Erin Cramer: Feminists on SCUM, 1992

Collection context

Abstract:
This collection contains 25 interviews on videotape of feminists and artists who had a significant relationship to Valerie Solanas's shooting of Andy Warhol. The interviews were conducted by Erin Cramer and filmed by Mary Patierno. The interviewees include Ti-Grace Atkinson, Florynce "Flo" Kennedy, Ros Baxandall, Dana Densmore, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, Vivian Gornick, Jill Johnston, Jeremiah Newton, and Ultra Violet.
Extent:
948 Gigabytes One harddrive (948 GB in 51 files). and 1 Linear Feet One record carton of 25 betacam tapes (transferred from Hi8).
Language:
English .
Scope and content:

The collection consists of 25 videotapes, numbered 1-3 and 6-27. The interviews include both critical and sympathetic perspectives on Valerie Solanas and the shooting of Warhol, as well as the complex legacy of Solanas within the feminist movement. The interviews were conucted by Erin Cramer and filmed by Mary Patierno.

Cramer interviews several women involved in the radical feminist movement of the late 1960s who were not personally familiar with Solanas, but admired her as a militant figure in the movement, including Rosalyn Baxandall, Jill Johnston, and Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. The interviews allow for the women to voice their complex thoughts on Solanas as a symbol for the feminist movement. For example, in tape 13 Dunbar-Ortiz discusses that as a political prisoner Solanas held similar symbolic power for radical feminists as Huey Newton did for the Black Panther Party. At the same time, it was clear to her that Solanas was a "total individualistic anarchist" and would not be a suitable leader for the feminist movement.

The set of interviews also represents feminists who had more personal involvement and interactions with Solanas, including Ti-Grace Atkinson, Florynce Kennedy, Dana Densmore, and Vivian Gornick. These interviewees share the complex ways in which they related to Solanas. Prominently, Ti-Grace Atkinson discusses her turbulent relationship with Solanas in tape 3. Atkinson was one of the biggest proponents of Solanas's work and distributed manuscripts of SCUM Manifesto prior to its publication, despite Solanas directly stating her rejection of the feminist label.

Lastly, Cramer interviews Jeremiah Newton and Ultra Violet, two people who knew of Solanas through Andy Warhol's Factory. They contextualize Solanas's experience within wider patterns of exploitation that they saw perpetuated in the Factory. Newton shares memories of Solanas and relates them to his own experiences, such as being incarcerated at Elmhurt Hospital. He discusses Solanas's shooting of Warhol in the context of her poverty, having to sleep on rooftops, go hungry, and pursue sex work for survival.

Biographical / historical:

Erin Cramer is an Emmy-winning screenwriter and director from New York, based in London, who makes films in the documentary and fiction genres. Cramer is a graduate of Barnard College (class of '86), where she majored in Women's Studies with a concentration in Literary Theory.

In the early 1990s Cramer began collecting the SCUM tape interviews for a self-funded project, interviewing radical feminists and actors involved with artist Andy Warhol's studio space, The Factory, in New York City. The interviews all center around Valerie Solanas and her widely-publicized shooting of Warhol in 1968. Solanas was also known for her self-publishing of SCUM Manifesto (1967), wherein the author envisions a world without men. The acronym SCUM, Society for Cutting Up Men, is said to have been added by publisher Maurice Girodias and appeared on the first edition of the text. After Solanas's conviction for shooting Warhol in June 1968, she received psychiatric evaluation and was sentenced to the prison ward of Elmhurst Hospital. In that same month Girodias published SCUM Manifesto through the independent and controversial Olympia Press, cementing Solanas's image as a militant misandrist and feminist separatist, with many interpreting the work as satire, despite Solanas claiming the work to be sincere, and her never having identified with the feminist movement. The crime has since been mythologized and theorized upon in both the media and public memory, with depictions likening Solanas to fictional and real tragic idols, such as Medea, or the Unabomber (in Avital Ronell's introduction to SCUM Manifesto). Alternately, composer Pauline Oliveros has likened Solanas's fate and legacy in pop culture to that of Marilyn Monroe in her orchestral piece "To Valerie Solanas and Marilyn Monroe in recognition of their desperation" (1970).

The set of interviews conducted by Erin Cramer in the 1990s give voice to individuals who personally knew Solanas, understood her shooting of Warhol as a political act and came to her aid. Though many of these individuals have publicly spoken out in defense of Solanas on other platforms, the Cramer tapes likely represent the only video interviews on the topic. Speakers include: Florynce Kennedy, a lawyer and radical feminist who defended Solanas; Ti-Grace Atkinson, a feminist activist who had a complex personal relationship with Solanas; radical feminist activist Rosalyn Baxandall, who resonated with Solanas's militant tactics; Dana Densmore and Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, founding members of Cell 16, a feminist separatist movement which drew inspiration from SCUM Manifesto; Vivian Gornick, a radical feminist writer who wrote an introduction to the second printing of SCUM Manifesto; Jill Johnston, a lesbian separatist activist and author; influential gay rights activist Jeremiah Newton, who knew Solanas from the downtown scene and edited The Letters and Diaries of Candy Darling (1992) which would go on to be the basis for the 1996 film I Shot Andy Warhol; and Ultra Violet, an actress in many of Warhol's films, including I, a Man (1967), on the set of which she met Solanas.

Access and use

Restrictions:

The collection is currently closed to all researchers in accordance with an ongoing documentary film project based on the interview footage, Civic-Minded Thrill-Seeking Responsible Females, dir. Eric Cramer, prod. Alexandra Juhasz. The interview materials will become unrestricted in April 2026.

Terms of access:

The copyright to the collection's materials is retained by Erin Cramer. Individuals utilizing the collection who wish to reproduce or publish any materials in this collection must obtain permissions from the copyright owner.

After the collection becomes unrestricted, the materials will be made available online.

Preferred citation:

Erin Cramer: Feminists on SCUM tapes, 1992; Box and Folder; Barnard Archives and Special Collections, Barnard Library, Barnard College.

Location of this collection:
Milstein Center for Teaching and Learning 423
Barnard College
3009 Broadway
New York, NY 10027, USA
Before you visit:
Please contact archives@barnard.edu with research requests or to schedule a visit; see our website for more information.
Contact:
archives@barnard.edu