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Tuli Kupferberg

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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.

Template:AnchorAn 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)

Discography

  • No Deposit No Return (1967)

ESP Disk – ESP-1035

  • Tuli & Friends (1989)

Shimmy Disc – shimmy 020

References

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Further reading

External links

Template:The Fugs

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  1. Vox Table Podcast, Fed. 22, 2010. Fugging Around – by Vox Tablet > Tablet Magazine – A New Read on Jewish Life
  2. Template:Cite news
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  5. Michael Simmons, Tuli Kupferberg featured obit, Mojo, October 2010.
  6. Template:Cite news
  7. Template:Citation as reproduced in Template:Citation
  8. Template:Cite web
  9. Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore
  10. Template:Cite web
  11. Sisario, Ben (July 12, 2010), "Tuli Kupferberg, Poet and Singer, Dies at 86", Artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com.
  12. Mojo Magazine #203, October 2010, p. 34