We Talked to John Waters About Facelifts, 'Kiddie Flamingos,' and His New Art Show
The legendary director opens up about 'Beverly Hills John,' his new art show in NYC.
www.vice.comI don’t currently have live access to the latest news feeds in this moment. Based on recent public coverage, John Waters’ mustache has long been a recognizable signature element of his image, but specific, up-to-the-minute news about it isn’t readily available in my current view.
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The legendary director opens up about 'Beverly Hills John,' his new art show in NYC.
www.vice.comJohn Waters has been thinking a lot about the half-century lately. Mr. Waters, the filmmaker, author, artist, performer and provocateur, was considering the passage of time because on Friday, the Film Society of Lincoln Center will unveil Fifty Years of John Waters: How Much Can You Take?
arthurrogergallery.comJohn Waters can’t get a film financed, but he’s been making a good living as a “John Waters impersonator.” His latest book, Carsick, gives just a hint of who else he might be.
hazlitt.netAll hail the "Pope of Trash."
www.out.comJohn Waters is an American film director, producer, and writer who is known for his boundary-pushing cult films such as Pink Flamingos (1972), Hairspray (1988), Cry-Baby (1990), and Serial Mom (1994). Often called the ‘Pope of Trash,’ Waters reveled in making films that repulsed many critics and viewers when he first came on the scene in the late 1960s.
www.britannica.comJohn Waters shares his top two reasons for sporting that famous pencil-thin moustache.
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