Tuli Kupferberg
Tuli Kupferberg | |
---|---|
Born | Naphtali Kupferberg September 28, 1923 New York City, U.S. |
Died | July 12, 2010 New York City, U.S. | (aged 86)
Education | Brooklyn College |
Occupation(s) | Author, poet, musician, cartoonist, publisher |
Years active | 1958–2009 |
Known for | The Fugs 1001 Ways to Beat the Draft 1001 Ways to Live Without Working |
Spouse | Sylvia Topp |
Children | Joe, Noah, Samara. |
Naphtali "Tuli" Kupferberg (September 28, 1923 – July 12, 2010) was an American counterculture poet, author, singer, cartoonist, publisher, and co-founder of the rock band The Fugs.
Biography
Naphtali Kupferberg was born into a Jewish, Yiddish-speaking household in New York City.[1] A cum laude graduate of Brooklyn College in 1944, Kupferberg founded the magazine Birth in 1958.[2]
Kupferberg reportedly appears in Ginsberg's poem Howl as the person "who jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge and walked away unknown and forgotten into the ghostly daze of Chinatown soup alleyways & firetrucks, not even one free beer." The incident in question actually occurred on the Manhattan Bridge.[3] Ginsberg's description in Howl uses poetic license. Kupferberg did jump from the Manhattan Bridge in 1944, after which he was picked up by a passing tugboat and taken to Gouverneur Hospital.[4] Severely injured, he had broken the transverse process of his spine and spent time in a body cast.[5]
In 1964, Kupferberg formed the satirical rock group the Fugs with poet Ed Sanders.[6]
Kupferberg was active in New York pacifist-anarchist circles. In 1965 he was one of the lecturers at the newly founded Free University of New York.[7]
He appeared as a machine-gun-toting soldier policing Manhattan in W.R.: Mysteries of the Organism, a 1971 film about the revolutionary psychiatrist Wilhelm Reich by Dušan Makavejev.
An anti-police-brutality skit from his Revolting Theatre[8] appeared in the 1971 underground film Dynamite Chicken directed by Ernest Pintoff, and featuring Richard Pryor.
In 1972, Kupferberg played the role of God in the Canadian experimental film Voulez-vous coucher avec God?. Kupferberg later appeared in the music video for Williamsburg Will Oldham Horror by Jeffrey Lewis.[9]
Kupferberg suffered a stroke in April 2009 at his home in New York City, which left him severely visually impaired and in need of regular nursing care. After treatment for a number of days at a New York hospital, followed by convalescence at a nursing home, he recuperated at home.[10]
Kupferberg died in New York Downtown Hospital in Manhattan of kidney failure and sepsis on July 12, 2010.[11] In 2008, in one of his last interviews, he told Mojo Magazine, "Nobody who lived through the '50s thought the '60s could've existed. So there's always hope."[12]
Bibliography
- Birth 1, The Bohemian Issue (1958)
- Birth 2, Children's Writings (1959)
- Beating (1959)
- Children as Authors: A Big Bibliography (1959, with Sylvia Topp)
- Snow Job: Poems 1946–1959 (1959)
- Selected Fruits & Nuts (1959)
- Birth 3, parts 1 & 2 Stimulants, An Exhibition (1960)
- 1001 Ways to Live Without Working (1961)
- The Grace & Beauty of the Human Form (1961)
- 1001 Ways to Live Without Working" (1961, rev. 1968; German translation by Max Wickert & Hubert Kulterer, with facing English text, Stadtlichter Presse 2009, 2015)
- 3,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 Beatniks : or, The War Against the Beats (1961)
- Sex and War (1962)
- The Mississippi (A Study of the White Race) (1962)
- The Rub-Ya-Out of Omore Diem (1962)
- The Christine Keeler Colouring Book & Cautionary Tale (1963)
- Kill for Peace (1965)
- Caught in the Act: a Legal Vaudeville (1966)
- The Book of the Body (with Judith Wehlau, 1966)
- I Say to Masturbate is Human, to Fuck Divine (1966)
- 1001 Ways to Beat the Draft (with Robert Bashlow, 1966)
- Fuck Nam : a morality play (1967)
- 1001 Ways to Make Love (1969)
- Newspoems (1971)
- Listen to the Mockingbird; satiric songs to tunes you know (1973)
- As They Were (with Sylvia Topp, 1973)
- Universal Housewife (1975)
- First Glance (with Sylvia Topp, 1978)
- As They Were Too (with Sylvia Topp, 1979)
- O God! (1980)
- The Crazy Paper (1980)
- Less Newspoems (1981)
- Questionable Cartoons (1981)
- True Professions (1981)
- Why Don't We Do It in the Bed? (1982)
- Was It Good For You Too? (1983)
- After the Balls Are Ova (1984)
- In Media's Feces (1986)
- Kill For Peace, Again (1987)
- Reaganation (1987)
- The Tuli Kupferberg Instant Lottery Broadside (1988)
- The Dark Night of the Soul in the Poetry Mines (1988)
- Signed By the Artist (1990)
- Don't Make Trouble (1991)
- My Prick is Bigger Than Yours (1992)
- The Land that God Remembered (1992)
- The Old Fucks at Home (1992)
- You Know Helen : Maybe Chimps Know a Lot More Than We Think (1994)
- Hey Ann! : What's The Diff Between Religion & Patriotism? (with Dave Jordan, 1994)
- Whitman said : "In order to have great art you have to have great audiences!" (1994)
- When I Hear the Word 'Culture' I Reach for My Gun (1994)
- I Hate Poems About Poems About Poems (1994)
- Great Moments in the History of Sport : No. 4, The Spartans Invent Football (1994)
- Teach Yourself Fucking (2000)
- Paris I Have Never Seen (2001)
References
- ^ Vox Table Podcast, Fed. 22, 2010. Fugging Around – by Vox Tablet > Tablet Magazine – A New Read on Jewish Life
- ^ Sisario, Ben (July 15, 2003). "Rock 'n' Roll Dissidents, Fearless for 4 Decades". The New York Times. Retrieved October 8, 2007.
- ^ Holden, Stephen (August 21, 1987). "POP/JAZZ; The Fugs Look Back to 1967's 'Summer of Love'". The New York Times. Retrieved October 8, 2007.
. . . Tuli Kupferberg, the poet and cartoonist whom Mr. Ginsberg remembered in Howl as the person who jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge and survived. (Mr. Ginsberg said the other day that the incident actually took place on the Manhattan Bridge in 1945.)
- ^ "'What The Hell Was That?': Remembering Tuli Kupferberg". The Forward. July 15, 2010. Retrieved September 24, 2021.
- ^ Mojo, October 2010, Michael Simmons, Tuli Kupferberg featured obit.
- ^ Strausbaugh, John (September 20, 2000). "The Old Fug". New York Press. Archived from the original on June 11, 2007. Retrieved October 8, 2007.
- ^ Berke, Joseph (October 29, 1965), "The Free University of New York", Peace News: 6–7 as reproduced in Jakobsen, Jakob (2012), Anti-University of Londin–Antihistory Tabloid, London: MayDay Rooms, pp. 6–7
- ^ "Tuli's Montreal Revolt". Media Burn Archive. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
- ^ "Williamsburg Will Oldham Horror" (video). YouTube. January 6, 2007. Archived from the original on December 13, 2021. Retrieved March 15, 2007.
- ^ "Fugs Founder Tuli Kupferberg Dies at 86". Exclaim.ca. July 12, 2010. Retrieved January 13, 2017.
- ^ Tuli Kupferberg, Poet and Singer, Dies at 86, Artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com
- ^ Mojo Magazine #203, October 2010, p. 34
Further reading
- Adams, Larry (2005). "Kupferberg, Tuli (1923–)". In William Lawlor (ed.). Beat Culture: Lifestyles, Icons, and Impact. ABC-CLIO. p. 192. ISBN 978-1-85109-400-4.
External links
- Tuli Kupferberg at IMDb
- Tuli's Youtube channel
- Interview by Jason Gross (1997)
- Interview by Matthew Paris (2004)
- Vox Tablet Podcast dedicated to Tuli Kupferberg
- The Fugs
- Kupferberg performing with The Fugs, NYC, 1967 Photo of by Michael Maggid
- Tuli Kupferberg and Sylvia Topp Papers at Fales Library and Special Collections at New York University Special Collections
- 1923 births
- 2010 deaths
- American anarchists
- American cartoonists
- American male singers
- American male poets
- American satirists
- Songwriters from New York (state)
- Beat Generation writers
- Critics of work and the work ethic
- Brooklyn College alumni
- Jewish American musicians
- Jewish poets
- Singers from New York City
- Writers from Manhattan
- People from Greenwich Village
- Outlaw poets
- ESP-Disk artists
- Protopunk musicians
- Jews in punk rock
- The Fugs members
- American male non-fiction writers