Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 29, 2026

Bibbe Hansen

Bibbe Hansen is an American performance artist, musician, actress, and writer. The daughter of Fluxus artist Al Hansen, she was associated with the 1960s New York avant-garde and the underground film scene surrounding Pop artist Andy Warhol's Factory. As a Warhol superstar, she appeared in the 1965 films Prison and Restaurant. In the 1960s, she performed with the pop group The Whippets and released the single "Go Go Go With Ringo," a tribute to Ringo Starr and The Beatles.

Last revised
Jun 29, 2026
Read time
≈ 4 min
Length
975 w
Citations
24
Source
Bibbe Hansen
Occupations
  • Performance artist
  • musician
  • actress
Children3, including Beck
FatherAl Hansen

Bibbe Hansen is an American performance artist, musician, actress, and writer. The daughter of Fluxus artist Al Hansen, she was associated with the 1960s New York avant-garde and the underground film scene surrounding Pop artist Andy Warhol's Factory. As a Warhol superstar, she appeared in the 1965 films Prison and Restaurant. In the 1960s, she performed with the pop group The Whippets and released the single "Go Go Go With Ringo," a tribute to Ringo Starr and The Beatles.

In later years, Hansen became active in the Los Angeles punk and underground arts scenes, co-operating the Troy Café and performing with Vaginal Davis in the satirical punk band Black Fag. She is also known as the mother of singer and artist Beck.

Life and career

Hansen's parents were Bohemian Jewish poet Audrey Ostlin Hansen and Fluxus artist Al Hansen.12 Her stepfather was Jimmy Shapiro.

Her father was an early pioneer of the Happenings movement, which emerged in the late 1950s after he, along with Allan Kaprow, Dick Higgins, and several other artists, attended an influential experimental composition class taught by John Cage at the New School for Social Research in 1958.

Hansen began her professional acting career as a child with the Saranac Lake Summer Theater in upstate New York.3

In 1964, Hansen recorded an album for Laurie Records with friends Jan Kerouac and Charlotte Rosenthal as members of the band The Whippets.45 The group released the single "Go Go Go With Ringo" on Josie Records, a Pop Art tribute to Ringo Starr and The Beatles.6

Hansen had a troubled childhood, recalling: "My mother was, by turns, an amphetamine addict and a heroin addict, and had some very troubling alliances with men."6 After a period in jail as a teenager, Hansen was released into the custody of her father. On her first day out, he took her to dinner with artists including Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol. During the meal, Warhol became fascinated by Hansen's stories about her incarcerations in youth detention institutions and suggested making a film about them.2 The result was Warhol's 1965 film Prison, co-starring Edie Sedgwick.78

That same year, Hansen also appeared in Warhol's Restaurant and participated in two of his Screen Tests.79 Warhol selected her second Screen test for his conceptual series The Thirteen Most Beautiful Women.7 She became part of Warhol's circle, later performing as a go-go dancer with The Velvet Underground during some of the band's early shows.2

In the mid-1960s, she also appeared in films by avant-garde filmmaker Jonas Mekas. By the late 1960s, Bibbe Hansen had moved to Los Angeles, where she met her first husband, David Campbell, a musician and arranger.2 As her family grew, Hansen settled into a relatively quiet Southern California life.

During the 1970s, Hansen appeared as an extra in the film Big Bad Mama, directed by Roger Corman, and as a dancer in Phantom of the Paradise, directed by Brian De Palma.10 Odyssey Theater production of The Threepenny Opera directed by Ron Sossi.

Around 1976, her father moved to Los Angeles and introduced her to the emerging punk rock scene. "That's classic Al," Hansen later recalled.2 "He would get people into shit. He was always where something very, very interesting was happening."2 he soon became involved in the scene centered around the The Masque, informally managing early Los Angeles punk bands including The Screamers and The Controllers. The Hansen home became known as "Bibbe's bunk house," a place where young punks with nowhere else to stay were welcome to sleep.2

From 1990 to 1995, Hansen and her husband, Sean Carrillo, operated the Troy Café in Los Angeles, which became associated with the city's underground performance and punk scenes. During this period, she frequently performed with singer, drag queen, and performance artist Vaginal Davis. Hansen and Davis later formed the satirical punk band Black Fag, whose name parodied the influential punk group Black Flag.611

In 1999, Hansen appeared in the short film The White to Be Angry.

In 2025, she published her book of poetry, Factory Poems, reflecting on her time at Warhol's Silver Factory.8

She is the mother of three children, Beck Hansen, Channing Hansen, and Rain Whittaker, a musician, artist and poet, respectively.1 Hansen delivered her future daughter-in-law, Marissa Ribisi, and Marissa's twin brother, Giovanni, when they were born.12

References

References

  1. Infante, Victor D. "'We find our people': Talking art, Warhol and more with Bibbe Hansen". Worcester Magazine. Retrieved May 7, 2026.
  2. Davis, Vaginal (1999). "Bibbe Hansen, 1999". Indexmagazine.com. Archived from the original on March 8, 2007. Retrieved March 4, 2007.
  3. Hellman, Arthur D. (July 25, 1962). "Adirondack Daily Enterprise".
  4. "Music - The Whippets". BBC. March 15, 2009. Archived from the original on July 1, 2013. Retrieved November 21, 2025.
  5. Bright, Kimberly J. (January 26, 2013). "The Whippets: Beck's mother and Jack Kerouac's daughter were in a '60s girl group". DangerousMinds.net. Retrieved November 21, 2025.
  6. "Index Magazine". Index Magazine. Archived from the original on September 26, 2010. Retrieved September 22, 2010.
  7. Angell, Callie (April 1, 2006). Andy Warhol Screen Tests: The Films of Andy Warhol Catalogue Raisonne. Harry N. Abrams. p. 89. ISBN 0810955393.
  8. Feigis, Alma (July 28, 2025). "New York's First It Girl, Bibbe Hansen". ELEPHANT. Retrieved May 7, 2026.
  9. Kern, Lauren (April 23, 2004). "Andy's Baby". New York Magazine. Retrieved May 7, 2026.
  10. Buckley, Heather (February 23, 2013). "Event Report: Paul Williams and Phantom of the Paradise at Museum of the Moving Image". Dread Central.
  11. Miller, Ben (September 9, 2025). "Parody, Punk and 'Terrorist Drag': Inside the World of Vaginal Davis". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 7, 2026.
  12. "Scientologists Beck & Marissa Ribisi had their second child, daughter Tuesday in June 2007". Celebrific. Archived from the original on October 13, 2008.
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