11 or 12 Things Remembered Well About the Chelsea Hotel

verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style

….or Hotel Chelsea, which looms large on West 23rd Street in Manhattan and in the history of American arts and letters as its greatest unofficial artists’ colony. Given the proliferation of renowned novelists, poets, painters, playwrights, actors, filmmakers, and musicians who put head to pillow at the Chelsea, long- and short-term, it’s almost easier compiling a list of well-known 20th century artists who didn’t stay at the hotel. Imagine if the goings-on at Brook Farm, America’s first famous commune of artists, had lasted more than century, or if London’s Bloomsbury Group had actually all bunked together. From the celebrated books, poems, and songs written in or about the Chelsea to the comic and tragic escapades of its residents and guests, the hotel has left a very rich legacy. Here are a few of its greatest hits.

  • New York’s Tallest Building

    The 12-story red brick with wrought-iron balconies came to life in 1883 as one of Gotham’s first co-operative apartment complexes, and for a cup of coffee it was the city’s tallest building. Constructed on the communitarian philosophical foundations of Fourierism, it reserved some of its units for the tradesmen who built it and set aside the 12th floor for artists’ studios. In 1905, after hard times and high costs had bankrupted the co-operative, the building was transformed into the swanky Hotel Chelsea, taking advantage of its location at the heart of what was then the city’s theatre district.

  • By Any Other Name: O. Henry and Mark Twain

    From its earliest days as a hotel, the Chelsea provided accommodations for artistic royalty, though even then some of them were not financially flush. Writer O. Henry, for example, reputedly registered under a string of different names to avoid his creditors. Samuel Clemens, on the other hand, had no compunction about strolling the halls of the hotel as Mark Twain. Novelist and lit crit William Dean Howells sublet. Among those who conversed with canvas in the studios atop the Chelsea in this era were Impressionist Childe Hassam and Ashcan Schooler John French Sloan. In the decades to come, famous painters who called the Chelsea home included Jackson Pollack, Larry Rivers, and Julian Schnabel.

  • Wolfe at the Door

    When the Chelsea, like the rest of the country, was down at its heels during the Great Depression, the hotel was home to poet Edgar Lee Masters (Spoon River Anthology), who worried in verse about its seemingly imminent demise (“Soon this Chelsea Hotel/Will vanish before the city’s merchant greed”). Encouraged by Masters to take up residence in the Chelsea, novelist Thomas Wolfe wrote You Can’t Go Home Again (1940) there. After describing the struggles of a young writer in New York City, Wolfe’s roman a clef segues into one of American literature’s most eloquent condemnations of capitalism run amuck. Check out the passage in the final chapter that begins “I believe that we are lost here in America, but I believe we shall be found.”

  • Within Stumbling Distance: Dylan Thomas

    Although El Quijote, the restaurant-bar next to the hotel, had its own considerable history, another drinking establishment with a reputation as a writers’ hangout, the White Horse Tavern, is memorably connected with the Chelsea. Located in Greenwich Village, within stumbling distance of the hotel, it was the White Horse at which Welsh poet Dylan Thomas drank himself to death in November 1953. According to legend, Thomas’s fatal drinking binge was the result of a single wee-hours excursion to the White Horse, after which he made the dubious claim of having downed 18 scotches. A more reliable account traces him back to the Chelsea following that episode, where he slept off his inebriation before going to the White Horse again later in the morning, drinking two beers, returning to the Chelsea, collapsing into coma, and dying several days later in St. Vincent’s Hospital.

  • Beat Generation

    Beats Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg both lived at the Chelsea. While it is sometimes wrongly claimed that Kerouac wrote portions of his masterpiece On the Road in the Chelsea, much of the novel was written nearby in a townhouse on West 20th Street. Moreover, William S. Burroughs (fictionalized in On the Road as Old Bull Lee) did write the most of the classic Beat novel Naked Lunch (1959) in the Chelsea. In the 1980s and ‘90s, two of the movement’s more celebrated members, poets Gregory Corso and Herbert Huncke, spent their declining years haunting the Chelsea.

  • After the Fall: Arthur Miller

    From 1962 to 1968, following the collapse of his marriage to actress Marilyn Monroe, playwright Arthur Miller lived in the Chelsea, where he wrote After the Fall (1964) in room 614. When a plaque to that effect (one of several for famous residents) went up at the hotel, Miller said, “Thank God the Chelsea has never been respectable.” More tellingly, in an essay titled “The Chelsea Effect,” he wrote, “This hotel does not belong to America. There are no vacuum cleaners, no rules and shame…it’s the high spot of the surreal.”

  • Sex, Drugs, and…You Know: The Sixties

    If the 1960s “stumbled into the Chelsea with young, bloodshot eyes,” as Arthur Miller claimed, the hotel’s fashionably seedy threshold most definitely was crossed to a druggy folk/rock soundtrack. “You had to be a certified dealer to get a job as a bellboy,” claimed the Rolling StonesKeith Richards, a frequent guest. Reputedly, guitar god Jimi Hendrix, mistaken by an old woman for a bellboy during one stay at the hotel, obliged by carrying her bags. “Chelsea Morning” was the product of a visit by Joni Mitchell. In the best-known song about the landmark, “Chelsea Hotel No. 2,” Leonard Cohen remembers well his tryst there with Janis Joplin, though too often it is the song’s reference to oral sex that is cited by listeners rather than the poetry of the fleeting privileged moments shared by the famous lovers.

  • Chelsea Girls: Andy Warhol

    Pop artist/filmmaker Andy Warhol and his quirky coterie of Factory performers invaded the Chelsea to shoot Chelsea Girls (1966), ostensibly the story of some of the Warhol “superstars” who lived in the hotel. Nico appeared and sang the title song (composed by the Velvet Underground’s Lou Reed and Sterling Morrison); Edie Sedgwick demanded that her scene be cut from the film. Critic Roger Ebert was less than impressed: “Warhol used a split screen, so that while one of his superstars was doing nothing on the left screen, we could watch another of his superstars doing nothing on the right screen.” Film historians have been kinder.

  • Bob Dylan’s Sad-Eyed Lady

    Two songs by Bob Dylan (who kept an apartment at the hotel from 1961 to 1964) are famously Chelsea-related: the marathon “Sad-eyed Lady of Lowlands” and the melancholy lament “Sara,” both love songs for his first wife. In the second, Dylan plaintively recalls “staying up for days in the Chelsea Hotel” writing the first for her. In the first he describes her “cowboy mouth,” which provided the title for the play co-written in the Chelsea by Patti Smith (more on her in a minute) and Sam Shepard, at the time still almost as well-known as the drummer for the Holy Modal Rounders as he was as a playwright.

  • Just Kids: Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe

    Poet-turned-rocker Patti Smith and acclaimed photographer Robert Mapplethorpe came of age together as bohemian artists in a complex relationship that Smith chronicled in her book Just Kids (2010). Some of its most important moments unfolded at the Chelsea. The book also provides a vivid portrait of Stanley Bard, who managed the Chelsea from the early 1970s to 2007. Part curator, part patron of the arts, Bard adorned the lobby walls with artworks accepted as collateral on rent payments to come. Another Chelsea resident named Smith is also prominent in Just Kids: Harry Smith, the extraordinary polymath and experimental filmmaker who compiled the old recordings that became the Anthology of American Folk Music, the bible of the folk revival of the 1960s.

  • At the Movies

    While living at the Chelsea, British science-fiction writer Sir Arthur C. Clarke wrote the screenplay for the film 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) and reportedly argued about it there with co-writer and director Stanley Kubrick. Cineast and filmmaker Jonas Mekas lived at the Chelsea, too, as did actor-novelist-director Ethan Hawke, who set his film Chelsea Walls (2001) at the hotel. The climax of the film Sid and Nancy (1986) occurs at the Chelsea, where punk rocker Sid Vicious, formerly of the Sex Pistols, had come to live with his girlfriend, Nancy Spungen, and where she was murdered in 1978.

  • “Hallelujah”: The Chelsea Endures

    In more recent decades, Chelsea residents have included Madonna, who lived there in the early 1980s but returned to Room 822 to shoot her photography book Sex (1992); singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright, whose anthem “Hallelujah” became a late-career signature hit for Leonard Cohen; and novelist Joseph O’Neill, author of Netherland (2008). In 2011 the Chelsea was sold to a real estate developer, who resold it to another in 2013. In the meantime, the hotel stopped taking reservations and underwent renovation, as longtime residents went to court, fearing that they were going to be pushed out.