flowers from the
asylum’s clown
by Douglas Messerli
Hope Stansbury (screenplay), Andy Milligan
(director) Vapors / 1965
Andy Milligan’s 1965 half-hour film, Vapors,
is or at least ought to be an absolute disaster. Shot on a 16mm Auricon
newsreel camera, the film roars through a series of what critic Michael Koresky
describes as hisses, “camera whirs, and echoing room ambience” filmed in a
seedy empty building near his apartment on Prince Street that pretends to be
the Saint Mark’s bathhouse, wherein two men, one middle aged (Robert Dahdah,
the director of the then-off off Broadway venue, The Cino West Village theater)
and the another younger man with thinning hair (Mulligan’s roommate, Gerald Jacuzzo) sit on a bed and a
chair in a cubical that, in such places stuffed with gays for a weekend series
of transient trysts, is usually reserved for the joys of a good fuck.
These two, both evidently new to the place—although the Jacuzzo
character at first lies, claiming that he comes there regularly—do little but
share in a long rather melodramatic conversation, written with what almost
appears with camp intentions by Hope Stansbury, whose claim to fame is that
she, so legend goes, helped create the Candy Darling superstar persona for the
transgender actor who played in Warhol films such as Trash and Women
in Revolt and later on stage in a Tennessee Williams play Small Craft
Warnings.
Indeed, many commentators on Milligan’s film describe the dialogue as
sounding a bit like warmed-over Williams, although one might say that many
critics of the day felt Williams’ own plays to be warmed-over or at least
consisting of leftover ideas that didn’t live up to his great plays. As I’ve
written elsewhere, I find his late plays as being often somewhat surreal and
almost always very funny (see my review of his last play, In Masks
Outrageous and Austere, in My Year 2012.)
But, in fact, Stansbury’s script reminds me less of Williams than it
does of Edward Albee, particularly his 1960 play The Zoo Story, although
obviously without Albee’s humor, wit, and, most importantly, the bitterness of
the character Jerry for all things mundanely heterosexual. But if one were to
turn the tables, so to speak, allowing the Peter figure to be the central
speaker while imagining the bed to be a kind of park bench upon which the Jerry
character, the youthful homosexual, sits, you might observe numerous
similarities between the two short works.
After explaining that his only reason for visiting the baths represents
an attempt to get away from his wife, he also makes it apparent that he doesn’t
at like the place in which they are now encamped. Just as the “park” in which
Albee’s homosexual figure suggests the police are out in full force bringing
down the fags out of the trees and bushes, so Mr. Jaffee declares that he finds
his new surroundings to be like “an insane asylum for mad homosexuals.”
Nonetheless, after they clear the way with a few awkward introductions,
together they proceed to transform the usual den of iniquity—which throughout
their conversation four queens intrude to remind them of the proper necessity
of opening and closing the door and the more common use of that space—into a
kind of confessional box.
Indeed, after a quick drink of communal wine (coke and 7-up in this
case), Mr. Jaffee gets down to business, like Albee’s Jerry telling two
stories, the first about his terrible wife who each night puts her hair up in
curlers and lathers her face in “lard.” After 19 years in this unhappy
relationship he would simply like to be free of her ugly feet pocked with bunions since she insists upon
squeezing into the smallest of shoes; he has even suffered a dream about her
feet of which he shares with Thomas, a nightmare that has made him unable to
even share the same bed with her for several nights.
Thomas’ feet, on the other hand, he finds beautiful, asking if he might
touch them, absurdly reciting the Mother Goose song of “This little piggy” as
he manipulates the toes, as if his new acquaintance were like a child—“This
little piggy went to market, This little piggy stayed home…,” etc.
His misogynistic accounts of his wife are indeed very similar to Jerry’s
story of his landlady and her dog, a kind of nightmare beast who, like Cerberus
guarding the gates of hell, makes his voyages back and forth to his tiny
apartment wherein he resides next door to “a colored queen” who does nothing
but pluck her eyebrows, equally nightmarish.
Jerry’s flirtatious landlady is described as a “fat, ugly, mean, stupid,
unwashed, misanthropic, cheap, drunken bag of garbage,” which, by comparison,
makes Mr. Jaffee’s wife almost a beauty; yet both are clearly disenchanted with
their relationships.
In
the Albee the play, Jerry’s second story is about his day at the zoo, clearly
not a very pleasant day, but the tale of which he is never permitted to finish.
We suspect, however, since Jerry declares that Peter will soon be hearing about
it on the nightly news, that it must involve something rather horrific
concerning Jerry’s actions. He has previously described attempting to poison
the dog owned by his landlady.
Mr. Jaffee’s story is more of a kind of urban legend such as the
repeated fable of alligators living in the New York City sewers. After
carefully describing the absolute beauty and athletic prowess of his son, Jaffee
describes how his boy and a couple of friends went to a nearby water hole to
cool off, his son diving in first. Almost immediately the others knew something
terrible had happened as they waited for him to return to the surface. It was
like a vacuum, Jaffe reports, that had sucked his body down.
When the water is siphoned away by authorities later that day, the find
the boy surrounded by thousands of snakes who had literally eaten away his
body.
The story I grew up hearing repeatedly in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, was about
three country boys who also sought out comfort in a local swimming spot, the
first one diving in and drowning, In this case it was dozens of water moccasins
who bit the swimmer to death.
Unable to go on any longer, but touched by Thomas’ empathy for his loss,
he tells his cubicle mate that he has a gift for him, and will be right back as
soon as he retrieves it.
This is perhaps the most surreal of all events in this extraordinary
series of confessions. But Thomas, always seemingly ready to play along, waits
patiently until the gaggle of queens returns with a box in hand, ribbon wrapped
around it, a gift they tell him which the man who suddenly left the premises
asking them to deliver it.
Why would the stranger have brought along a gift, one can only ask, for
a man he has never before met? In any event, Thomas opens it, discovering
within a large Papier Mâché sunflower. Thomas is so touched that he weeps for
moment or two.
It
also calls up for me a scene from another Albee play, where after a rather
violent scene between George, Martha, and their guests, George suddenly pulls
out a rifle, pointing it at Nick, who has just come down from Martha’s bedroom;
he shoots while all watch in terror, as a smaller bouquet of just such flowers
pops out from the end of the gun’s barrel.
It
is almost impossible, accordingly, not to take Mr. Jaffee’s offering as
anything other than a kind of comic jest, as if he had suddenly become the
clown in this asylum offering his new boyfriend a silly simulacrum of what
someone once sent to the man’s dead son, alerting us that in Jaffee’s mind
Thomas symbolically speaking, has now become his son.
At
almost the same moment a new man enters Thomas’ cubicle to wonder why he might
be crying. At first it appears that the young man is going to send him away,
but he quickly calls him back, asking him to close the door, the proper
expression that those within are engaging in sex.
The
new guest, (the role credited to Matt Baylor in the British Film Institute’s
DVD credits) according to Koresky, was Gary Stone, whom Milligan described as
“very attractive street guy…known for his big dick” and whom Milligan first met
“hanging upside down in a doorway” at an S&M party on Prince Street. Stone
quickly disrobes revealing in the original that reportedly large cock, which,
during the premiere showing of Milligan’s film at the Bridge theater on St.
Marks resulted in a police raid, resulting ever since a large black bar
blocking our view.
Milligan when on to make at least 29 other films, most of them
concerning deviant behavior with titles that included words like
“bloodthirsty,” “degenerate,” “torture,” “incest,” and other incidents of
slasher-like gore, as if his genteel conversation between the spiritual father
and son in this film let loose some inner depravity. In the future, I’ll see if
I can obtain a copy of his drama of incestuous murder, Seeds.
Los Angeles, September 16, 2020
Reprinted from World Cinema Review and Queer
Cinema blog (September 2020).





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