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The Legend of Cool "Disco" Dan

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Wikipedia article


{{Infobox film

| name = The Legend of Cool "Disco" Dan

| image = TheLegendOfCoolDiscoDan FilmPoster.png

| writer = Joseph Pattisall

| starring =

| director = Joseph Pattisall

| producer =

| distributor =

| released = April 15, 2013

| runtime = 96 minutes

| music = Iley Brown

| cinematography =

| studio = MVD Entertainment Group

| editing = Joseph Pattisall

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget =

}}

'The Legend of Cool "Disco" Dan' is a 2013 American documentary film written and directed by Joseph Pattisall. The film was released on April 15, 2013 in conjunction with the release of the book 'Pump Me Up: DC Subculture in the 1980s'. The documentary was narrated by Washington, D.C.-native Henry Rollins. 'The Legend of Cool "Disco" Dan' provides a documentation of Washington, D.C. during the 1970s and 1980s from the perspective of Cool "Disco" Dan, and blends commentary by local Washingtonians combined with archival footage, forming a comprehensive portrait of this time period.

Synopsis



'The Legend of Cool "Disco" Dan' examines the life of mythical graffiti artist Cool "Disco" Dan, while juxtaposing his life against many of the historical events from the 1970s and 1980s that shaped the culture of Washington, D.C. Cool "Disco" Dan (real name Danny Hogg) was born on December 31, 1969, on the very last day of the 1960s. It was a revolutionary decade that saw the rise of Civil Rights Movement, the assassination of prominent political figures, and the Vietnam War. During this time period, D.C. was experiencing race riots in the aftermath of Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination, heightened racial tensions and white flight, and blacks from southern and northern states relocating to D.C. in search of better economic opportunities during the Great Migration. This eventually transformed the city's demographics into a largely majority black city and introduced the label "Chocolate City". Additionally, it marked the beginning shift in local politics, and the beginning of home-grown music and musical acts (particularly go-go music and culture) all of which influenced Cool "Disco" Dan's graffiti.

Beginning in the 1970s, Hogg adapted the nickname "Disco Dan" after being inspired by an episode of 'What's Happening!!' He was also fascinated with the murals in the opening credits of 'Good Times', along with the cover art of many funk albums. He taught himself to draw and eventually was able to completely duplicate the vibrant artwork of those albums. Also around this time, Marion Barry's political career was on the rise, as he was elected mayor with a platform based on helping the poor, implementing a 'summer jobs programs' for the youth, and helping senior citizens and the cities most vulnerable. The development of go-go and har'DC'ore music was also in its early stages.

By the 1980s, Disco Dan had perfected his graffiti art skills just as the popularity of go-go music and harDCore was heightening throughout the city. Inspired by "roll-calls" and call and responses during go-go concerts (where patrons got their names and neighborhoods immortalized on P.A. tapes and live album recordings), Disco Dan began immortalizing himself by tagging his nickname on Metro buses and rails, vacant building, and throughout the Washington metropolitan area. At the height of his fame, go-go was also reaching the height of its fame, and the energy levels around the city had reached a fevering peak with the rise of local sports teamsthe Washington Bullets, the Big East Conference and the Georgetown Hoyas (John Thompson, Patrick Ewing, Alonzo Mourning), Maryland Terrapins (Lefty Driesell and Len Bias), Sugar Ray Leonard, and the Washington Redskins (Doug Williams)and the peak of the local politicians Marion Barry and Sharon Pratt Kelly, along with the crack epidemic and illegal drug trade, AIDS epidemic, materialism, hip-hop music, elevated murder rates, Reaganomics, homelessness, George H. W. Bush's War on Drugs, and the ubiquity of Cool "Disco Dan" graffiti all peaked simultaneously during this time period.

Contributors



*Paul Hendrickson

*Cynthia Connolly

*Alona Wartofsky

*Iley Brown

*Jonathan Binstock

*Paul Berry

*Chuck Brown

*Gregory "Sugar Bear" Elliott

*D.C. Scorpio

*Stinky Dink

*Tony "Big Tony" Fisher

*Andre "Whiteboy" Johnson

*Big Brother CJ

*Darrell West

*Vincent Shacks

*Grevlin Trombone Hunter

*Tidy

*Big Butch

*Hollywood Breeze

*Scooter Magruder

*Frank Ski

*Marion Barry

*Walter E. Fauntroy

*Lisa of the World

*Tonya F

*Nizam Ali

*Dick Dyszel

*Asas "ULTRA" Walker

*Cycle

*Caleb Neelon

*Ken Olden

*Rob Myers

*Ian MacKaye

*Seth Hurwitz

Release



The documentary was part of the Corcoran Gallery of Art's exhibit for 'Pump Me Up: DC Subculture in the 1980s'. The documentary also screened at the AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center in Silver Spring, Maryland from February 23, 2013 to March 1, 2013, and screen nationwide at select theatres. The DVD was released on March 11, 2014.

See also



*Street art

*Go-go

*har'DC'ore

*Culture of Washington, D.C.

*Music of Washington, D.C.

*'Straight Up Go-Go', 1992 documentary

*'Heavy Metal Parking Lot', 1986 documentary

References




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