This website exists today only because courageous, intelligent and daring women
    back in the 1970's decided to break the rules of society. They rallied together
    under the banner of the punk movement. Many of them are no longer with us.

    This page is dedicated to their memories.

    I am sending out e-mail interviews to women who were actively involved in the late
    seventies L.A. punk scene. Everyone gets the same eight questions. No space or
    time limitations. Since I think that women's voices have already been over-edited
    by others, I reserve the right to refuse to edit these women's responses. Instead, I
    intend to publish them in their entirety, raw and unexpurgated.
    LET THE WOMEN SPEAK!  
    Interview with: Seal  conducted March 2005
    Running into Seal recently was almost a case of what you might call punk rock
    synchronicity. I was having dinner at a local cafe when the waitress informed me
    that the chef had offered to buy me dessert.  A short while later, Seal came out to
    introduce herself and ask if I remembered that she had once been a roadie for the
    Bags. It turned out that she had seen me perform with Stay At Home Bomb in 2004.
    We started talking and distant memories of shows at the Hong Kong Cafe and the
    Cuckoo's Nest  began to surface. Fortunately, Seal's memory is excellent and she
    has great stories to tell.

    Seal is living proof that women were involved in every facet of the L.A. punk scene,
    including the traditionally male vocation of roadie. Because she worked and was
    friends with some of the most popular and successful L.A. bands, she has a unique
    insider's perspective that is as close to actually being there as you can get. I love
    what Seal says about how the early punk scene was "golden in its poverties." That
    line speaks volumes about what it was like to be living hand-to-mouth and creating
    a scene out of nothing, with little resources other than our imagination and  sheer
    determination to DO SOMETHING!

    She graciously agreed to share some of her stories and incredible collection of
    artifacts with us, some of which you will see on this page. We are sure you will find
    something to astonish and delight you in her stories and archives, including a
    stunning early Black Flag flyer. Enjoy!  
Seal, back in the late seventies, and hanging out
with pal, Joan Jett.  
Joan Jett and Seal
Seal in the audience at the Masque for a Mau Mau's
show. Click on the photo for a larger version.
Seal collected set lists from the shows she worked,
Here's one from an early Go-Go's concert. Click on
the photo for a larger version.
Some flyers from Seal's collection. She used to wallpaper her
apartment with them and must have had hundreds at one time.
Click on each thumbnail for a large version.

    1. What was/is your contribution to the punk community?
    Wow, that's a question! I don't really know that I contributed a lot, I was 'just a roadie'. My
    contribution I would say, was to show that there was no aspect of the scene that women couldn't
    handle. I carried heavy equipment and set up stages, mainly for the Go-Go's. Then a man
    named Marshal Beryll(?) asked me and a friend to work for other bands, mostly The Alleycats,
    The Bags, The Plugz. I met a lot of gay women in the scene, a lot of whom I'm still in contact with.
    My favorite contribution was helping to get the girls in 'The Speed Queens' together. I also have
    a pretty good memory so I am able to bore all my young musician friends (with stories of) "How
    things used to be."

    2. Which artist, band concert and/or show had the most impact on your life?
    Joan Jett, because she was such a bad-assed rocker. Then, Gina, Jane and Charlotte of the Go-
    Go's were so fun and cool. You, Diane Chai (Alleycats), Phranc, Sue Tissue (Suburban Lawns).  
    Rozz Williams (Christian Death) changed my life and my view of everything in the world. I'll miss
    him every day. Killer (Speed Queens, now a sound tech for major touring acts such as Peaches
    and Le Tigre) has always had a great impact on what I listen to.

    I was 17 and living my dreams. Going to the Masque on Santa Monica changed my life.

    3. What was the role of women in the early punk scene?
    Look around you...anywhere... Fashion!  Then, people made so much fun of the way we
    dressed, now it's everywhere!  We so carefully cultivated our looks, whether it was day-glo,
    spikes, our hair, our thrift store clothes! Do you see all the Mohawks on young people these
    days?  But women had to have so much strength (back then) to pull it off. You had to spit on
    someone on the streets when they laid into you for the "way you were." Then, you had to be
    ready to fight them, just because we were different. Punk women were strong, sexy and smart.
    Give them that and an instrument or mic in their hands...we ruled!!

    4. What is the legacy of punk in your life?
    Well, I may be ostracized for saying this, but the crap people call Punk now, is not Punk. I would
    rather say "punk is dead" ... with the exception of "Stay at Home Bomb". (ed. note - Seal, I'll pay
    you that $20 next time I see you.)  Punk was our anger, our lifestyles, our drives, our
    depressions, our disconnection from "regular society"... our lack of money. I am a tempered old
    Punk. That life seems so long ago but it was so golden in its poverties.

    5. What are you listening to now?
    What ever Killer (Female drummer for the Speed Queens) sends me!!  I listen to some old stuff,
    Slits, Althea and Donna, Runaways, Siouxsie, X, etc. The newer stuff I listen to is: Peaches, Le
    Tigre,  Patsy (from a few years ago), Chicks on Speed.. (I could listen to Suburban Lawns "He's
    My Boyfriend" on a loop for hours!) I must admit I am a huge Led Zeppelin fan !!!!   Ha Ha.

    6. Do you have any funny or interesting stories to share?
    My favorite is,,, One day I was at The Starwood doing a sound check with the Go-Go's. Joan Jett
    wandered in and proposed doing a song with them, said she loved them. Backstage, their  
    manager said " No way, she is a has-been, old dyke, etc, etc,,," I was so mad. The other roadie
    and I took Joan home after sound check (she had taken a Quaalude). Joan takes a shower and
    comes out in just a towel (That had been my 'wet dream' all my teen years).  On a crappy little
    tape recorder she plays for us her new song that she was working on. We didn't dare tell her we
    thought it was kinda cheesy.

    So we go back to the Starwood, prior to show time and Joan and Gina Schock and I are in the
    stage room, girls bathroom, smoking pot. We were having a very interesting discussion on
    masturbation and a bouncer comes in and tries to kick us all out. Well, he couldn't kick Gina out,
    or Joan so... I was ejected from the front exit. Well, I just went back in, the upstairs, backstage
    door and laid low until I had to do my job.

    After the show, as we were packing up, the bouncer comes up and says "Hey, I thought I kicked
    you out?  Who's in charge here?" Jane (Wiedlin) comes up and says in her tiny little voice, "I
    am." So he tells her that I was supposed to be kicked out and that I needed to be reprimanded
    for smoking pot, blah blah blah. As soon as he leaves, Jane grabs me and says "You better
    have more!!"  

    Oh yeah and (that song Joan played us) "I Love Rock & Roll" went gold. (ed note: It went
    platinum.)              

    7. Are there any punk women from the early scene that you feel have not been been
    adequately recognized?
    Diane Chai, Jill Emery, Eva O., Phranc, and Killer.

    8. What is something we should know about you that we probably don't know?
    I do not want to carry another amp in my life!  I don't regret anything, I don't regret making out
    with someone's girlfriend, I don't regret stealing from supermarkets to get the money to go to
    shows. I don't regret beating anyone up. I make a paltry living cooking which I supplement by
    cutting hair. I've been licensed since 1982.