Los
Angeles Times
March 26, 2004
MOVIE REVIEW
The guy with the band
Rodney Bingenheimer's fame comes from finding -
and hanging with - rock's royalty.
'Mayor of Sunset Strip'
(Courtesy of Rodney Bingenheimer)
By Kenneth Turan, Times Staff Writer
His is a name you can't make up, a voice you can't forget
even if you want to, a look beyond duplication or even
description. He's been called the prince of pop, the king
of L.A. radio, even, as an intriguing new documentary
has it, the "Mayor of the Sunset Strip." But
who is Rodney Bingenheimer really, and why should anyone
care?
Although currently relegated to a Sunday midnight to 3
a.m. slot, Bingenheimer has been a fixture at Los Angeles'
KROQ-FM (106.7) since 1976. He's been instrumental in
breaking any number of bands, from the Sex Pistols and
Blondie to Nirvana, Oasis and Coldplay, someone considered
so influential in the world of rock that Courtney Love
admits "I stalked him" to get his imprimatur.
But director George Hickenlooper, whose best-known documentary
was on Francis Ford Coppola and the making of "Apocalypse
Now," sees Bingenheimer as something more. For him,
this quiet little man, this stranger in a strange land
forever blinking in the bright light of day, is the ultimate
product of society's obsession with fame. He's someone
who became known for being an intimate of the well-known
- in Mick Jagger's acid phrase, "a famous groupie,
now respectable" - someone who believed that celebrity
would set him free. How much that happened and at what
cost is a more open, more interesting question.
Certainly, the walls of what the man himself mockingly
calls Bingenheimer Manor attest to a range of acquaintance
that is staggering. The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Elvis
Presley (who gave him his driver's license), the Doors,
Rod Stewart, Elton John, David Bowie, the list goes on
and on and finally includes John F. Kennedy and Brigitte
Bardot. Not bad for someone who was, a childhood friend
says, "the kid everyone beat up on the way to high
school."
That childhood, spent in Northern California's suburban
Mountain View, is in some ways the key to it all. His
mother, star-struck with a vengeance, separated from Bingenheimer's
father when the boy was 3, often leaving him alone with
his dreams while she worked as a waitress at night. Finally,
unbelievably, she dropped him off at Connie Stevens' Los
Angeles house when he was 17, instructed him to get the
star's autograph, and never came back.
Gravitating to the music scene, he became the ultimate
guy with the band, the small face near the stage, the
man hanging out with someone everyone wanted to meet.
"Rodney knew them all," a disbelieving childhood
friend says, looking over the photographic evidence. "I
can't quite figure this out."
That's the question, isn't it? What does it say about
the nature of fame that anyone who was anyone let this
quiet, nervous person in so close? What secret did Rodney
Bingenheimer know, how did he unlock the mystery of celebrity
that has frustrated so many?
As revealed in "Mayor," Bingenheimer's guilelessness
certainly played a part. It's not everyone who can say
with complete sincerity of Andy Warhol and his own late
mother, "Andy is an angel with my mom right now up
in heaven." Bingenheimer buys into the system unquestionably,
wanting nothing of the stars but their heavenly presence.
As Cher says, he is "very genuine. You don't have
to worry about an ulterior motive."
But more than that, it's as if Bingenheimer and celebrities
sensed an instinctive kinship. Stars also turn out to
be damaged people with childhood wounds that have never
healed, "aliens in high school," as Joan Jett
puts it. The purity of his unwavering passion is a nice
fit with celebrity insecurity, and, as Miss Mercy of the
GTOs says, "everybody needs a worshiper."
If this were a less aware film, Bingenheimer would be
portrayed as someone who squandered his life in thrall
to celebrity. But in fact, "Mayor" is careful
to point out his quite real accomplishments, his gift
for finding and promoting new music, his place as an acknowledged
if unlikely champion of cutting-edge sounds.
Still, in one of "Mayor's" most revealing moments,
Bingenheimer says quietly that he wishes his life had
been different. Despite his closeness to fame and its
blandishments, there is no one, now that his beloved mother
is gone, to whom he can claim a close emotional attachment
("it's a lot easier that way," he says), and
the one woman he pines for views him quite definitely
as just a friend. A life in the limelight, but also a
disconnected one.
Made by Hickenlooper over a six-year period, "Mayor"
is rich in interviews, with comments from rock stars;
USC's Leo Braudy, author of "The Frenzy of Renown:
Fame and Its History"; and members of Bingenheimer's
family, including his father, Bing, and his stepmother,
Zelda. The director asks them the question that is at
the heart of the matter: "What's so special about
mingling with celebrities?" They think long and hard
but do not come up with an answer.
'Mayor of the Sunset Strip'
MPAA rating: R, for sexual content/nudity, language and
some drug references
Times guidelines: Adult subject matter.
A Caldera Productions, Perna Productions and Question
Mark Productions in association with Kino-Eye America
presentation, released by First Look Pictures. Director
George Hickenlooper. Producers Chris Carter, Greg Little,
Tommy Perna. Executive producer Donald Zukerman. Screenplay
Hickenlooper. Cinematographers Kramer Morgenthau, Igor
Meglic, Carter, Hickenlooper. Editor Julie Janata. Music
Anthony Marinelli. Running time: 1 hour, 35 minutes.
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