Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "East Village, Manhattan" in English language version.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 10-6227; OCLC 6671620 (all editions).{{cite book}}
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ignored (help)) ProQuest 425550537 (online; US Newsstream).John Franklin Bardin, a novelist, editor and publicity man, died at Beth Israel Hospital on July 9. He was 64 years old and a resident of the East Village,
Like Basquiat, Thompson lived for a while in the East Village, had notoriously excessive appetites, adored jazz, and was a longtime heroin addict.
Jean Michel Basquiat, a Brooklyn-born artist whose brief career leaped from graffiti scrawled on SoHo foundations to one-man shows in galleries around the world, died Friday at his home in the East Village.
With a bushy white moustache that makes him resemble a Civil War-era cavalry colonel, Mr. Beal is a well-known figure in the East Village, where he often roams the streets wearing a tan corduroy blazer and brown leather boots.
Jeremy Blake, an up-and-coming artist who sought to bridge the worlds of painting and film in lush, color-saturated, hallucinatory digital video works, has died, the New York City Police said yesterday. He was 35 and lived in the East Village in Manhattan.
After dinner Mr. Casablancas walked out into the street. It was nearly 1:00 a.m.; it was drizzling. He misses Los Angeles weather, he said. His wife was at home in their East Village apartment; his friends were ... well, what friends?
A resident of the East Village since 1977, and of the same single-room-occupancy building on Third Street since 1981, Mr. Crisp was a neighborhood celebrity known for his wardrobe of splashy scarves, his violet eyeshadow and his white hair upswept a la Katharine Hepburn and tucked under a black fedora.
Tory Dent, a poet, essayist and art critic whose verse told of life with a diagnosis of H.I.V. and of the struggle to keep her creativity alive, died last Friday at her home in the East Village.
Allen Ginsberg, the poet laureate of the Beat Generation whose Howl! became a manifesto for the sexual revolution and a cause celebre for free speech in the 1950s, eventually earning its author a place in America's literary pantheon, died early yesterday. He was 70 and lived in the East Village, in Manhattan.
After Jarmusch moved to New York in the 70s to attend Columbia, he formed a band called the Del-Byzanteens, and he lived in the East Village, the same neighborhood he lives in now.
Larry Desmedt, a New York-based custom motorcycle builder and biker better known nationally as Indian Larry, died on Monday in Charlotte, N.C., of injuries he suffered doing a stunt on Saturday at an appearance there. He was 55 and lived in the East Village.
Alvin Klein, a longtime theater reviewer for the Sunday regional sections of The New York Times and for WNYC radio, died on Feb. 28 at his home in the East Village section of Manhattan.
Frank Lovell, an American disciple of Leon Trotsky's brand of Marxism-Leninism and a New York City writer and editor concerned with socialist and trade-union issues, died on May 1 at his home in the East Village.
Butch Morris, who created a distinctive form of large-ensemble music built on collective improvisation that he single-handedly directed and shaped, died on Tuesday in Brooklyn. He was 65 ... Mr. Morris, who lived in the East Village, died at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Fort Hamilton.
Shepard, of course, was not there – the former resident of the East Village now eschewing America east of the Mississippi – but Lanford Wilson, Leonard Melfi, Crystal Field, Maria Irene Fornes, Kevin O'Connor, Ralph Lee and others were.
Mr. Threadgill is a longtime resident of the East Village.
A short, wiry man with a penchant for cigars and a wife named Lisa Ramaci in the East Village, Mr. Vincent recently had articles about Basra published in The Christian Science Monitor and The National Review, and had also written for The Wall Street Journal.
One of many artists of his generation to achieve recognition in the boom-and-bust East Village art scene of the early 80s, Mr. Wojnarowicz was first known for stenciling images of burning houses and falling figures onto the sides of buildings.
Charles Wright, who wrote three autobiographical novels about black street life in New York City between 1963 and 1973 that seemed to herald the rise of an important literary talent but who vanished into alcoholism and despair and never published another book, died on October 1 in Manhattan. He was 76 and lived in the East Village.
To maintain such an output, Mr. Zorn has adopted a discipline that few could muster or tolerate. He lives alone in the same East Village apartment where he has lived since 1977 – with what is by all accounts a gigantically ecumenical record collection – and works constantly, eliminating distractions like magazines, television or, sometimes, people.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) (permalink – via TimesMachine. {{cite book}}
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ignored (help)) ProQuest 425550537 (online; US Newsstream).{{cite book}}
: |work=
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ignored (help))John Franklin Bardin, a novelist, editor and publicity man, died at Beth Israel Hospital on July 9. He was 64 years old and a resident of the East Village,
Like Basquiat, Thompson lived for a while in the East Village, had notoriously excessive appetites, adored jazz, and was a longtime heroin addict.
Jean Michel Basquiat, a Brooklyn-born artist whose brief career leaped from graffiti scrawled on SoHo foundations to one-man shows in galleries around the world, died Friday at his home in the East Village.
With a bushy white moustache that makes him resemble a Civil War-era cavalry colonel, Mr. Beal is a well-known figure in the East Village, where he often roams the streets wearing a tan corduroy blazer and brown leather boots.
Jeremy Blake, an up-and-coming artist who sought to bridge the worlds of painting and film in lush, color-saturated, hallucinatory digital video works, has died, the New York City Police said yesterday. He was 35 and lived in the East Village in Manhattan.
After dinner Mr. Casablancas walked out into the street. It was nearly 1:00 a.m.; it was drizzling. He misses Los Angeles weather, he said. His wife was at home in their East Village apartment; his friends were ... well, what friends?
A resident of the East Village since 1977, and of the same single-room-occupancy building on Third Street since 1981, Mr. Crisp was a neighborhood celebrity known for his wardrobe of splashy scarves, his violet eyeshadow and his white hair upswept a la Katharine Hepburn and tucked under a black fedora.
Tory Dent, a poet, essayist and art critic whose verse told of life with a diagnosis of H.I.V. and of the struggle to keep her creativity alive, died last Friday at her home in the East Village.
Allen Ginsberg, the poet laureate of the Beat Generation whose Howl! became a manifesto for the sexual revolution and a cause celebre for free speech in the 1950s, eventually earning its author a place in America's literary pantheon, died early yesterday. He was 70 and lived in the East Village, in Manhattan.
After Jarmusch moved to New York in the 70s to attend Columbia, he formed a band called the Del-Byzanteens, and he lived in the East Village, the same neighborhood he lives in now.
Larry Desmedt, a New York-based custom motorcycle builder and biker better known nationally as Indian Larry, died on Monday in Charlotte, N.C., of injuries he suffered doing a stunt on Saturday at an appearance there. He was 55 and lived in the East Village.
Alvin Klein, a longtime theater reviewer for the Sunday regional sections of The New York Times and for WNYC radio, died on Feb. 28 at his home in the East Village section of Manhattan.
Frank Lovell, an American disciple of Leon Trotsky's brand of Marxism-Leninism and a New York City writer and editor concerned with socialist and trade-union issues, died on May 1 at his home in the East Village.
Butch Morris, who created a distinctive form of large-ensemble music built on collective improvisation that he single-handedly directed and shaped, died on Tuesday in Brooklyn. He was 65 ... Mr. Morris, who lived in the East Village, died at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Fort Hamilton.
Shepard, of course, was not there – the former resident of the East Village now eschewing America east of the Mississippi – but Lanford Wilson, Leonard Melfi, Crystal Field, Maria Irene Fornes, Kevin O'Connor, Ralph Lee and others were.
Mr. Threadgill is a longtime resident of the East Village.
A short, wiry man with a penchant for cigars and a wife named Lisa Ramaci in the East Village, Mr. Vincent recently had articles about Basra published in The Christian Science Monitor and The National Review, and had also written for The Wall Street Journal.
One of many artists of his generation to achieve recognition in the boom-and-bust East Village art scene of the early 80s, Mr. Wojnarowicz was first known for stenciling images of burning houses and falling figures onto the sides of buildings.
Charles Wright, who wrote three autobiographical novels about black street life in New York City between 1963 and 1973 that seemed to herald the rise of an important literary talent but who vanished into alcoholism and despair and never published another book, died on October 1 in Manhattan. He was 76 and lived in the East Village.
To maintain such an output, Mr. Zorn has adopted a discipline that few could muster or tolerate. He lives alone in the same East Village apartment where he has lived since 1977 – with what is by all accounts a gigantically ecumenical record collection – and works constantly, eliminating distractions like magazines, television or, sometimes, people.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 10-6227; OCLC 6671620 (all editions).