Disturbing Photos From Studio 54

By | December 19, 2022

Andy Warhol and his entourage were among the regulars at Studio 54.

Warning: This collection of photographs contains graphic images that may be disturbing to some viewers

This collection of unedited photographs caught inside the doors of Studio 54 expose everything that these celebrities never wanted us to know.

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Iconic pop artist Andy Warhol was a frequent patron of Studio 54. Being seen at the trendiest nightclub in New York City helped boost the quirky artist’s public persona. Warhol cemented his connection to Studio 54 when he reproduced one of the club’s VIP tickets, with comp drinks, in a large oil painting on canvas. The oil painting was a gift to Andy Warhol’s good friend, In Cold Blood author Truman Capote. The two friends often partied together at Studio 54, so Warhol wanted to commemorate their good times by presenting Capote with a piece of art reflecting on their nights spent at the 1970s disco mecca. On the back of the painting, which is now in the collection at the New York Public Library, there is a message saying “To Truman Love Andy ‘78” in a black Sharpie.


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One of the most prestigious and notorious places of the disco era, Studio 54 was a bit of a latecomer to the dance club scene in midtown New York in the 1970s. The nightclub didn’t open its doors until 1977 when Steve Rebell and Ian Schrager opened a club in a building that formerly housed a TV studio on 54th Street in Manhattan. Very quickly, Studio 54 became the place to be for celebrities and wannabes of disco’s heyday. One reason why the club was so popular was that not everyone could get inside. The doormen only allowed the rich and famous – and the scantily dresses ‘pretty people’ – through the doors, For those lucky enough to get inside, the scene was one of trendy fashions, open drug use, heart-pounding music, and overt sexual activity.