
Sleight
about 9 years ago
over 60 years ago ...more
over 60 years ago
“Andy Warhol called Marie Menken and Willard Maas ‘the last of the great bohemians,’ and, in 1965, made Bitch, his real-life parody of Edward Albee’s play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, with Willard and Marie sitting on the couch in their living room, drunk and arguing on a Sunday afternoon. Unscripted, shot with a stationary camera in his signature home-movie documentary style, Warhol’s Bitch has never before been seen by the public—until now…” (Philip Gefter).
Bitch
1965
about 9 years ago
over 7 years ago
over 7 years ago
No image available
about 1 year ago
almost 5 years ago
about 14 years ago
almost 11 years ago
No image available
Invalid date
about 2 years ago
over 6 years ago
almost 5 years ago
almost 8 years ago
over 3 years ago
about 4 years ago
about 6 years ago
almost 3 years ago
over 6 years ago
No image available
Invalid date
over 16 years ago
over 6 years ago
over 60 years ago ...more
over 60 years ago
“Andy Warhol called Marie Menken and Willard Maas ‘the last of the great bohemians,’ and, in 1965, made Bitch, his real-life parody of Edward Albee’s play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, with Willard and Marie sitting on the couch in their living room, drunk and arguing on a Sunday afternoon. Unscripted, shot with a stationary camera in his signature home-movie documentary style, Warhol’s Bitch has never before been seen by the public—until now…” (Philip Gefter).
Bitch
1965
about 9 years ago
over 7 years ago
over 7 years ago
No image available
about 1 year ago
almost 5 years ago
about 14 years ago
almost 11 years ago
No image available
Invalid date
about 2 years ago
over 6 years ago
almost 5 years ago
almost 8 years ago
over 3 years ago
about 4 years ago
about 6 years ago
almost 3 years ago
over 6 years ago
No image available
Invalid date
over 16 years ago
over 6 years ago