Sunday, April 20, 2014

HOLLYWOOD AFTER-HOURS: THE ZERO ZERO GALLERY



The Brainiacs 1982 "Drunk With Funk" EP cover: me  with Zero Zero proprietor Wayzata De Camerone; shot in the Zero Zero on Gardener Street, Hollywood, 1982  by Vito "Jack" Codini & K.K. Barrett of The Screamers


From the early-to-mid 1980's, one of the wildest clubs in Hollywood was an after-hours speakeasy called the Zero Zero Gallery. Though it actually did exhibit art (showcasing work by the likes of punk-adjacent artists like Raymond Pettibon, Gary Panter, "Mad" Marc Rude, and Bob Zoell, to name just a few) the non-stop inebriated decadence- taking place every night until the sun came up- was the main attraction. The place was run by an eccentric pair: bon vivant John Pochna and artist/musician Mark Boyd, lead singer and sax player of art-funk band The Brainiacs, then known by the moniker Wayzata De Camerone.

The club’s first location was on Cahuenga Boulevard north of Franklin, in a small-whitewashed loft  space dominated by a  vintage jukebox, furnished with a few crummy brocade couches that had been dragged in from the trash. Since all the clubs and bars in LA closed  at 2:00 am , the  Zero’s  patrons would already be a few sheets to the wind, coming from  various other nightspots such as Cathay De Grande, Club Lingerie or The Hong Kong Cafe. You’d pay your five bucks at the door  to become a "member" of this "private club", then join the seventy or eighty other scenesters inside, getting  absolutely  trashed until the sun came up. Since the whole thing wasn't legal anyway, there were no ID checks or door-searches, and everyone’s pockets clanked with smuggled booze-bottles, plus an assortment of pipes,  joints, pills and powders. Everybody was fucked up beyond belief- that, after all, was the point. But this was no callow underage crowd; the Zero Zero attracted a boho elite of artists, photographers, actors, models, writers, filmmakers, club bookers, Euro-trash, intellectuals, and of course, musicians. There was even a Board Of Directors, though it's doubtful they ever met anywhere besides the club itself. Just some of the board members were  John Doe and Exene from X, Tito Larriva from the Plugz and  members of Los Lobos and The Blasters.

Larry Fishburne at C.A.S.H. by Gary Leonard
 Zero regulars included ex-Warhol Superstar Mary Woronov, members of The Go-Go's, Cramps, Levi & The Rockats, Wall Of Voodoo, The Joneses, Tex & The Horseheads, Thelonious Monster, Fear, The Red Hot Chili Peppers and Ice T’s Body Count. There were also local luminaries like Ruben Blue, who ran the popular scene 'zine Scratch, Limey Dave of Tupelo Chainsex, photographers Gary Leonard and Moshe Brakha, Donnie "Two Beers" Popejoy, New Wave Theater founder/director David Jove, pianist Zachary, and actor Larry Fishburne, who was then the doorman at C.A.S.H., Janet Cunningham's space next door, before becoming famous as Cowboy Curtis on PeeWee’s Playhouse.

Punk Rock It Girls abounded, such as performer Jane Cantillion, Texacala Jones of Tex and The Horseheads, Iris Berry,  and  platinum blonde bombshell Alice Miller  who  managed the popular rockabilly combo Jimmy & The Mustangs. The ubiquitous scene-maker  Tequila Mockingbird was ever-present, and  once scared the living hell out of  the Blasters’ drummer  Bill “Buster”Bateman. She was sitting on his lap; he was stroking her long hair…and it came off in his hand. He was too wasted to realize it was a wig and screamed bloody murder!

 The late Brendan Mullen, founder of Hollywood’s first punk enclave The Masque,  deejay Ron Miller and former Screamers’ drummer   K.K. Barrett would spin the latest in weird-ass, cutting-edge funk. George Clinton's "Atomic Dog" was a perennial favorite. Carlos Guitarlos, guitarist  of  Top Jimmy  & The Rhythm Pigs usually was on the door. El Duce , founder of  what was perhaps  the most politically-incorrect band on earth, The Mentors, and blues singer  Top Jimmy ( who was the namesake of the  popular Van Halen song) were the  club’s janitors, cleaning up for free so they could imbibe all the high school beers set down by the drunken revelers, and maybe- if they were lucky- find someone's stash on the floor.
David Lee Roth with Top Jimmy, Cathay De Grande, 1981

Speaking of Van Halen, then-lead singer David Lee Roth in particular took a shine to The Zero and it was rumored that he was an investor. Whatever the case, he could always be found holding court in the notorious Back Room. You had access to that inner circle only if you were super-duper hip , had a lot of blow to share or were a  good looking nubile girl.  The  Back Room  was also the place the door-money was stashed in case the cops came to bust the place, which happened once in a while. Usually the place was just shut down and fined, but because of these raids, the club changed locations a few times, once to a basement on Gardner Street, then to a loft above Playmates Of Hollywood at the corner of Hollywood & Wilcox, yet again to a loft on Vine Street. The loft on Vine street was particularly dangerous for two reasons: the steep wooden stairs mixed with the  utterly inebriated condition of the patrons were literally an accident waiting to happen…and  then, there was Danielle The Doorman.

Danielle himself was an accident waiting to happen. Nowadays, he’d probably be described as  bi-polar; and certainly the elephantine amounts of speed he did on a regular basis only enhanced his incendiary mental and emotional predilections.  Danielle was the craziest thing to come out of Puerto Rico since  Sister Bertrille, and he proudly referred to himself  as The Tweekin’ ‘Rican. Danielle’s  accent was almost indecipherable  when he was sober- and even  more so if he was   wasted…which was an every day occurance.  Danielle was always extremely sweet to me and my Discgraceland  roommate Iris Berry, but we’d both seen him turn on a dime. The dark clouds and impending storm of anger were easily read on his face just before he’d explode, but that was another problem altogether:  it was  difficult to see his face.  Danielle’s customary doorman uniform consisted of a full suit of  high-impact plastic football player body armor which he had spray-painted  metallic silver. A large plastic toy stegosaurus also painted silver was mounted at the crest of each shoulder pad, and he always wore a matching metallic  hockey mask to complete his ensemble.

Me & then-husband Levi Dexter at The Zero on Cahuenga Blvd., 1981by Gary Leonard
The bar at any of the  Zero’s locations was always a makeshift plywood affair, and was almost always  tended by the afore-mentioned Iris Berry Alice Miller, and myself. Our bartending consisted of opening the  flrip-tops of the only drinks the Zero served, cans of Burgie and Lucky Lager, doing the drugs that were often left as our  tips, and flirting shamelessly with the regulars. There were always fun people to party and/or go home with, and since we weren’t above flashing our bras to solicit our gratuities, we got all the action. Frequently during the course of every night night, we'd count out and divide the contents of the tip jar, stuffing the bills into our fishnet stockings, and  brining the cash-stash from the beer sales  to the Back Room to hide it in case the cops came. On many occasions I'd take a cab home  the next day from wherever  after-party had been, and pay my fare with   plastic Solo cups full of quarters. Usually, the after-parties would blend into the next afternoon or evening, and we probably could've made a killing selling cheap sunglasses at the bar too, 'cause everyone always needed them! We'd always be getting home when other people were going to work or church.
 
The Cahuenga Blvd. Zero Zero,  circa 1982 as seen from behind the bar by Gary Leonard
The Zero went on for  quite a long time, and it's hard to really describe in detail all the sordid fun, crazy, zoned-out intellectual conversations, brainstorms and sheer madness that went on there. It was the on-going after hours hub of the 1980’s Hollywood Punk/New Wave/New  Romantic/Goth/Cow Punk  scene.  What started as a semi-private enclave for just a few people  wound up getting so popular that it’s exclusivity and anonymity were threatened by the sheer volume of people-mostly clueless idiots- who wanted to soak up the  hip atmosphere. Eventually, they contributed to the club’s demise.
Like all golden eras, The Zero Zero came to an end, but damn, was it great while it lasted! So great, in fact, that like the old adage about the Sixties, one could describe the Zero in this way: If you say you remember it, you probably weren't there!

Luckily, when I came home   from bartending at The Zero wired out of my gourd the next day, I had nothing better to do than write about the previous night's escapades in my diary, before passing out and waking up to start the partying all over again.

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If you’ve enjoyed this post and would like to read of my memoirs from the 1980’s punk scene and beyond,  my latest book “Showgirl Confidential: My Life Onstage, Backstage And On The Road”( Punk Hostage Press) is available here: http://www.princessfarhana.com/shop.htm




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8 comments:

  1. Have it on my wish list at Amazon... ;-)

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  2. Lots of photo's by Zatar play with no sound... https://vimeo.com/46554953

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  3. Zero-Zero was the site of one of my worst humiliations EVAH. Duran Duran were in town and I was hanging with them, acting as LA’s Best Hostess. It was late and they wanted to keep the party going, so I told them about this super-secret, super-fun club that I was SURE they would just LOVE. I took them to the Z-Z. I don’t remember what night of the week it was, but there was literally NO ONE there other than us. The band was not impressed and I was mortified.

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  4. I remember being at ZZ after a night out at a local show and El Duce was in fine form and drunk as usual . We were all sitting on the floor and this guy and his girlfriend were to the left of me and El Duce walk in and walks up to the guy on my left and straddles the guys face with his crotch and whips out his willie. The guy now embarrassed and angry gets in El Duce face and says “Don’t ever stick your dick in my face “ and a tense moment begins but we never underestimated El Duces wit when in character and he replies “ Next time I’m trying to take a piss don’t stick your face in my dick” the room immediately busts out laughing.. and the tense moment dissolves ... Man... those years were some great and fun memories!

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  5. I have checked this link this is really important for the people to get benefit from. hollywood nightlife

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  6. Zero Club Hollywood Family After-Hours Party - 2 Hour Documentary Movie
    Have a Good Time!
    3/2/1984 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ex9ANVxtSM

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    Replies
    1. Hi, what was the adress of the club featured in your video?

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