Camille_O'Grady

Camille O'Grady

Camille O'Grady

American musician, visual artist, poet, drag king and performance artist


Camille O'Grady (December 31, 1949 – March 17, 2020) was an American musician, visual artist, poet, drag king, and performance artist. She described herself as a "multimedium" artist.

Early life

Camille O'Grady grew up in New Jersey and was raised Catholic. She was the eldest of seven siblings. After high school she moved to New York City and studied fine art at the Pratt Institute.[1] At Pratt she met photographer Robert Mapplethorpe.[2]

Career

In 1974 she started the band Leather Secrets, which then became Secrets and then the Camille O'Grady Band. She and her band were involved with the New York punk scene, playing many venues associated with the punk movement such as CBGB and Max's Kansas City. Leather Secrets played with Television and both bands were mentioned by David Bowie, who said “Yes, I've seen a lot of good new bands this time. A lot of bands with good names, anyway, how d'ya like 'Leather Secrets' and 'Television'?”[3][4] In 1978 Lou Reed invited her to open for him on his Street Hassle tour.[5] Reed described her as "Patti Smith without a social conscience."[2] That same year she also appeared in the gay experimental film New York City Inferno.

O'Grady performed at gay bars and leather clubs, and was one of the few women allowed in New York gay sex club the Mineshaft. She performed as a drag king named "Jake Savage".[6] In 1979 she moved to San Francisco and began to date photographer and art gallery owner Robert Opel. On July 7, 1979, Opel was killed by two men. Camille O'Grady was present for the murder and testified against Opel's killers.[1] She was in the 2010 documentary Uncle Bob, which was about Robert Opel.

Death

On March 17, 2020, Camille O'Grady died from liver cancer.[1]


References

  1. "Camille O'Grady by Andy Campbell". The Invisible Archive. Retrieved 2023-01-04.
  2. "CAMILLE O'GRADY: MULTIMEDIUM ARTIST". THE LGBTQ HISTORY PROJECT. Retrieved 2023-01-04.
  3. Kirkup, Martin (29 June 1974). "Broadway's got nuthin' on this". Sounds Magazine.
  4. Waterman, Bryan (2011). Television's Marquee Moon 33 1/3. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 80. ISBN 9781441145291.
  5. "Keep On Rocking in the Queer World". Bay Area Reporter. Retrieved 2023-01-05.
  6. Brandon. "Janet Hamill & Camille O'Grady". The Beat Museum. Retrieved 2023-01-05.

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