Phranc

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Phranc
Phranc 01.jpg
Phranc at Work It!, a conference at USC on gender, race, and sexuality in pop music
Background information
Birth nameSusan Gottlieb
Born (1957-08-28) August 28, 1957 (age 67)
Santa Monica, California, U.S.
Genres Punk rock, folk
OccupationSinger-songwriter
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar
Years active1970s–present
Website http://www.phranc.la/

Phranc (born Susan Gottlieb; [1] August 28, 1957), [2] is an American singer-songwriter whose career began playing in several bands in the late 1970s Los Angeles punk rock scene. Her musical style later shifted during the 1980s as a solo artist, into a self-proclaimed "All-American Jewish lesbian folksinger." [3]

Contents

Biography

Phranc was born Susan Gottlieb in Santa Monica, California, and grew up in Mar Vista, Los Angeles. [2] She began her performing career in the late 1970s and early 1980s punk scene in Los Angeles. She had a bleached blonde crewcut and wore male attire, creating an androgynous persona for her first band, Nervous Gender, which formed in 1978. The writer V/D wrote of her for the punk fanzine Slash , "On stage, Phranc looks like a 14-year-old runaway from a boys' reform school." The band was influential in the development of what later came to be known as 'electropunk'. In 1980 she left Nervous Gender to join the punk band Catholic Discipline, in which Craig Lee (Bags) and Claude Bessy, journalist for Slash punk fanzine, were the lead singers. Phranc appears with Catholic Discipline in the 1980 documentary The Decline of Western Civilization . She was also in Castration Squad, a feminist, all-female punk band which also featured Dinah Cancer of 45 Grave, Elissa Bello of The Go-Go's, Alice Bag of the Bags, Tracy Lea of Redd Kross, and Shannon Wilhelm.

In the 1980s, Phranc pursued a solo career. She performs in Paul Morrissey's film Madame Wang's (1981) as Phranque. She began playing an acoustic guitar and released Folksinger on Rhino Records in 1985. [4] She opened for music acts such as The Smiths, Hüsker Dü, Violent Femmes, and Billy Bragg. [4] She styled herself the "All-American Jewish Lesbian Folksinger" [5] and with a wry sense of humour released the LP I Enjoy Being a Girl in 1989 on Island Records, appearing on the cover with her trademark 'flat top' hair style. [6] Describing a live performance, Adam Block wrote "Phranc's unnerving androgyny (expressed with easy confidence) and her fervent opinions (couched in sly, laconic wit) make her a fascinating performer." [7] Her third full-length recording, released in 1991, was Positively Phranc . [8] [9]

Phranc was an important influence on the Queercore movement, [10] being acknowledged as such by Team Dresch in their song for her, "Uncle Phranc." In the 1990s many queercore bands and musicians involved in queercore music began collaborating with her. She appeared as a guest on the Team Dresch LP/CD Captain My Captain and, as well, members of Team Dresch, Tobi Vail of Bikini Kill, Patty Schemel of Hole and others have played with Phranc on her EP Goofyfoot and other songs. Phranc performs and is interviewed in the queercore documentary She's Real, Worse Than Queer by Lucy Thane, and she has appeared frequently at queercore events such as Olympia's Homo-a-go-go festival. In the 1990s Phranc performed "Hot August Phranc", performing as Neil Diamond. [11] On her full-length CD of 1998, Milkman , she is joined by Steve MacDonald of Redd Kross, who plays bass. Her most recent releases, including Milkman, appear on her own independent record label, Phancy Records.

The 2001 documentary film, Lifetime Guarantee, directed by Lisa Udelson, chronicled Phranc's side job as a Tupperware demonstrator and manager. The documentary showed that despite Phranc's high sales and high-profile, [1] her enthusiastic and sincere approach to the job, and her engaging manner and popularity among the sales force, Phranc was disappointed to find that the Tupperware corporation itself did not celebrate or even acknowledge her genuine achievements in sales and marketing for the company. Phranc was still selling Tupperware in 2008, [12] but as of 2013 her online store was closed. [13] [14]

She still performs occasionally, but spends more time working on creative visual art projects, including her Cardboard Cobbler sculptures. In December 2007 she had a solo art show at Cue Art Foundation in New York City curated by Ann Magnuson; The New York Times review compared her work to Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol. [15] Phranc had her first major West Coast solo show, at Craig Krull Gallery, June 18 to July 23, 2011, an exhibition made of beach themed cardboard and craft paper works. She continues to work in her Santa Monica studio and is represented by Krull.

Phranc was absent from her blog and Facebook from late 2011 to Spring 2014. [16] Phranc announced in April 2014 that she had been prevented from participating in online activities due to an injury. [17]

In 2023 Phranc's retrospective The Butch Closet was held at Craig Krull Gallery in Santa Monica. It was a multi-disciplinary show that included new and old work as well as ephemera, home movies, merchandise and artfacts from her music and visual art career spanning over 40 years. It included pieces like drawings of food, vacuums, and toothpaste that Phranc did while working at the Women's Building in the 1970s, as well as current work like a reproduction of her Slash magazine t-shirt and her 1960s Lambchop Halloween costume. [18]

Personal life

Phranc lives in Santa Monica, California with her partner and children.

Discography

Albums

Singles

  • "Amazon" (1985), Stiff
  • "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" (1986), Stiff
  • "Bulldagger Swagger" b/w "Hillary's Eyebrows" 7" single (1994), Kill Rock Stars

Compilations

  • "My Favorite Women Newscasters" on The Best of the Radio Tokyo Tapes (Chameleon 8608, 1987) [19]
  • Some Songs (1997)
  • Hang Ten Double CD on American Pop Project, Phranc with Satan's Pilgrims
  • "Dumb Hairdresser" on Milkshake – A CD to Benefit the Harvey Milk Institute (1998), timmi-kat ReCoRDS
  • "Tupperware Lady" on Kat Vox: A CD to Celebrate 20 Years of timmi-kat ReCoRDS (2011), timmi-kat ReCoRDS

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

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References

  1. 1 2 Meyer, Carla (February 1, 2012) [June 20, 2001]. "A Passion for Plastic / Lesbian folksinger Phranc's career in Tupperware is documented in Lisa Udelson's fillm". SFGate. San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on April 10, 2021. Retrieved February 27, 2021.
  2. 1 2 Nafus, Chale (February 2, 2019). "Legacy Award: Phranc / Frank Talk about Phranc". OUTsider. Archived from the original on October 4, 2021. Retrieved October 4, 2021.
  3. Strong, Martin Charles (2003). "The 1980s: Phranc". The Great Indie Discography: complete discographies listing every track recorded by more than 2,000 artists (2nd ed.). Edinburgh: Canongate Books Ltd. p. 453. ISBN   978-1-84195-335-9. LCCN   2005434116. OCLC   52530784. OL   22546927M. ark:/13960/s21rngfrv31.
  4. 1 2 Block, Adam (July 22, 1986). "Flat-top Fantasies, Post-punk Politics from Folksinger Phranc" (PDF). Pop Life. The Advocate . No. 451. p. 43. ISSN   0001-8996. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 1, 2024.
  5. Kort, Michele (September 16, 1997). "Phranc". The Advocate . No. 742. Liberation Publications / Equal Entertainment LLC. p. 65. eISSN   2158-2149. ISSN   0001-8996. ProQuest   215761922 (in GenderWatch database; accession number SFLNSIADV1197ADDZ549000013), EBSCOhost   9711091635 (in MAS Ultra: School Edition, MasterFILE Premier, LGBTQ+ Source, and Academic Search Ultimate databases).
  6. Block, Adam (June 20, 1989). "Of Flattops, Fake Fags, and Real Benefits" (PDF). The Advocate . No. 527. p. 64. ISSN   0001-8996. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 20, 2023.
  7. Block, Adam (February 27, 1990). "Phranc Talk: The Dreams and Desires of an All-American Jewish Lesbian Folksinger" (PDF). The Advocate . No. 545. p. 57. ISSN   0001-8996. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 1, 2024.
  8. Farber, Jim (April 12, 1991). "Positively Phranc (1991)". Music Review. Entertainment Weekly . No. 61. Archived from the original on September 12, 2012. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  9. Block, Adam (March 26, 1991). "A lavender avalanche..." (PDF). Block on Rock. The Advocate . No. 573. p. 71. ISSN   0001-8996. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 1, 2024.
  10. Jackson, Jhoni (June 23, 2016). "7 Queer Latinx Punk Icons You Should Know". Music. Remezcla. Archived from the original on November 3, 2016. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
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  14. "My.Tupperware | This page is currently unavailable". Wayback Machine. Internet Archive. May 9, 2013. Archived from the original on May 9, 2013.
  15. Schwendener, Martha (December 21, 2007). "Art in Review: Ron Linden, Phranc: Cue Art Foundation". The New York Times. Vol. CLVII, no. 54165 (Late ed.). p. E37. ISSN   0362-4331. ProQuest   433741901 for sub-article text; ProQuest   848101835 for full article page image. Archived from the original on November 26, 2022.
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  17. Phranc (April 25, 2014). "Hi Friends! I'm back after a 2 and a half year absence. I..." Facebook. Archived from the original on April 1, 2024. Retrieved April 1, 2024.
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