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Difference between revisions of "The Topless String Quartet"
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[http://www.esquire.com/the-side/qa/alan-abel-hoaxes-033109 -from a 2011 Esquire magazine interview with Abel]'' | [http://www.esquire.com/the-side/qa/alan-abel-hoaxes-033109 -from a 2011 Esquire magazine interview with Abel]'' | ||
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+ | They also appeared in Abel's 1971 sex comedy, ''[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0125263/combined Is There Sex After Death]'' performing something called "Breast Rock." | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== |
Revision as of 12:57, 16 July 2013
"Professional media hoaxer" Alan Abel created this hoax in 1967.
ESQ: You have said that all of your hoaxes have a message behind them. What was the message behind the Topless String Quartet?
AA: At the time, Yoko and John Lennon were doing their nude-in-bed interviews, and there was a young lady who was playing concerts as a topless cellist. So I thought, why not have a quartet? Frank Sinatra wanted to record them, but I would say they were in Europe or Australia. They were never available.
-from a 2011 Esquire magazine interview with Abel
They also appeared in Abel's 1971 sex comedy, Is There Sex After Death performing something called "Breast Rock."
External Links
- Abel's website on the hoax
- San Francisco Chronicle article on the hoax
- 1992 article on Abel from the American Journalism Review
See also: KKK Symphony Orchestra