Editing Interview:2003/07 Details Magazine

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In fact, the living room could pass for Dr. Caligari's Museum of Transgressive Art. Prominently displayed on one wall is Epiphany 1 (Adoration of the Magi), a signed lithograph by Gottfried Helnwein that depics what looks like a baptism attended by Nazi officers; by the front door sits Homunculus, a Joachim Luetke sculpture of a baby whos hands are chicken feet and whose lower body tapers off like a caterpillar's. If it's German and it makes you squirm, Manson likes it.
 
In fact, the living room could pass for Dr. Caligari's Museum of Transgressive Art. Prominently displayed on one wall is Epiphany 1 (Adoration of the Magi), a signed lithograph by Gottfried Helnwein that depics what looks like a baptism attended by Nazi officers; by the front door sits Homunculus, a Joachim Luetke sculpture of a baby whos hands are chicken feet and whose lower body tapers off like a caterpillar's. If it's German and it makes you squirm, Manson likes it.
  
Actually, that's the idea behind his new album, [[The Golden Age of Grotesque (album)|The Golden Age of Grotesque]]. Manson says it was inspired by the Weimar Republic, by the boom in art and burlesque in Berlin that preceded Hitler's march to power. (Which means he's got to be the only performer in history to bring together Christopher Isherwood and Iron Maiden.) That indie-film directors Randy Barbato and Fenton Bailey recently cast Manson as a Teutonic drag queen in their movie [[Christina Superstar|Party Monster]], and they were struct by both his skill as an actor ("The guy is a comic genius," Barbato says) and the depth of his database. "We're doing this film about whether Hitler was gay," Barbato says, "and Manson would send us a list of books that he thought we should check out. I mean, we started using him as a resource for other projects of ours." Get Manson going about The Golden Age of Grotesque and it's only a few seconds before he's dropping references to Expressionism and Dada and film noir, to Fellini, Dali, Gaudi, Nietzsche, Jung, Freud, and, not unexpectedly, the Marqus de Sade.
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Actually, that's the idea behind his new album, [[The Golden Age of Grotesque (album)|The Golden Age of Grotesque]]. Manson says it was inspired by the Weimar Republic, by the boom in art and burlesque in Berlin that preceded Hitler's march to power. (Which means he's got to be the only performer in history to bring together Christopher Isherwood and Iron Maiden.) That indie-film directors Randy Barbato and Fenton Bailey recently cast Manson as a Teutonic drag queen in their movie [[Christina|Party Monster]], and they were struct by both his skill as an actor ("The guy is a comic genius," Barbato says) and the depth of his database. "We're doing this film about whether Hitler was gay," Barbato says, "and Manson would send us a list of books that he thought we should check out. I mean, we started using him as a resource for other projects of ours." Get Manson going about The Golden Age of Grotesque and it's only a few seconds before he's dropping references to Expressionism and Dada and film noir, to Fellini, Dali, Gaudi, Nietzsche, Jung, Freud, and, not unexpectedly, the Marqus de Sade.
  
 
"All this imagery was piling in from all directions," he says. "A lot of times I would say 'I want a song that sounds like elephants and Rockettes.' Or 'I want a song that sounds like a burning piano.'" At his fingertips is a goblet of absinthe, which is illegal in the United States; at his feet lies a brown bear rug, which is illegal in California. "I was very vague and evasive with the record company," he goes on. "I would give them recordings of me talking to my cat. I would say, 'This is the single,' and they'd laugh, 'Yeah, ha ha, that's funny. But really, where is it?'"
 
"All this imagery was piling in from all directions," he says. "A lot of times I would say 'I want a song that sounds like elephants and Rockettes.' Or 'I want a song that sounds like a burning piano.'" At his fingertips is a goblet of absinthe, which is illegal in the United States; at his feet lies a brown bear rug, which is illegal in California. "I was very vague and evasive with the record company," he goes on. "I would give them recordings of me talking to my cat. I would say, 'This is the single,' and they'd laugh, 'Yeah, ha ha, that's funny. But really, where is it?'"

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