A remote and barren
blister of land on the American desert.
As isolated as the face
of the moon.
Zabriskie Point.
Where a boy and a girl
meet….and touch….and blow their minds!
Heavy….isn’t
it? Those were the powerful words which advertised Zabriskie Point,
famed film maker Michelangelo Antonioni’s look at America. Released in 1970
under a mushroom cloud of protest, controversy and fascination, Zabriskie
Point was the story of a college drop out named Mark who walks into a
student protest, allegedly shoots a cop, steals a plane and flies out to the
desert where he meets an anthropology student/temp secretary named Daria. Mark
and Daria go to Zabriskie Point in Death Valley, run around the desert having
pointless dialogue, fuck, and then Mark decides to return the plane with
disastrous results, and Daria blows stuff up with her mind to Pink Floyd music.
That’s it. I’m serious. You don’t believe me and think that there is more to
this movie then find a copy and watch it yourself. MGM was hoping that
Zabriskie Point would be a box office smash and an instant counter culture
masterpiece. They were wrong. Zabriskie Point was a bomb. Critics
hated it. Audiences hated it. Even the films stars were quick to condemn it.
Now there was no denying that Zabriskie Point was beautifully filmed and
crafted. I mean, this is Antonioni we’re talking about and it is a visually
stunning film. However, the script, written by Antonioni along with a team of
successful writers, was nothing but a pretentious and pointless mess without any
plot or direction. Watching Zabriskie Point is really a marathon of
numbness with dialogue that goes no where, characters who pop in and out of
scenes and a bigger message which may not be clear to anyone but Antonioni
himself…and he took that bigger message to the grave with him. Anybody claiming
that Zabriskie Point is a masterpiece is probably a pretentious asshole.
They are the type who stocks their bookshelves full of avant-garde literature,
yet has never actually read any of it, in order to impress people who come over
and may just happen to look at the shelf. Yet, everyone who ever saw
Zabriskie Point would never forget it, and love it or hate it, the film
would stay in the hearts and minds of movie fans forever.
Yet
Zabriskie Point would not have been made possible without the “talents”
of the two young unknown actors that Antonioni cast in the leads of his film –
Mark Frechette and Daria Halprin in the roles of…well….Mark and Daria. Where
they lacked in talent they made up in good looks and for a millisecond America
was fascinated with the pair, especially when they found out that magic did
happen in the barren land called Zabriskie Point. You see, although Mark and
Daria had never met before the film, in the desert the two fell in love, and
soon became America’s first counter culture couple. Mark and Daria quickly
found themselves featured on the cover of magazines such as Look and
Rolling Stone and being featured in round table discussions and interviewed
on The Dick Cavett Show. However critics questioned why a master film
maker like Antonioni would cast two unknown kids with no acting experience in a
film like Zabriskie Point? I mean, MGM was dishing out seven million
dollars to make this film! It was a big risk. Yet what Antonioni saw that
perhaps nobody else did was unlike many of the counter culture figures and
celebrities that cried for revolution and peace during the late 1960s, Mark
Frechette and Daria Halprin were the real deal. Sure, they may not have been
the most talented, and nearly forty years later they may not have become icons
of the counter cultural movement, but Frechette and Halprin walked the walk and
talked the talk. No other couple ever embodied the true spirit of the counter
culture movement more then Mark and Daria. Not John and Yoko. Not Tom Laughlin
and Deloris Taylor. Not even Jane Fonda and Tom Hayden. They all had their
merits and their messages were carried farther and better remembered. Yet Mark
and
Daria
were brought from the front lines of the counter culture movement to represent
the counter culture movement. But, like most of the real revolutionists of the
time, their names have faded into the obscurer parts of the pop culture journey.
That is why I invite you
to come along and steal and air plane as we take a flight once again to that big
orgy at Zabriskie Point and rediscover the story of Mark and Daria; their humble
beginnings, their short time at the top, their revolutionary love affair and two
different endings – one which ended in tragedy and another who stayed true to
the spirit of the sixties and dedicated a life to spirituality and healing.
Come back to Zabriskie Point. How we get there depends on where we’re
at:
CONFESSIONS OF A POP CULTURE ADDICT PRESENTS:
RETURN
TO ZABRISKIE POINT:
THE MARK FRECHETTE AND DARIA HALPRIN STORY
Before
we can begin to rediscover the story of Mark and Daria, we have to begin with
the man who brought them together, Italian art house director Michelangelo
Antonioni. Without him the world would have never have known Mark and Daria,
and they would have never have known each other. Already famous in Europe for
films such as Le Amiche, L’advventura and L’eclisse,
Antonioni signed a deal at the end of the 1960’s with MGM studios to make three
English speaking films to be released
for American audiences. The first of these films was the British crime thriller
Blowup, which took a look at England’s Canterbury fashion subculture and
made stars out of David Hemmings and Vanessa Redgraves. Despite mixed reviews,
Blowup was a huge success for Antonioni, and Antonioni finally made his
mark on English speaking audiences. Thus, for his second feature Antonioni set
his sights on America to try to discover the true nature of the US of A.
Obviously he concluded that the US was made up of auto mobiles, billboards,
radicals, police violence and discontented youth, because the result was
Zabriskie Point. Preferring to use unknown actors instead of name stars in
the thoughts that he could shape and mold their performance to his needs,
Antonioni decided to ignore casting calls and auditions and instead he sent his
casting directors out upon the streets of America to find the modern all
American girl and boy. Acting talent was not a prerequisite. All that was
required was that the pair be beautiful, unashamed and revolutionary.
Antonioni
discovered Daria Halprin himself while watching Jack O’Connell’s 1968
documentary Revolution about the San Francisco hippie movement in and
around Haight-Ashbury, which featured a naked Daria reciting terrible hippie
poetry. Daria’s long dark hair and hard eyes appealed to Antonioni and he
sought out the beautiful hippie girl. In an interview with Look Magazine
Antonioni stated that he was drawn to Daria’s “bratty, free, earth-child
quality” and that he “made no attempt to change her.” Born and raised in the
San Francisco area, Daria Halprin was the daughter of prominent landscape
architect Lawrence “Pops” Halprin and postmodern dance pioneer Anna Halprin.
Daria was attending Berkley when the call came from Antonioni’s people for
Zabriskie Point, which left her with a choice to make. Either she settle
with a degree in anthropology, or follow the dream of potential stardom. Being
a true free spirit, Daria dropped out of school and headed to LA. It would be
there that life would temporarily change for Daria, and that change came in the
form of Mark Frechette. If Daria represented the airy and free spirited
movement of Haight-Ashbury, Frechette in many ways represented just the
opposite.
The
search for Antonioni’s all American boy was far more difficult. Ads went out in
major city newspapers looking for someone that had "angular features ...
Politically Aware” but nobody suitable auditioned. Antonioni’s casting directors
found Mark Frechette, literally, on the streets of Boston. The story goes that Frechette was first spotted by Antonioni's people at a bus stop screaming
“motherfucker” at a woman (although some reports say it was a man) in a third
story apartment and flinging a flower pot at her. The casting directors sent
the simple message to Antonioni: “He’s twenty and he hates.” This was exactly
what Antonioni was looking for. In Look Magazine Antonioni described
Mark Frechette as having “"the elegance of an aristocrat, though from a poor
family. There is something mystical about him." Born in Fairfield, Connecticut,
high school drop out Frechette was basically a penniless drifter when he
relocated from New York City to Boston where he was discovered. In order to
support a wife and child, both of whom little is known about, Frechette would
take up the odd carpentry job, but spent most of his time begging for money on
the streets. Arrested a number of times due to his violent temper and drugs, it
was during his time as an angry and discontented youth on the streets of
Beantown that Frechette discovered the underground publication The Avatar
which was published by members of the Mel Lyman cult. His fascination with the
writings of Mel Lyman would go on to change the course of his entire life.
Folk
musician Mel Lyman, was a Boston based cult leader who taught his own warped and
claustrophobic LSD filled views encouraging Americans to return to the roots
that folk music was born from and to reject modern America, and throughout the
end of the 1960’s and early 1970’s ran a commune with approximately one hundred
members in the Fort Hill area of Roxbury. At the best of times Mel Lyman
claimed to be the “living embodiment of the truth” and “the greatest man in the
world.” At the worst of times he claimed to be “Jesus Christ” and an alien life
form sent to Earth in human guise. Said to be both merciful and cruel, kind and
tyrannical, Mel Lyman’s commune appealed to members of the disenchanted
anti-establishment of the 1960s, and through the publication The Avator,
his group attracted its followers. It is believed that Mark Frechette first
approached Lyman in 1967 but was completely ignored. However, upon reproaching
Lyman after he was cast in Zabriskie Point, Frechette was brought into the
commune with open arms. Mel Lyman was a true opportunist, and believed that
Mark Frechette could be the celebrity spokesperson for his message. Mark’s
initial time with Lyman would be short, as he had a movie to make in California,
but he promised he would return. So, in 1968, Mark Frechette, whose wife had
taken their child and left him by this point, headed for sunny California to become a counter culture super
star….and into the arms of Daria Halprin.
When Mark and Daria first
met in Hollywood in the MGM offices, it could be said that it was love at first
sight. In a 1970 Pluto
Magazine interview, Mark and Daria described their first impressions of each
other. Mark stated:
“The first time I met her,
she walks into the MGM office, gorgeous, tan, real long hair, shoulder pads –
she must have had shoulder pads…I’d never seen shoulders on a chic like that,
she sits down on a chair and rolls her eyes at me…looks over at me and says, “I
feel like I should rush into your arms and kill you, but I’m really knocked out
from the flight down.”
However, Daria’s first
recollections of Mark were a little less flattering:
“He's sitting there in his
big arm chair, looking like a zombie, not saying a word to anyone, real white
and pasty, and he's got these huge Benjamin Franklin glasses on. You know what
he looks like when he hasn't had a hair cut? He had about five pounds of hair
all combed over to one side, looks like he's going to collapse on the floor from
all that weight ... it kinda drags him over to one side like the leaning tower
of Pisa. And remember the only reason (Mark) got that role was 'cause (he was)
the only guy around who had shoulders as big as mine!”
Yet
history would prove that this mismatched pair would grow close as filming began
on Zabriskie Point. But, making the film would not be an easy task.
Even before filming began the public were out to damn Zabriskie Point.
When word came out that Antonioni’s screenplay was highly anti-American the FBI
began to trail and investigate the cast and crew of the film. Upon showing up
to film a real life protest in Oakland, California for stock footage, the
sheriff accuses Antonioni of provoking the protestors in order to get the
footage he required, while the group of militant anti-establishment protestors
involved stated that they felt that they were being “sold out” When word got
out that there was to be a flag burning scene, a mob of right-wing protestors
besieged filming locations (the irony is no scene of this nature was in the
film). Most notably, however, was the Sacramento California’s US Attorney
Office’s failed attempt to shut filming of Zabriskie Point down.
Investigating the film for its anti-Americanism, the district attorney’s office
attempted to use the Mann Act to cease the film from being made. The Mann Act
was a law created in 1910 prohibiting the export of women across the state line
“for immoral conduct, prostitution
or debauchery." Proposing that the orgy scene at Zabriskie Point could be held
under these laws, the DA’s office had to back down when it learnt that Zabriskie
Point was actually fifteen miles west of the California-Nevada state line, and
that Antonioni wasn’t breaking any laws. As the public tension around this film
rose, MGM hoped that public outcry, scandal and protest would lead to a curious
public embracing the film. However, what was perhaps more true is that these
protests were in reality omens of doom for the film.
Even the relationship
between Antonioni and his stars were often difficult, although Mark and Daria
would have very different perceptions of working with the fabled director.
Antonioni was famous for not getting along with his actors and for having little
use for them and even stating that he hated them. In a famous quote Antonioni
said “Actors are like cows. You have to lead them through a fence.” However
despite his usual disdain for actors, Antonioni seemed to take a great liking
for Daria and took her under his wing. In the disastrous interview with Dick
Cavett, one of the only clear statements that Daria made when asked about
Antonioni was that she often felt very close to him.
Yet for Mark Frechette it
was a different story. The two had a very stormy relationship with arguments
and bitter discussion surrounding the film as well as their opposing views and
ideologies. Mark Frechette tried to turn Antonioni on to Mel Lyman’s message,
and was even reported to be leaving copies of The Avator around the set.
However, Antonioni could not be swayed to Frechette’s frame of mind, and kept
true to his own vision of America as an outsider looking in, which to Mark was
tainted and unrealistic. After Zabriskie Point was finished, when
expected to promote the film, Mark continuously criticized the film and
Antonioni’s vision of America, at one point being quoted as saying “(Zabriskie
Point is) A big lie and totally alien.” Yet, it could be wondered if
Antonioni wasn’t just a little bit envious of the budding relationship between
his new protégé Daria, and the angry and rebellious Mark, especially when he was
succeeding in seducing her with Mel Lyman’s ideas, and eventually getting Daria
to agree to return with him to Boston to live in Mel Lyman’s commune, in which
they returned and handed their entire earnings from the film over to the
charismatic and bizarre cult leader. Perhaps his music and message was unheard
in Zabriskie Point, but the film just made Mel Lyman $60 thousand
richer. Lyman would be the only one who made any money off of the film, and he
wasn’t even in it.
After
two years in production Zabriskie Point was released in February 1970 to
a sea of controversy and to scathing and terrible reviews. Time Magazine
called the film “Incredibly simple-minded and obvious. The scenario might have
been written by a first year student in film school.” Film critic Rex Reed
wrote “Hilariously awful…it is uninspired and phony” and of Mark and Daria said
“two of the worst performances of the decade” (ironically, Rex Reed would be a
guest during Mark and Daria’s Dick Cavett interview, where both barely
acknowledged him). Meanwhile The New Yorker called Zabriskie Point
a “pathetic mess” and The New York Times called it “One of the worst
films of 1970.” Yet we all know that just because critics don’t like a movie
doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s awful, right? Doesn’t mean the audience won’t
embrace it. Well, after Zabriskie Point ran its course, including second
run engagements, the film only made $892 thousand back from the seven million it
took to make it, being one of the biggest money losing films in film history up
to that point. Antonioni called the film to "his first flop," and never
returned to America to make a movie again.
Yet
despite the fact that America was not having a love affair with the film, for a
very short while Mark and Daria became the face of the counter culture. The
idea of a beautiful and revolutionary couple living together in a commune seemed
to fascinate a certain pocket of America and for a very brief time America was
fascinated with the pair. However, it is uncertain how beautiful their love
actually was. Evidence shows that Mark Frechette could be quite cruel and
controlling of Daria. It is known that the Mel Lyman’s cult was very male
dominant and even, at times, misogynistic. There is no solid evidence proving
that Mark tried to control Daria nor abused her, but there is much evidence that
he tried to mute her voice and crush her spirits. In their tense interview with
Dick Cavett, Mark ruled the roost, answering (or in his coy way, not answering)
Cavett’s questions, and interrupting
Daria
any time she made an attempt to speak, and when she finally found a chance to
speak, between the constantly cut off my Cavett, Mark and guest Mel Brooks (who
Daria shows on screen disdain towards) she psychically was forced to shake
Frechette and tell him to be quite, only to say in the confusion that she forgot
what she had to say. Later, in an interview with The Los Angeles Times, when they were asked if they were to get married Daria answered “one of
these days, right Mark?” to have Mark quickly and coldly reply “Wrong.” When
Daria tried to recover by suggesting they’d get married so that they could have
children Mark replied “In France they call them natural children, not
bastards.” This type of repression for a former San Francisco flower child must
have been both difficult and demoralizing. In a wishy-washy unrevealing
interview with Pluto Magazine near the end of Daria’s time in
Boston, her frustrations with commune living poked its head out when she said
“it's so hard for me to recognize that person I was in Zabriskie Point.
And when I read that the Women's
Lib. believe me to be the most liberated women ever to be filmed, it makes me
sick!” By the end of 1970 Daria had had enough of Mel Lyman’s commune and made
her way back to San Francisco while Mark went to Italy to make an anti-war film
called Many Wars Ago. Upon returning to the US Frechette followed Daria to San Francisco, but by the end of 1971 Mark was back in Boston, while Daria had found comfort in the arms of another counter culture icon – award
winning actor Dennis Hopper.
Thus, as America’s
interest with Zabriskie Point faded, so had the romance between Mark
Frechette and Daria Halprin. Yet their individual stories were hardly over.
Mark
Frechette went on to make a third film in Yugoslavia called Man Against
in 1972, and returned again to Mel Lyman’s commune. However, in an abstract and
foolish protest against Watergate in 1973 Mark and two other members of the cult
staged a bank robbery which went wrong. Frechette’s best friend, Christopher
“Hercules” Thein, was gunned down by police and died on the way to hospital
during the robbery. Yet, upon confiscation of the robber’s guns, it was
revealed that there were no bullets in the chamber. Upon being arrested and asked
why he had tried to commit such a bizarre and major criminal act Frechette
stated:
“I am afflicted by a
political conscience. We did it as a revolutionary act of political protest.
We had been watching the Watergate hearings on television and we saw John Dean
tell the truth and we saw Mitchell and Stans lie about it. We saw the apathy
and we felt an intense rage. They did not know the truth and did not want to
know the truth. We know the truth and wanted to show it to them. Because banks
are federally insured, robbing that bank was a way of robbing Richard Nixon
without hurting anybody…There was no way to stop what was going to happen. We
just reached the point where all that the three of us really wanted to do was
hold up a bank. And besides…standing there with a gun, cleaning out a teller’s
cage – that’s about as fuckin’ honest as you can get, man.”
Perhaps,
as the flower power of the sixties turned towards the lies, deceit and greed of
the seventies, and without Daria Halprin there to keep him grounded, Frechette’s
train of thought was finally warped. As a result of the attempted bank robbery,
Mark Frechette received a six to fifteen years sentence for his crime. He would
only serve two years of his sentence but never know freedom again because on
September 27th, 1975 a fellow inmate found Mark’s dead body in the
prison weight room where a 150 set of barbells had fallen on him and he had been
chocked to death by the bar that fell on his throat. An inquest was held to
investigate Mark’s death, with the official conclusion being that his death was
accidental and that the barbells had slipped while Mark was bench pressing.
Yet, questions occurred around his death as the result that no marks from the
bar were left on his neck. Still, foul play was ruled out as Mark Frechette
proved to be very popular with inmates. Yet, it was said that due to increase
depression, Mark had stopped eating and had lost a lot of weight and muscle,
which possibly resulted in his accident. Thus ended the life of a cultural icon
that we barely got to know.
But
what of Daria Halprin? Did she find happiness after Zabriskie Point?
Daria made one more film, The Jerusalem File, in 1972, and married Dennis
Hopper the same year. In 1974 the couple had their only child Ruthanna, but by
1976 Daria and Dennis had split up as well. Daria remarried later in life,
and had another child. Daria
eventually returned to San Francisco to teach and study dancing alongside her
mother Anna Halprin, and together they revolutionized the art of dance as a
healing process in the 1970’s. When Anna was diagnosed with colon cancer in
1972 she began to use dance as a form of movement therapy. Through this
endeavor, she and Daria together formed the Tampala Institute, which is a San
Francesco based non-profit organization dedicated to teaching dance as a
therapeutic art form and through a combination of psychology and drama, use
dance as a way to cure emotional, mental and
physical ailments. Daria is currently the director of the Tampala Institute as
well as a registered movement therapist and expressive arts therapist where she
maintains a private practice in Marin County, California. She is also the
author of the book The Expressive Body in Life, Art and Therapy. For
more information on Daria’s work and the Tampala Institute you can visit their
web-site. Obviously Daria’s future artistic endeavors were more revolutionary
then joining a cult, robbing a bank and dieing in prison. Instead Daria took
the free love and peace and creativity aspects of her days at Haight-Ashbury and
has used it to better the lives of people.
Today
Mark and Daria are best known as the nameless couple on the cover of Pink
Floyd’s Zabriskie Point Sessions CD cover. The film isn’t even on DVD in
most countries, but every now and then finds its ways
to art house screening and film festivals so that a whole new generation can
watch it in a combination of confusion and
amusement
and scratch their heads and ask “what the hell was that all about?” Yet,
despite the fact that the world has seemed to forget the lives and love of Mark
and Daria, they still remain the greatest counter culture couple that we never
really knew. Their love was as fleeting as their time at the top, and although
their film didn’t make it in the Hollywood hall of fame, their story is far more
interesting then many Hollywood movies. Love and sex, madness and manipulation,
revolution and aggression, tragedy and redemption. Mark and Daria’s story had
it all, and if the world wants to forget about Zabriskie Point, hopefully
it will never completely forget Mark Frechette and Daria Halprin.
REDISOCVER
DARIA HALPRIN, MARK FRECHETTE AND ZABRISKIE POINT VIA YOUTUBE
Zabriskie Point may not be available on DVD in North
America, but there are a number of interesting video clips featuring Mark and Daria courtesy of our friends at YouTube. Here are a few of my favorites:
Zabriskie Point Trailer - Possibly one of my favorite
movie trailers, it makes Zabriskie Point look a lot better then it actually
is...but then that's what a successful trailer should do. Featuring the
music of Pink Floyd and a montage of Antionioni's best scenes, the trailer is
really an overview of what your going to get....without the suck.
Daria Halprin Blows Stuff Up With Her Mind - The classic
finale to Zabriskie Point featuring Daria Halprin blowing up stuff with her mind
to Pink Floyd music. Un-American? You be the judge. Strange?
You betcha. Pure Antonioni? For sure.
Counter Culture Love - Just when Mark and Daria
thought they were the
only ones in the desert, suddenly Zabriskie Point is full of discontented youth
making it in the desert. The scene that the state of California tried to
use the Mann Act in order to shut filming of Zabriskie Point down.
Mark and Daria on the Dick Cavett Show - Poor Dick Cavett. Mark refuses to cooperate and answer Dick's questions
and publicly bashes the film. Daria
is cold, cut off, and tries to blow guest Mel Brooks up with her mind after
being constantly harassed by him.
Notice how they completely ignore guest Rex Reed who, weeks earlier, wrote that
the pair gave "two of the worst
performances of the decade." When Mark finally does speak to Reed he is
trying to find an excuse to bust his chops and Daria glares at him. A heavy cloud of doom sits
over this interview, and everybody involved is uncomfortable.
Even the audience is nervous. This clip has to be seen to be believed.
All images that appear on this page are used under the Fair Use provisions of United States copyright law, and are presented in this non-commercial venue strictly for pubic benefit (educational).