drag nights, record releases and film premieres.

5. Atomic Books

As an author, screenwriter and former bookstore employee, Waters knows his bookshops. Atomic Books stands out, he says, because it is “one of the only places where you can get big fashion magazines from all over the world,” and also has “a huge true-crime section.” In it, classics such as “Helter Skelter,” about the 1969 Charles Manson murders, sit alongside cult favorites like “Panzram,” about early-20th-century serial killer Carl Panzram. The shop, whose motto is “Literary Finds for Mutated Minds,” also carries a vast array of John Waters merchandise, and receives his fan mail. A bar in back serves local beer, cider and mead, including a Union Craft Brewing IPA called Divine. It might be the perfect place to raise a glass and toast Waters’ cinematic diva who shares the beer’s name. And who knows whom you might meet in the aisles? “If you’re ever looking to score sexually, go to bookshops,” Waters advises. “You always meet smart people, and they’re cute.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

July 6, 2024

A masterpiece of fiction inspires the urge to submerge in a gallery crawl

This bigheaded fossil turned up in a place no one expected to find it

Piñatas that provide awe instead of candy

Paal Enger, who stole Munch's 'The Scream,' is dead at 57

Inaugural auction featuring selections from William Strutz's celebrated library realizes $5.65 million at Heritage

The dazzling artistry of Hiroshige's '100 Famous Views of Edo'

Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg opens first institutional exhibition in Germany of works by Firelei Báez

The man behind the Muppets

How the Denisovans survived the Ice Age

John Waters' Baltimore

Museo Picasso Málaga to show a large-format installation by the South African artist William Kentridge

Nara Roesler opens 'Co(r)respondences: Constructive Affinities/Painting as Surface'

Heritage's July Entertainment Auction offers out of this world spaceships, costumes and artwork

The best documentaries of 2024, so far

Ordrupgaard to open an exhibition of works by British artist Flora Yukhnovich

Sculptural fashion and body-related art in the TextielMuseum this November

Exhibition challenges our perceptions of interconnectedness and transformation within the natural world

Heritage's Historical Platinum Signature Auction spans Beethoven and Napoleon to Neil Armstrong and Harry Potter

Celebrated Ruth Nelkin collection of Japanese woodblock prints brings $2.2 million at Heritage Auctions

How big is Taylor Swift by the numbers?

Netflix show earns its Saudi creator plaudits, and a prison sentence

A Jewish teen's diary recounts pain and resilience in a Nazi ghetto

Australian designer Martin Grant gifts more than 200 designs to NGV

International judge announced for The Walters Prize 2024

Protect Your Roof with Effective Roof Coating Solutions




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful