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If any one figure in early punk embodied the healthy Valley Girl
gone very bad, it would have to be Cherie Currie, the lingerie-clad, platinum-blond
jailbaitery who fronted the legendary Runaways. So it’s oddly fitting that Currie’s
current occupation is chain-saw artist. With Makita in hand — or maybe an Ekko
— Currie can reduce a piece of redwood, pine, palm, elm or cedar into a carefully
carved work of art, generally at the rate of about two a day when she’s really
cranking.
Still, there’s some serious cognitive dissonance when one first meets the former
teenage “Cherry Bomb” snarler and encounters the amiable Chatsworth soccer mom
who appears at the door. Inside her Southwestern-style home, her work abounds
— from the colorful relief images that adorn her walls (the “relief carvings,”
as she calls them, are one-dimensional and done with a dremel tool, a kind of
rotating blade with different bits) to the completed and in-progress pieces
of full-on chain-saw art, which are generally wooden animals and, more specifically,
cute renditions of bears.
“Most of my clientele commissions the bears because they’re very cute,” she
says. “They can sell for $250 and up — I’m busy all year with them.”
Carefully goggled and gloved, she strips the bark off a log via chisel and then
commences to chain-saw and talk about her art.
“Haven’t killed myself yet with the saws,” she says. “But I have been winged
by flying pieces of wood that hit you at 150 mph.”
Luckily, Currie is in excellent shape, possibly as a result of her mid-’80s,
post-Runaways career as a personal fitness trainer. In fact, after a couple
of hours talking with her, it becomes clear that there’s little she hasn’t done.
After she parted company with the Runaways (“We hated each other. The abuse
was unreal because I was the singer and always getting photographed. The others
were jealous”), she acted in many movies, including Foxes and a turn
in This Is Spinal Tap as the source of that cursed
band’s herpes outbreak.
“That scene was on the cutting-room floor,” she says, “but made it to DVD.”
She came upon her new career as a craftswoman, artist and entrepreneur completely
by chance. “I was driving over Kanan Dume Road one day and saw these dudes doing
chain-saw carving by the side, and I knew I had to get into it. I started interning
at the place, the Malibu Mountain Gallery, and before I knew it, I was doing
it.”
It wasn’t all that different from her start with the Runaways. “I dropped out
of high school to go on the road, and they promised they’d help with my education,”
she says. “Of course, the education I got was nothing like the one you usually
get.”
For now, her future as carver is bright. She even got a spot recently on the
Discovery Channel’s Monster Garage. In her episode, called “The
Logsplitter,” she says, “I got to chain-saw carve next to the legendary Bob
King, who’s the best carver out there.”
Currie’s present dilemma is that she can’t do much carving at home because of
the noise and wood-chip refuse — all these years later, she’s still the queen
of noise — but the West Valley real estate boom has made a move to a workshop
or storefront difficult. No matter, she loves her work.
“I was told when I started that all you had to do was visualize something in
the wood and do it,” she says. “If you can’t do that, you can’t carve.”
As for the inevitable question of a Runaways reunion — she and Joan Jett did
“Cherry Bomb” onstage in Anaheim about three years ago — it is unlikely to ever
happen.
“Lita Ford is the main reason,” she says, sadly. “Seven years ago, she set up
this reunion thing and we had to talk Joan into it and that was hard, but Joanie
finally said she would do it. A tour, a record deal, everything in the works
was a go, until Lita heard Joan’s voice on the conference call and then freaked
out.”
Apparently, Ford didn’t sense enough enthusiasm from the band’s most famous
alum.
“Lita basically says, ‘Hey, if you don’t wanna do double backflips over this,
I won’t do it.’ Joan [told her] that she was just off the plane from Hong Kong
and was a little tired, but that wasn’t good enough for Lita. Lita goes, ‘I’m
a household name, I don’t need this,’ and that was that. She did it again four
years ago when we were offered $3 million for a 40-date tour. I think it was
a setup from her to kind of string us along and drop it, because she’s still
angry.”
Currie isn’t, which is a good thing — she’s got a chain saw and she knows how
to use it.
—Johnny Angel