Hannah Maguire
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But they were like, what we really didn't want is polyester shirts.
So we would say that they melted under the lights and that's why you couldn't come in if you were wearing one.
But obviously it just cancels out an entire group of lower income people.
If you were lucky enough to get past the doorman, who was not only good looking, he was paid more than anyone else, so he wouldn't take bribes.
People just like shoving cocaine in his pocket.
But he's like, he's the king of the door.
And if you made it past him, his name's Steve Benecke, I think, the last days of Rome were waiting for you on the inside.
Steve Rubell would walk through his club wearing a massive coat filled with cash and drugs that he would hand out to anyone he liked the look on.
The basement was full of mattresses populated by anonymous sex and competitions in which a trip to St Bart's was awarded to the patron who could do the most disgusting thing for the longest or farthest.
We also have to remember this is the age of the Quaalude.
But I think if you even managed to make it through a night at Studio 54 ingesting no drugs, it would be quite difficult for you to tell the difference because it is so mad.
I read that Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, they were allowed in.
The rest of the Rolling Stones had to pay.
For the 33 months that it was open, Studio 54 was the cutting edge of cool at the dawn of the age of celebrity.
Michael Jackson was a big fan, famously saying that Studio 54 was where you come when you want to escape.
In the 70s, people were famous for having achieved something.
It wasn't like it is now where you're famous for being famous.
You were famous because you were good at something.