Tag Archives: After Hours

Hours with Griffin Dunne

“After Hours” was a movie I watched obsessively when I was just embarking on adulthood; its surreal night life helped motivate me to move to New York. Joey Soloway described the film to me as a “heroine’s journey” when I interviewed him for my Hollywood Reporter story on the film’s star, Griffin Dunne. I did feel a little like Alice running around the wonderland of my old East Village hood with Dunne. We even fell down a rabbit hole into a ‘90s flat. Son of Dominick and Lenny Dunne, nephew of John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion, Grif is well versed in the art of story telling, as is evident in his memoir, “The Friday Afternoon Club”. But the crazy tales of growing up in Hollywood crash into the brutal reality of his sister Dominique’s murder. His powerful book and my article publish today.

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Lou Reed After Hours

Friday night at the MEOW Conference in Austin, Grace London found the dark innocence in the Velvet Underground song “After Hours” like only a 13-year-old could. A tall, lanky girl with eyeliner curls, the Austin artist sang with the raw emotional warble of Conor Oberst or Chan Marshall as she strummed an acoustic guitar hard, then stepped on the pedal smashing the kick drum behind her for good measure. It was an impressive performance, doubly impressive that a young teen was playing a Velvets cover, triply impressive that she was playing that cover. Here was a new generation, discovering Lou Reed’s songwriting genius. “If you close the door, the night could last forever/ Leave the sunshine out/ And say hello to never.”

Genius is one of those words that gets tossed around so much, but Lou Reed was definitely a genius. I’ve been thinking about the Velvets a lot lately, ever since I saw Tammy Faye Starlite’s amazing Nico tribute. I played “All Tomorrow’s Parties” for my Revolution Girl Style students, explaining how this was the dawn of punk (and how women were there at the beginning). My love of Lou runs long and deep. In college I was obsessed with him. So important were albums like Street Hassle and Transformer, I can’t really imagine myself without the influence of his music. That didn’t stop me from once writing a negative review of a Broadway show he did, which I felt pandered to fans. I guess Lou read his press; a few years later, he refused to talk to me for Interview magazine. “Isn’t she that writer who writes terrible things about me?” he apparently said. Ouch.

While I stand by my judgment, I would take it all back, because I love Lou Reed’s music and what he stood for: an unapologetic, tough, loving, cantankerous, idealistic, ugly, beautiful, rapturous aesthetic, that is now silenced forever.

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