Irving Klaw(1910-1966)
- Director
- Producer
- Additional Crew
Irving Klaw was a true pioneer in the world of bondage fetish
photography whose pictures and movies of the legendary
Bettie Page played a principal role in
establishing Page as a major pin-up icon. Klaw was born on November 9,
1910, in Brooklyn, New York City. After working four unsuccessful years
as a furrier, Irving and his sister Paula opened a secondhand bookstore
in Manhattan in the late 1930s. Klaw began selling movie-star stills
and lobby photo cards in his store after he noticed that teenagers were
tearing out photos in his movie magazines. He eventually stopped
selling books altogether and moved the store from the basement to a
street-level store front. He renamed the place Movie Star News and
dubbed himself the Pin-Up King. Irving also began a highly lucrative
international mail order business that specialized in selling
cheesecake photos of movie stars. In the late 1940s, Klaw started
taking bondage fetish pictures of beautiful women. His first bondage
fetish model was Lili Dawn. Moreover, Klaw and
his sister Paula also took photos of such famous burlesque dancers as
Lili St. Cyr,
Tempest Storm, Baby Lake, and
Blaze Starr. Irving rented the third floor
over Movie Star News and turned it into a shooting studio. Klaw's
photos of Bettie Page proved to be
especially popular and successful. In the mid 1950s, Irving directed
the burlesque features
Varietease (1954),
Teaserama (1955), and
Buxom Beautease (1956). In
addition, he made many 8mm and 16 mm black-and-white adult film loops;
a fair share of these shorts featured
Bettie Page. In 1955, Klaw was brought
before the Senate Subcommittee on Obscene and Pornographic Materials.
He also had his phones bugged, and his mail was often intercepted by
the FBI. In 1963, Irving produced the films
Intimate Diary of Artists' Models (1963)
and
Nature's Sweethearts (1963)
(he also co-directed the latter movie). However, Klaw, nonetheless,
still eventually quit the business and burned up to 80% of his
negatives due to heavy social pressure and constant persecution by the
government. Irving Klaw died at age 55 due to complications from
untreated appendicitis on September 3, 1966. He was survived by his
sons Arthur and Jeffrey. His nephew Ira Kramer now runs Movie Star News
in New York City.