Bill Siddons (1948) is an American music manager, best known for managing The Doors from 1968 to 1972.
After the death of The Doors' lead singer Jim Morrison he managed the remaining three members for two records. He was the one person in the United States Pamela Courson contacted from Paris after Morrison had died. He arranged the funeral and burial with Pamela, but never saw Jim's body due to the closed casket and his aversion to seeing his friend dead. “We buried Jim correctly,” says Siddons, “and that perhaps was my greatest achievement: making sure we kept it quiet until it was done the right way. Nothing to hide, but we knew what was going to happen because we’d just been through it with Jimi and Janis."
Siddons began his career as a teenage roadie with the Doors while attending Cal State Long Beach, and six months later was asked to be the manager of the band. He and the band parted ways 5 years later when the band dissolved two records after Jim's death and re-formed into "the Butts Band", and he suggested moving to a standard 15 per cent commission arrangement. They re-united around the release and marketing of the Jim Morrison poetry record, An American Prayer which re-launched awareness of The Doors, their historical significance and sextupled their royalties. His character appears in Oliver Stone's movie The Doors, in which Josh Evans plays him.
Actors: Michael Madsen (actor), Andrew Lauer (actor), Adolf Hitler (actor), Kyle MacLachlan (actor), Martin Luther King (actor), Val Kilmer (actor), Bret Culpepper (actor), Kevin Dillon (actor), Robert F. Kennedy (actor), Allan Graf (actor), Dennis Burkley (actor), Crispin Glover (actor), John Capodice (actor), Jack McGee (actor), Costas Mandylor (actor),
Plot: Oliver Stone's homage to 1960s rock group The Doors also doubles as a biography of the group's late singer, the "Electric Poet" Jim Morrison. The movie follows Morrison from his days as a film student in Los Angeles to his death in Paris in 1971, at the age of 27. The movie features a tour-de-force performance by Val Kilmer, who not only looks like Jim Morrison's long-lost twin brother, but also sounds so much like him that he did much of his own singing. It has been written that even the surviving Doors had trouble distinguishing Kilmer's vocals from Morrison's originals.
Keywords: 1940s, 1960s, 1970s, 27-year-old, acid-the-drug, acid-trip, airplane, alcohol, alcohol-abuse, alcoholicBill Siddons (1948) is an American music manager, best known for managing The Doors from 1968 to 1972.
After the death of The Doors' lead singer Jim Morrison he managed the remaining three members for two records. He was the one person in the United States Pamela Courson contacted from Paris after Morrison had died. He arranged the funeral and burial with Pamela, but never saw Jim's body due to the closed casket and his aversion to seeing his friend dead. “We buried Jim correctly,” says Siddons, “and that perhaps was my greatest achievement: making sure we kept it quiet until it was done the right way. Nothing to hide, but we knew what was going to happen because we’d just been through it with Jimi and Janis."
Siddons began his career as a teenage roadie with the Doors while attending Cal State Long Beach, and six months later was asked to be the manager of the band. He and the band parted ways 5 years later when the band dissolved two records after Jim's death and re-formed into "the Butts Band", and he suggested moving to a standard 15 per cent commission arrangement. They re-united around the release and marketing of the Jim Morrison poetry record, An American Prayer which re-launched awareness of The Doors, their historical significance and sextupled their royalties. His character appears in Oliver Stone's movie The Doors, in which Josh Evans plays him.
WorldNews.com | 13 Jul 2018