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| Studio 54 in 1977 |
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| Before you got down, you had to get in.
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One night at studio 54, a woman, thinking she’d hit upon
a foolproof strategy for getting in, rented a horse and arrived Lady
Godiva–style. The doormen, sizing up the situation, made a Solomonic
decision—the horse was in; the lady would have to wait outside.
In or out: For the couple of years of Studio 54’s reign, there
was no in-between (except for one man who got stuck in an air duct
trying to sneak in and died there, in full black tie). New York City
was on the edge of bankruptcy, but at Brooklyn kids Steve Rubell and
Ian Schrager’s Studio 54, that was a mere detail. On any given
night, you could see Baryshnikov, Bill Buckley, Betty Ford, King Juan
Carlos of Spain, Mick Jagger, David Rockefeller, and (of course) Andy
Warhol. In the warren of low-ceilinged rooms downstairs was the inner
sanctum, with coke by the yard, a place where you could meet anyone
doing just about anything. When the FBI raided, they found Hefty bags
stuffed with cash and a pathetically minuscule amount of coke—and
Rubell and Schrager found they were out of celebrity friends.
IT’S 11:59: A not-yet-married-to-Mick Jerry Hall parties
with an on-the-brink-of-superstardom Debbie Harry.
"I don't know if I was in heaven or hell. But it was wonderful."
Lillian Carter. |
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