Welcome to MiamiSteven Gaines interviews novelist Brian Antoni on sex, scandal, and South Beach—America's other Sin City
TEXT ON THE BEACH South Beach: The Novel and author Brian Antoni Novelist and Miami Beach literary darling Brian Antoni moved to South Beach from the Bahamas 20 years ago, which is just about the time his new book, South Beach: The Novel, begins. This X-rated roman à clef is a phantasmagoric paean to the golden age of South Beach. Much of it takes place in a rundown apartment building on Ocean Drive called the Venus De Milo Arms, and its ensemble cast includes the hunky Gabriel Tucker, who inherits the dowdy building along with its family of kooky tenants; Miss Levy, an elderly Holocaust survivor who is secretly a bookie; Marina, a performance artist who pulls a ribbon from her vagina inscribed with the names of people who died of AIDS on South Beach; and Jesus, a young Cuban refugee who washes up on Ocean Drive on a raft and becomes a model and paramour of a famous Italian designer. Recently, Radar caught up with Antoni to talk about and his sex-filled tome, the death of Versace, and how the South Beach of today compares to the gay '90s.
Speaking of butt plugs, there's an awful lot of sex in your book. Is there still that much sex in South Beach?
PAINTED MAN Antoni at FantasyFest I would say it's part love story, part comedy, morality tale, travelogue, and that it's a fairy tale, in more ways that one. In one memorable chapter—and I hope I can put this delicately—a German real estate developer is ... violated with a dildo by a black, mute, preoperative transvestite who lip-syncs to a boom box. Does anybody in South Beach have their Speedos in a twist over sections like this? Reading your book, it occurred to me that back then everybody was for sale in South Beach. Are drugs still as prevalent as they are in the book? Everybody is popping Ecstasy. Two of your characters have their ashes dumped in the pool surrounding the Holocaust memorial in Miami Beach. One was a Holocaust survivor and another was a victim of the AIDS. The character Skip Bowling in your book is a nightlife columnist with a masochistic streak who arranges his own murder on the beach.
MAN IN BLACK AND WHITE Antoni Clearly, I took that story from Versace, because you couldn't make that story up. I remember looking at the window of the Versace boutique at 4:00 one morning and in it was a blowup of a gilded raft with beautiful models, and it dawned on me that every day these rafts were washing ashore in front of Versace's house. The character of Jesus was based on every young Cuban guy who tried to make it here. When Versace and Madonna and Sly Stallone moved here, it was the beginning of the end of the golden years. You'd see Versace in the middle of the night, walking around. It's not like it is now, with limousines and bodyguards. When Versace was shot, the whole place changed. It was like when Adam ate the apple. Versace was living off the same energy that we all were, and when he died the innocence was shot. What's your assessment of South Beach today? READ MORE Snap Judgments: X17 co-owner Brandy Navarre on paparazzi principles, and why she just might be Britney's best friend Davy's Kids: Artist Davy Lauterbach's bizarre aesthetic Today's Top Stories |
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