Showing posts with label Russ Meyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russ Meyer. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2012

HAJI CAT



Very little is known for sure about the mysterious Haji, also occasionally credited as "Haji Cat" and "Haji Catton", we don't even know the story of how she got her famous moniker (when questioned, Haji says that story is a long one). One thing that is known for sure however, is that the notorious sexploitation king Russ Meyer thought enough of her to cast her in several of his films, --a noteworthy accolade from a director known for usually only working with an actress once or twice, and then never calling her again. How Haji got started in show business appears to be another one of her mysteries but she did spend some time working as an exotic dancer at a club called The Losers on La Cienega Boulevard in LA. While she was workin' it as a go-go dancer, she met Tura Satana, who Haji later introduced to Russ Meyer. The two would co-star in what is one, if not the most famous and acclaimed of all his films, 1965's Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!.

Before portraying the eclectically accented third of the hell-raising hell-cat gang, Haji starred in Motorpsycho! (1965), the third of Meyer's black and white gothic melodramas. Though the plot revolves around Corey, an ineffectual veterinarian attempting to avenge the rape of his wife, Haji's Ruby Bonner is easily the most compelling character in the narrative. A newly remarried Cajun widow, she falls out with her current schlub of a husband on the road, and decides to team up with our "hero" to seek vengeance on the gang-raping bikers that killed her previous husband. From the moment she appears, Ruby becomes the hardest driving force in the film. It is Ruby who sucks the poison out of Corey, it is Ruby who watches over Corey as he rests and recovers from the poisonous snake bite, and it is Ruby who defends herself and Corey from one of the bikers with a classic mantis move.

After Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!, Haji continued to work with Meyer, appearing in Good Morning...and Goodbye! (1967), Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970), and Supervixens (1975). She often wrote her own dialog for her parts in Meyer's films, and contributed psychedelic elements, like body painting, adding extra atmosphere to his rural sex-romps.


More than just a staple of the Russ Meyer stable, Haji appeared in John Cassavetes's crime-drama The Killing of Chinese Bookie (1976). She had a supporting role in the outrageous "women-in-prison" sexploitation film Ilsa, Harem Keeper of the Oil Sheiks (1976) as a spy disguised as a dancing girl, and also made an appearance in the musical '70s soft-core take on Don Quixote, When Sex Was a Knightly Affair (1976).

Born in Quebec, Canada, Haji now lives in Malibu, California. Though more or less retired from acting these days, she still gives the occasional interview, and has contributed to several "making-of" documentaries over the last decade including Go, Pussycat, Go! (2005) a short documentary on the making of Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!. A long-time supporter of environmentalism, Haji has maintained a keen interest in nature and the outdoors throughout her life, reportedly starting her mornings by body-surfing in the buff at 6am.

From the Burlesque circuit to the Cult Cinema circuit, Haji's been there and back. However, she's given several interviews over the years and never sounds cynical. Instead she reveals herself to be smart and savvy, if perhaps a bit spacey. Whether she's living the glamorous life as an entertainer on La Cinega, or the quiet life near the coast, thinking about all the little creatures in the ocean, Haji remains one of the most mysterious and fascinating figures of exploitation cinema.

Further Reading:

Big Bosoms and Square Jaws: The Biography of Russ Meyer, King of the Sex Film
; Jimmy McDonough,(2006)
Invasion of the B-Girls; Jewel Shepard, (1992)
Motorpsycho clip

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

The point is of no return

Tally Roses's Foxy Ladies would like to take a moment to remember the great, and sadly since Friday, late Tura Satana. The NY Times reports that her death was announced by her manager Siouxzan Perry and that Ms. Perry believes the cause of death to have been heart failure.

Thank you Tura, for being Varla, for doing your own stunts and fight scenes, for the other films you leave behind, for being a major -if not the major inspiration for this blog, and for never apologizing for being a girl.

Join us this month, as we re-watch, review and remember the films that were graced by Ms. Satana!

Rest in peace, Tura. No one will ever fill those black boots!

Friday, July 23, 2010

LORNA MAITLAND:

Photobucket


Jimmy McDonough once described the notorious, yet mysterious Lorna Maitland as being, "a trashy melon-breasted blonde, one who'd look good in the back of the a pickup in a torn dress"; one page later he described her as having "a terminally unimpressed scowl that seemed to suggest your balls were not long for this world". Given such a description, it's little wonder that Russ-"King Leer"-Meyer cast this corn-fed foxy lady in the first of his black and white Gothic films, 1964's Lorna.

Born Barbara Popejoy on 19 November, 1943 in Glendale California, she wasn't christened "Lorna Maitland" until twenty years later by her discoverer. According to some biographers, Maitland grew up in Norman Oklahoma, but by the time she answered the cattle-call for Meyer, Lorna was working as a dancer in fabulous Las Vegas, Nevada. Despite thousands of hits on Google for her name, few other biographical details are known. Several sources have mentioned but fail to cover Maitland's romantic involvement with Ben "Dino" Rocco, musician and one time member of an early incarnation of Neil Young and Crazy Horse, known then as Psyrcle. Reports conflict as to whether Maitland and Rocco were actually married or just "practically married", but Rocco himself stated at least once that the two spent seventeen years together.

After starring in the then ground-breakingly visceral Lorna, the twenty year-old Maitland went on to a major role in Meyer's next film Mudhoney (1965). Another black and white Southern-Gothic "roughie", Mudhoney is a Meyer classic being critically acclaimed while featuring topless, buxom blondes. Following her two major roles for Meyer, Lorna Maitland had appearances in Mondo Topless (1966), Hip, Hot and 21 (1967) and Hot Thrills and Warm Chills (1967). Given the extensive coverage she received in Fling magazine in 1967, it must have seemed that her career was poised to take off. Once rivaling the prolific and by then, already established Angie Dickinson for the same contract, it seems all stranger that Lorna Maitland's current whereabouts are completely unknown.

Though her career as a sexploitation star was brief and she never achieved mainstream acting success, Lorna certainly made her mark on 60s-cult-culture. Before finally sliding off into the unknown, Maitland used some of the money she earned during the 60s to fund the Autumn Records subsidiary Lorna Records. The label recorded "Baby Don't Do That" for the aforementioned Psyrcle. While she may be remembered by most for her bodacious bust-line, Maitland left another legacy: eternally disturbing auteur and weirdo, Russ Meyer.

Described as "intimidating" and known for sometimes terrorizing his casts during filming, Meyer couldn't have been a character that was easily shaken. Yet, over twenty years after working with her, Meyer was still telling interviewers "Lorna did a number on my head". Convinced that "she hated (his) guts", Meyer rarely had anything nice to say about his two-time leading lady. In a 1980 interview he mused to the UCLA Daily Bruin that "her tits must be down to her knees by now".

What accounts for such ire for so long? Some might chalk it up to the King of the Nudies being something of a grudge holder who was easily crossed. Others hint that perhaps Meyer unconsciously found Maitland a bit intimidating; standing at 5'9, she was one of the few truly Amazonian of his stacked-starlets. Perhaps his film's tagline was spot on and Lorna really was "too much for one man!", too much for even one Russ Meyer.

Want more Maitland?

Video and Images:

- Clip from Lorna (NSFW)
- Trailer for Mudhoney (NSFW)
- Lorna Maitland Tribute site, featuring several black and white photos (NSFW)

Further Reading:

-Throughly researched, and fast-paced read Big Bosoms and Square Jaws: The Biography of Russ Meyer, King of the Sex Film; Jimmy McDonough,(2006)
-The incredibly detailed Russ Meyer-The Life and Films: ; David K. Frasier, (1990)
-The two-part article in contemporary lad-mag Fling, vol. 10 no.1/2 3-5/67, author is uncredited but it may have been Arv Miller