David Johansen, singer from the seminal punk band the New York Dolls, dies at 75 - News
David Johansen, the last surviving member of the glam and protopunk band the New York Dolls who later performed as his campy alter ego, Buster Poindexter, has died. He was 75.
David Johansen, the last surviving member of the glam and protopunk band the New York Dolls who later performed as his campy alter ego, Buster Poindexter, has died. He was 75.
FILE - Buster Poindexter is seen at the Grammy Awards in New York's Radio City Music Hall, March 2, 1988. (AP Photo, File)(AP/Anonymous)
NEW YORK (AP) â David Johansen, the wiry, gravelly-voiced singer and last surviving member of the glam and protopunk band the New York Dolls who later performed as his campy, pompadoured alter ego, Buster Poindexter, has died. He was 75.
Johansen died Friday at his home in New York City, according to Rolling Stone, citing a family spokesperson. It was revealed in early 2025 that he had stage 4 cancer and a brain tumor.
The New York Dolls were forerunners of punk and the bandâs style â teased hair, womenâs clothes and lots of makeup â inspired the glam movement that took up residence in heavy metal a decade later in bands like Faster Pussycat and Mötley CrĂŒe.
âWhen youâre an artist, the main thing you want to do is inspire people, so if you succeed in doing that, itâs pretty gratifying,â Johansen told The Knoxville News-Sentinel in 2011.
Rolling Stone once called the Dolls âthe mutant children of the hydrogen ageâ and Vogue called them the âdarlings of downtown style, tarted-up toughs in boas and heels.â
âThe New York Dolls were more than musicians; they were a phenomenon. They drew on old rock ânâ roll, big-city blues, show tunes, the Rolling Stones and girl groups, and that was just for starters,â Bill Bentley wrote in âSmithsonian Rock and Roll: Live and Unseen.â
The band never found commercial success and was torn by internal strife and drug addictions, breaking up after two albums by the middle of the decade. In 2004, former Smiths frontman and Dolls admirer Morrissey convinced Johansen and other surviving members to regroup for the Meltdown Festival in England, leading to three more studio albums.
In the â80s, Johansen assumed the persona of Buster Poindexter, a pompadour-styled lounge lizard who had a hit with the kitschy party single âHot, Hot, Hotâ in 1987. He also appeared in such movies as âCandy Mountain,â âLet It Ride,â âMarried to the Mobâ and had a memorable turn as the Ghost of Christmas Past in Bill Murray-led hit âScrooged.â
Johansen was in 2023 the subject of Martin Scorsese and David Tedeschiâs documentary âPersonality Crisis: One Night Only,â which mixed footage of his two-night stand at the CafĂ© Carlyle in January 2020 with flashbacks through his wildly varied career and intimate interviews.
âI used to think about my voice like: âWhatâs it gonna sound like? Whatâs it going to be when I do this song?â And Iâd get myself into a knot about it,â Johansen told The Associated Press in 2023. âAt some point in my life, I decided: âJust sing the (expletive) song. With whatever you got.â To me, I go on stage and whatever mood Iâm in, I just claw my way out of it, essentially.â
David Roger Johansen was born to a large, working class Catholic family on Staten Island, his father an insurance salesman. He filled notebooks with poems and lyrics as a young man and liked a lot of different music â R&B, Cuban, Janis Joplin and Otis Redding.
The Dolls â the final original lineup included guitarists Sylvain Sylvain and Johnny Thunders, bassist Arthur Kane and drummer Jerry Nolan â rubbed shoulders with Lou Reed and Andy Warhol in the Lower East Side of Manhattan the early 1970s.
They took their name from a toy hospital in Manhattan and were expected to take over the throne vacated by the Velvet Underground in the early 1970s. But neither of their first two albums â 1973âs âNew York Dolls,â produced by Todd Rundgren, nor âToo Much Too Soonâ a year later produced by Shadow Morton â charted.
âTheyâre definitely a band to keep both eyes and ears on,â read the review of their debut album in Rolling Stone, complementary of their âstrange combination of high pop-star drag and ruthless street arrogance.â
Their songs included âPersonality Crisisâ (âYou got it while it was hot/But now frustration and heartache is what you gotâ), âLooking for a Kissâ (I need a fix and a kissâ) and a âFrankensteinâ (Is it a crime/For you to fall in love with Frankenstein?â)
Their glammed look was meant to embrace fans with a nonjudgmental, noncategorical space. âI just wanted to be very welcoming,â Johansen said in the documentary, ââcause the way this society is, it was set up very strict â straight, gay, vegetarian, whatever⊠I just kind of wanted to kind of like bring those walls down, have a party kind of thing.â
Rolling Stone, reviewing their second album, called them âthe best hard-rock band in America right nowâ and called Johansen a âtalented showman, with an amazing ability to bring characters to life as a lyricist.â
Decades later, the Dollsâ influence would be cherished. Rolling Stone would list their self-titled debut album at No. 301 of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, writing âitâs hard to imagine the Ramones or the Replacements or a thousand other trash-junky bands without them.â
Blondieâs Chris Stein in the Nolan biography âStranded in the Jungleâ wrote that the Dolls were âopening a door for the rest of us to walk through.â Tommy Lee of Motley Crue called them early inspirations.
âJohansen is one of those singers, to be a little paradoxical, who is technically better and more versatile than he sounds,â said the Los Angeles Times in 2023. âHis voice has always been a bit of a foghorn â higher or lower according to age, habits and the song at hand â but it has a rare emotional urgency.
The Dolls, representing rock at itâs most debauched, were divisive. In 1973, they won the Creem magazine poll categories as the yearâs best and worst new group. They were nominated several times for The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame but never got in.
âDirty angels with painted faces, the Dolls opened the box usually reserved for Pandora and unleashed the infant furies that would grow to become Punk,â wrote Nina Antonia in the book âToo Much, Too Soon.â âAs if this legacy wasnât enough for one band, they also trashed sexual boundaries, savaged glitter and set new standards for rock ânâ roll excess.â
By the end of their first run, the Dolls were being managed by legendary promoter Malcolm McLaren, who would later introduce the Sex Pistols to the Dollsâ music. Culture critic Greil Marcus in âLipstick Traces: A Secret History of the Twentieth Centuryâ writes the Dolls played him some of their music and he couldnât believe how bad they were.
âThe fact that they were so bad suddenly hit me with such force that I began to realize, ââIâm laughing, Iâm talking to these guys, Iâm looking at them, and Iâm laughing with them; and I was suddenly impressed by the fact that I was no longer concerned with whether you could play well,â McLaren said. âThe Dolls really impressed upon me that there was something else. There was something wonderful. I thought how brilliant they were to be this bad.â
After the first demise of the Dolls, Johansen started his own group, the David Johansen band, before reinventing himself yet again in the 1980s as Buster Poindexter.
Inspired by his passion for the blues and arcane American folk music Johansen also formed the group The Harry Smiths, and toured the world performing the songs of Howlinâ Wolf with Hubert Sumlin and Levon Helm. He also hosted the weekly radio show âThe Mansion of Funâ on Sirius XM and painted.
He is survived by his wife, Mara Hennessey, and a stepdaughter, Leah Hennessey.
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