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Bob Flanagan at the Movies, Artists' Television Access, San Francisco, April 18, 1992 [16] Bob Flanagan's Sick, Art in the Anchorage, New York, August 1991 [16] Sick is a voice-over reading the actual ''contract'' that the two (Sheree Rose and Bob Flanagan) drew up, which details their mistress/slave agreement. [7]
Sick: The Life and Death of Bob Flanagan, Supermasochist is a 1997 documentary film directed by Kirby Dick about Bob Flanagan, a Los Angeles writer, poet, performance artist, comic, and BDSM celebrity, who had and later died of cystic fibrosis. The film premiered at the 1997 Sundance Film Festival, where it was awarded a Special Jury Prize.
Robert Flanagan (politician) (born 1945), American politician from Maryland; Bob Flanagan (performance artist) (1952–1996), American performance artist and writer; Bob Flanigan (singer) (1926–2011), American tenor vocalist and founding member of The Four Freshmen; Bob Flanigan (footballer) (1914–1988), Australian rules footballer
Robert Lee Flanigan (August 22, 1926 – May 15, 2011) was an American tenor vocalist and founding member of The Four Freshmen, a jazz vocal group.. The Four Freshmen originated in early 1948 when brothers Ross and Don Barbour, then at Butler University's Arthur Jordan Conservatory in Indianapolis, Indiana, formed a barbershop quartet called Hal's Harmonizers.
Robert L. Flanagan (born November 1, 1945) is an American politician who was the Secretary of the Maryland Department of Transportation from 2003 until 2007, under the administration of Governor Robert Ehrlich.
Bob Flanagan being tortured in the video. The music video for "Happiness in Slavery", directed by Jon Reiss, was inspired by the 1899 novel The Torture Garden by French author Octave Mirbeau. [2] It features performance artist Bob Flanagan entering a large room, placing a flower and a candle on an altar. He then removes all of his clothing and ...
Flanagan is from St. Louis Park, Minn., and graduated from the University of Minnesota in 2002 with a bachelor’s degree in American Indian studies and child psychology.
Brothers Don and Ross Barbour grew up in a musical family in Columbus, Indiana, and had sung with their cousin Bob Flanigan as kids.In 1947, while attending the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music at Butler University in Indianapolis, Indiana, music theory classmate Hal Kratzsch convinced the Barbours that forming a barbershop quartet would be a great source of income, so they formed a ...