The hotel gained fame through the extended "family" of
beat writers and artists who stayed there from the late 1950s to the early 1960s in a ferment of creativity.
Gregory Corso was introduced to the hotel by painter and resident
Guy Harloff in 1957. In September of that year, Corso would be joined by
Allen Ginsberg and
Peter Orlovsky.
William S. Burroughs,
Derek Raymond, and
Harold Norse, as well as
Sinclair Beiles would follow. It was here that Burroughs completed the text of
Naked Lunch and began his lifelong collaboration with
Brion Gysin. It was also where
Ian Sommerville became Burroughs' "systems advisor" and lover. Gysin introduced Burroughs to the
cut-up technique and with Sommerville they experimented with a "
dream machine" and audio tape cut-ups. Here
Norse wrote a novel,
Beat Hotel, using cut-up techniques. Ginsberg wrote a part of his moving and mature poem
Kaddish at the hotel, and Corso wrote the
mushroom cloud-shaped poem
Bomb. There is now a small hotel, the four-star Relais du Vieux Paris, at that address. It displays photographs of several Beat personalities and describes itself as "The Beat Hotel". In July 2009, as part of a major William Burroughs symposium NakedLunch@50, a special tribute was held outside 9 Rue Gît-le-Coeur, with
Jean-Jacques Lebel unveiling a
plaque commemorative, now permanently hammered to the outside wall next to the main entrance, honoring the Beat Hotel's seven most famous occupants: B. Gysin, H. Norse, G. Corso, A. Ginsberg, P. Orlovsky, I. Sommerville, W. Burroughs. == Bibliography ==