- Irving Klaw
Irving Klaw (
November 9 ,1910 -September 3 ,1966 ) was an Americanphotographer andfilmmaker .Klaw is best-known for operating a mail-order business selling photographs and film of attractive women (sometimes in bondage) from the 1940s to the 1960s. He was one of the first
fetish photographer s, and his modelBettie Page became the first famousbondage model .He was born in
Brooklyn ,New York . His family business, which eventually becameMovie Star News , began in 1939 when he and his sister Paula opened a struggling used bookstore at 209 East 14th Street in Manhattan. After he discovered teenagers were frequently tearing out photos from his movie magazines, he started selling movie star stills and lobby photo cards. These sold so well that he stopped selling books and moved the store up from the basement to the ground-level storefront and renamed it Irving Klaw Pin Ups. Business thrived and the self-named "Pin-Up King" moved again to 212 East 14th Street and took on the name Movie Star News. Klaw also had a brisk international mail-order business selling cheesecake photos of movie stars.By the late 1940s he was receiving frequent requests for "Damsel-in-distress" photos of actresses being bound and gagged, spanked, and flogged. Because of the difficulty of finding enough film stills to meet this growing demand, Klaw decided to produce his own photos. He and his sister Paula, who actually posed and took most of the photos, started selling bondage and fetish photos using
burlesque dancers like Baby Lake,Tempest Storm , andBlaze Starr as models. Klaw always went to great pains to make sure his photographs contained no sex acts or nudity, which would make the material pornographic and hence illegal to sell via mail.Klaw also published and distributed illustrated adventure/bondage serials by fetish artists
Eric Stanton ,Gene Bilbrew , Adolfo Ruiz and others.After the surprise success of the B-movie "Strip-O-Rama", a 1953
burlesque revue with famous striptease artists and model Bettie Page, Klaw quickly duplicated the format for his own burlesque features. "Varietease" (1954) and "Teaserama" (1955) featuredLili St. Cyr , Tempest Storm, andBettie Page (and were released onDVD in the U.S. in 2000). He produced and directed a third film in 1956, "Buxom Beautease", without Page.Also during this period, Klaw set up weekend home-movie sessions where he produced scores of silent 8mm and 16mm black-and-white film loops. These featured striptease acts and an assortment of fetishistic subjects based on special requests from his clientele. Titles such as "Riding the Human Pony Girl," "Bondage in Leather Harness", and "Booted Amazon Fights Again" depicted women in skimpy lingerie and high heels engaging in elaborate bondage, cat-fights, spanking, and slave training. Nearly all of the film loops were shot on a single, sparsely decorated set, either in the studio above Movie Star News or at a nearby loft space. At least two films with Bettie Page ("Rumble Seat Bondage" and "Jungle Girl Tied to Trees") were filmed outdoors at secluded locations. Still photos taken during the movie sessions were also sold at the store and in the biannual mail-order catalog "Cartoon and Model Parade".
Due to the revival of interest in Bettie Page that began in the 1980s, various compilations of these featurettes have been released on video and DVD. Background music and narration was added to the silent footage for the definitive two-volume video "Irving Klaw Bondage Classics" (1984) by London Enterprises. In 2005, Cult Epics released both volumes on one DVD under the title "Bettie Page: Bondage Queen." Also in 2005, Cult Epics put out "Bettie Page: Pin Up Queen," a DVD compilation of her burlesque performances from "Striporama", "Varietease" and "Teaserama" plus six black-and-white short films.
Klaw returned to filmmaking in 1963, producing two films:
Larry Wolk 's "Intimate Diary of an Artist's Model" and "Nature's Sweethearts", co-directing the latter. Unlike his previous works, both pictures featured a lot of topless women.The "Kefauver Hearings" of the
Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency marked the beginning of the end of Irving Klaw's mail-order photography business. The investigation attackedcomic book s citing the fact that manyjuvenile delinquent s had read them. It also tried to linkpornography with juvenile delinquency.Robert Kennedy , asAttorney General , joined in on the attack.Because of the political and social pressure he faced, Klaw eventually quit the business, and burned his negatives. (It is estimated that more than 80% of the negatives were destroyed.) Paula Klaw secretly kept in her possession some of the better images which can be seen today.
Irving Klaw died on September 3, 1966 due to complications from untreated
appendicitis . He was survived by two sons, Arthur and Jeffrey. His nephew Ira Kramer, son of Paula and Jack Kramer, currently runs the family business known as Movie Star News.In 2005 Klaw was portrayed by
Chris Bauer in the biographical film "The Notorious Bettie Page ".ee also
*
Lili St. Cyr
*Censorship
*Bettie Page External links
* [http://www.irvingklaw.com Irving Klaw - Fan Site]
* [http://www.moviestarnews.com Movie Star News - official site]
* [http://www.austinchronicle.com/issues/dispatch/2006-03-10/screens_feature15.html The Notorious Irving Klaw - article by Irving's grandson Rick Klaw]
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