Rockets Redglare

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Rockets Redglare
Born May 8, 1949
New York City, New York
Died May 28, 2001 (aged 52)
New York City, New York

Rockets Redglare (May 8, 1949 - May 28, 2001) is the stage name of American character actor and stand-up comic Michael Morra. He appeared in over 30 films in the 1980s and 1990s, including a number of independent films, and mainstream films such as After Hours (1984) and Desperately Seeking Susan (1985).

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Morra was born in New York City to a heroin-addicted 15-year-old mother named Agnes Tarrulli Morra. While still in utero, Morra became addicted to heroin, so doctors added an opiate derivative into his baby formula so that he could withdraw from the drug. Morra's father and uncle were career criminals in the Italian-American criminal underworld in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn. After his father was deported to his native Italy, Agnes began a relationship with a drug-addicted former boxer who assaulted both young Morra and the mother. After his mother was killed by her boyfriend, Morra took up the stage name Rockets Redglare, from the fifth line of the US national anthem.

[edit] 1970s and 1980s

In the late 1970s, Morra spent most of his time in the East Village, where he "became a permanent fixture in the punk and porno film scenes".[1] Morra worked as bouncer at the East Village "Red Bar", as a roadie for a band called the Hassles (with a young Billy Joel), and acted as a bodyguard and drug supplier to punk rock bassist Sid Vicious and artist-musician Jean Michel Basquiat. The night Sid Vicious allegedly killed his girlfriend Nancy Spungen, Morra had delivered 40 capsules of Dilaudid to the couple's room at the Chelsea Hotel. In his book, Pretty Vacant: A History of Punk, Phil Strongman names Nancy Spungen's killer as Rockets Redglare.

Morra began doing stand up comedy routines at East Village bars such as Pyramid and Club 57 in his own show called "Taxi Cabaret", and he also did performance art. He made his acting debut in the 1984 Eric Mitchell film The Way It Is, also known as Euridice on the Avenues, a film whose cast also included Steve Buscemi and Vincent Gallo (who also composed the soundtrack). Later that year, he appeared in the Jim Jarmusch film Stranger Than Paradise.[2] He was often cast as a rough or seedy character, which echoed his real-life upbringing and drug addiction problems.

[edit] 1990s and 2000s

Morra died in 2001 from a combination of kidney failure, liver failure, cirrhosis and hepatitis C.[3] Morra's death was hastened by his multiple addictions: he admitted that "Anything I ever liked...I always did to excess", including heroin, cocaine, and alcohol.[4] At the time of his death, Morra was morbidly obese and hospitalized. In 2003, Luis Fernandez de la Reguera released a documentary about Morra entitled Rockets Redglare!, a "portrait of the New York personality from his early days around '50s hustlers to the East Village crowd of the '80s to his tragic death in 2001".[5]

After Morra's death, obituary-writers tried to sum up Morra's varied, colorful, and unusual life in the New York art and music scenes as a bodyguard/roadie turned-actor/comedian. The Chicago Reader called Morra a "...compulsive hustler who became obese once he decided to substitute beer for drugs", and acknowledges that "... he was also a gifted raconteur" and storyteller, especially in informal, relaxed settings.[6] Seattle newspaper The Stranger argued that Morra became a New York City "alternative celebrity"[7] in the city's East Village bars and clubs where he would drink and tell stories.

[edit] Filmography

      • Also appeared as 'The Barber' in season 3 of the HBO tv show Oz.

[edit] References

[edit] External links