Music The band was formed in 1989 by Warner and guitarist
Scott Putesky, with Warner writing lyrics and Putesky composing the majority of music. Warner adopted the stage name Marilyn Manson and, alongside a revolving lineup of musicians, recorded the band's first demo tape as
Marilyn Manson & the Spooky Kids in 1990. The group quickly developed a loyal
fanbase within the
South Florida punk and hardcore music scene, primarily as a result of their intentionally
shocking concerts; band members often performed in women's clothing or bizarre costumes, and live shows routinely featured amateur
pyrotechnics, naked women nailed to
crucifixes, children locked in cages, as well as experiments in
reverse psychology and butchered animals remains. Within six months of forming, they were playing sold-out shows in 300-capacity nightclubs throughout Florida. They signed a
record deal with
Sony Music in early 1991, although this deal was rescinded before any material was recorded for the label. The band instead used the proceeds of this deal to fund the recording of subsequent demo tapes, which were released independently. The name of the group was shortened to Marilyn Manson in 1992, and they continued to perform and release cassettes until the summer of 1993, Their debut studio album,
Portrait of an American Family, was released in July 1994. Manson later criticized Nothing Records and its parent label
Interscope for a perceived lack of promotion. While recording b-sides and remixes for the album's proposed third single, "
Dope Hat", the band decided to issue the resultant material as a standalone release titled
Smells Like Children. The record included their cover version of the
Eurythmics's "
Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)", which established the band as a mainstream act. The song's music video was placed on heavy rotation on
MTV, and earned the band their first nomination for
Best Rock Video at the
1996 MTV Video Music Awards. Their second studio album, 1996's
Antichrist Superstar, sparked a fierce backlash among
Christian fundamentalists. The album was an immediate commercial success, debuting at number three on the
Billboard 200 and selling almost 2 million copies in the United States alone, and 7 million copies worldwide. Lead single "
The Beautiful People" received three nominations at the
1997 MTV Video Music Awards, where the band also performed. For 1998's
Mechanical Animals, Manson said he took inspiration from 1970s
glam rock, and adopted a wardrobe and hairstyle similar to
David Bowie. He said he did this to avoid being portrayed as a "
boogeyman", a role which had been ascribed to him by mainstream media following the band's commercial breakthrough. with the label erecting enormous billboards of Manson as an
androgynous extraterrestrial in
Times Square and the
Sunset Strip. The album debuted at number one on the
Billboard 200, but was the
lowest-selling number-one album of 1998 in the United States, with sales of 1.4 million copies in the country as of 2017. The album was not well received by longtime fans, who complained about its radio-friendly sound and accused the vocalist of "
selling out", and Interscope were reportedly disappointed with its commercial performance.
Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death) was a return to the band's
industrial metal roots after the glam-influenced
Mechanical Animals, and was the vocalist's response to media coverage blaming him for influencing
the perpetrators of the
Columbine High School massacre. The album was a critical success, with numerous publications praising it as the band's finest work. Despite being certified gold in the United States for shipments in excess of half a million units, mainstream media openly questioned the band's commercial appeal, noting the dominance of
nu metal and controversial
hip-hop artists such as
Eminem. A cover of "
Tainted Love" was an international hit in 2002, peaking at number one in several territories.
The Golden Age of Grotesque was released the following year, an album primarily inspired by the
swing and
burlesque movements of
1920s Berlin. In an
extended metaphor found throughout the record, Manson compared his own often-criticized work to the
Entartete Kunst banned by the
Nazi regime. Like
Mechanical Animals in 1998,
The Golden Age of Grotesque debuted at number one on the
Billboard 200, Manson began his collaboration with French fashion designer
Jean-Paul Gaultier during this period, who designed much of the elaborate attire worn by the band on the supporting "
Grotesk Burlesk Tour". The
greatest hits compilation
Lest We Forget: The Best Of was released in 2004. After a three-year hiatus, in which the vocalist pursued other interests, the band returned with 2007's
Eat Me, Drink Me. The album's lyrical content largely related to the dissolution of Manson's marriage to
Dita Von Teese and his affair with 19-year-old actress
Evan Rachel Wood. Seventh studio album
The High End of Low was released in 2009, and was their final album issued by Interscope. While promoting the record, Manson made a series of disparaging comments about the label and its artistic censorship, as well as its president
Jimmy Iovine. Manson signed a lucrative recording contract with British independent record label
Cooking Vinyl in 2011, with the band and label sharing profits equally after the label recouped costs associated with marketing, promotion and distribution. The first album released under the deal was 2012's
Born Villain. Lead single "
No Reflection" earned the band their fourth Grammy nomination. and was a commercial success upon release.
Heaven Upside Down followed in 2017, with its single "
Kill4Me" becoming the band's highest-peaking single ever on
Billboard Mainstream Rock. While
touring in support of the record, Manson was injured by two large falling stage props as he performed on stage at the
Hammerstein Ballroom in New York, breaking his
fibula in two places, requiring a plate and ten screws to be inserted in the bone, as well as another screw in his ankle, which he had sprained during a show in
Pittsburgh. "
God's Gonna Cut You Down" was released as a non-album single in 2019, and is the band's highest-peaking single on
Billboard Hot Rock Songs and
Rock Digital Songs. Their most recent studio album, 2020's
We Are Chaos, was the band's tenth top ten release on the
Billboard 200. Manson announced in March 2024 that the band would embark on an arena and amphitheater tour of North America with
Five Finger Death Punch. The tour began on August 2, and was interspersed with Manson's own headlining shows. The same day that the tour began, the band released "
As Sick as the Secrets Within", their first new single in four years. This was followed two weeks later by "
Raise the Red Flag". Music videos were released for both songs, each directed by Bill Yukich. The band will perform their own headline shows in Europe in 2025. According to
Nielsen SoundScan, the band sold 8.7 million albums alone in the United States as of 2011. Ten of their releases debuted in the top ten of the
Billboard 200, including two number-one albums. Marilyn Manson has sold over 50 million records worldwide.
Musical collaborations In addition to his work with the band, Manson has collaborated extensively with other musicians.
Cello rock act
Rasputina opened for the band throughout the "
Dead to the World Tour", the controversial tour supporting
Antichrist Superstar. Lead vocalist
Melora Creager performed cello and backing vocals for the band, most notably for renditions of "
Apple of Sodom", a live version of which appeared as a
b-side on Manson's 1998 single "The Dope Show". Manson also created three remixes of the song "Transylvanian Concubine", two of which appeared on their 1997 EP
Transylvanian Regurgitations. Manson befriended
the Smashing Pumpkins vocalist
Billy Corgan in 1997, and performed renditions of "
Eye" and "The Beautiful People" alongside that band at the 1997 edition of
Bridge School Benefit concert. Manson frequently consulted Corgan during the early stages of recording
Mechanical Animals. Referring to its inclusion of glam rock influences, Corgan advised Manson that "This is definitely the right direction" but to "go all the way with it. Don't just hint at it". In 2015, Marilyn Manson and the Smashing Pumpkins embarked on a
co-headlining tour titled "
The End Times Tour". To promote
Mechanical Animals in 1998, the band embarked on their first co-headlining concert tour: the "
Beautiful Monsters Tour" with
Hole. The tour was problematic, with Manson and Hole vocalist
Courtney Love frequently insulting one another both on-stage and during interviews. Private disputes also arose over finances, as Hole were unwittingly financing most of Manson's production costs, which were disproportionately high relative to Hole's. The tour was to consist of thirty-seven dates, Manson had produced many of Jack Off Jill's demo recordings in the early 90s, and later wrote the
liner notes to their 2006 compilation
Humid Teenage Mediocrity 1992–1996. Manson launched his own vanity label in 2000,
Posthuman Records. The label released two albums – the 2000 soundtrack to
Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 and
Godhead's 2001 album
2000 Years of Human Error – before being dissolved in 2003. The latter album sold over 100,000 copies in the United States, and featured him performing vocals on the track "Break You Down". He performed vocals on "Redeemer", a song written by
Korn vocalist
Jonathan Davis that featured on the 2002 album
Queen of the Damned: Music from the Motion Picture. Davis had been prevented from singing the song due to contractual issues with his record label. Manson also contributed a remix of the
Linkin Park song "By Myself" to that band's remix album
Reanimation, and collaborated with
Marco Beltrami to create the score for the 2002 film
Resident Evil. He performed vocals on the
Chew Fu GhettoHouse Fix remix of
Lady Gaga's "
LoveGame", which was featured as a b-side on the song's single in 2008. He was a featured vocalist on "Can't Haunt Me", a track recorded in 2011 for
Skylar Grey's unreleased album
Invinsible. He appeared on "
Bad Girl", a song from
Avril Lavigne's 2013
self-titled album,
New Orleans brass ensemble
the Soul Rebels performed "The Beautiful People" alongside Manson at the 2015 edition of the Japanese
Summer Sonic Festival. Manson recorded vocals on a cover of Bowie's "
Cat People (Putting Out Fire)" for country musician
Shooter Jennings's 2016 album
Countach (For Giorgio). The two were introduced in 2013 by Manson's then-bassist
Twiggy Ramirez, and the pair first collaborated that same year on a song for the soundtrack to television series
Sons of Anarchy. Their version of the song, "Join the Human Gang", remains unreleased, but the track was eventually rewritten and released by
The White Buffalo as "Come Join the Murder". Following the Columbine High School massacre, Manson was mentioned in the lyrics to
Eminem's "
The Way I Am" from
The Marshall Mathers LP, in the lyric "When a dude's getting bullied and he shoots up the school and they blame it on Marilyn". Manson appeared in the song's music video, and a remix created by
Danny Lohner and featuring Manson appeared on special editions of
The Marshall Mathers LP. Manson also joined Eminem on-stage for several live performances of the track, one of which featured on Eminem's 2002 video album
All Access Europe. He featured on "Pussy Wet", a song on
Gucci Mane's 2013
mixtape Diary of a Trap God, and provided vocals on the song "Marilyn Manson" on the 2020 mixtape
Floor Seats II by
ASAP Ferg. Alongside
DaBaby, Manson co-wrote and was a featured artist on "
Jail pt 2", a song on
Kanye West's 2021 album
Donda. Manson and DaBaby appeared alongside West - aka Ye - at several events promoting the album, including at a listening event held at
Soldier Field in August, and at one of Ye's Sunday Church Services in October. The appearances attracted significant media attention and controversy. Ye said the trio collaborated on a total of five songs. Manson continued his collaboration with Ye for the follow-up album,
Donda 2. Ye collaborator
Digital Nas said Manson was in the recording studio "every day" while the album was recorded, and explained that Ye "doesn't want Marilyn to play rap beats. He wants Marilyn to play what he makes, and then Ye will take parts of that and sample parts of that and use parts of that, like he did [generally when making]
Yeezus." Manson band-member
Tim Skold has confirmed he was involved in the process. While with the Spooky Kids, Manson teamed with
Jeordie White (also known as Twiggy Ramirez) and Stephen Gregory Bier Jr. (also known as
Madonna Wayne Gacy) in two side-projects: Satan on Fire, a faux-
Christian metal ensemble where he played bass guitar, and drums in Mrs. Scabtree, a collaborative band formed with White and then girlfriend
Jessicka (vocalist with the band
Jack Off Jill) as a way to combat contractual agreements that prohibited Marilyn Manson from playing in certain clubs.
Film and television Manson made his film debut in 1997, as an actor in
David Lynch's
Lost Highway. Since then he has appeared in many minor roles and cameos, including
Party Monster; then-girlfriend
Rose McGowan's 1999 film
Jawbreaker;
Asia Argento's 2004 film
The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things;
Rise;
The Hire: Beat The Devil, the sixth installment in the
BMW films series; and
Showtime's comedy-drama TV series
Californication in 2013, in which Manson portrayed himself. He also appeared on HBO's
Eastbound & Down, of which Manson is reportedly a longtime fan, and had lobbied to appear on for years; and ABC's
Once Upon a Time, for which he provided the voice of the character "Shadow". He was interviewed in
Michael Moore's political documentary
Bowling for Columbine (2002) discussing possible motivations for the
Columbine massacre and allegations that his music was somehow a factor. He has appeared in animated form in
Clone High and participated in several episodes of the MTV series
Celebrity Deathmatch, becoming the show's unofficial champion and mascot; he often performed the voice for his
claymated puppet, and contributed the song "
Astonishing Panorama of the Endtimes" to the soundtrack album. In July 2005, Manson told
Rolling Stone that he was shifting his focus from music to filmmaking – "I just don't think the world is worth putting music into right now. I no longer want to make art that other people – particularly record companies – are turning into a product. I just want to make art."
Johnny Depp reportedly used Manson as his inspiration for his performance as
Willy Wonka in the film
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. He had been working on his directorial debut,
Phantasmagoria: The Visions of Lewis Carroll, a project that has been in
development hell since 2004, with Manson also set to portray the role of
Lewis Carroll, author of ''
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Initially announced as a web-only release, it was later decided to give the estimated $4.2 million budget film a conventional cinema release, with a slated release date of mid-2007. The film was to have an original music soundtrack with previously unreleased songs. Production of the film had been postponed indefinitely until after the Eat Me, Drink Me'' tour. In 2010, studio bosses shut down production on the project, reportedly due to viewers' responses to the violent content of clips released on the internet. The film was later officially put on "indefinite production hold". According to a 2010 interview with cowriter Anthony Silva about the hold, the film was still on and the talk of it being shut down was just a myth. In a June 2013 interview, Manson stated that he had "resurrected" the project, and that
Roger Avary would direct it. In a separate interview during the previous year, he said a small crew similar to what he used for his "
Slo-Mo-Tion" music video would be used, and would rather film the movie on an iPhone than not film it at all. In a
Reddit AMA with
Billy Corgan on April 4, 2015, Manson commented that he had withdrawn from the project because the writing process for the film was "so... damaging to my psyche, I've decided I don't want to have anything to do with it", and further commented that the only footage that had been created thus far had been content created for the trailer, which was made to promote the film. Manson appeared in the final season of the TV series
Sons of Anarchy, portraying white supremacist Ron Tully. In January 2016, it was announced that Manson would be joining the cast for season 3 of WGN's
Salem. He played Thomas Dinley, a barber and surgeon described as "the go-to man in Salem, from a shave and a haircut to being leeched, bled, sliced open or sewn up". In 2020, Manson was a guest star on the HBO television series
The New Pope, in which he has a personal audience with the series' Pope and recommends that he visit the prior Pope that lies unconscious in a coma.
Art Manson stated in a 2004 interview with
i-D magazine to have begun his career as a
watercolor painter in 1999 when he made five-minute concept pieces and sold them to drug dealers. On September 13–14, 2002, his first show, The Golden Age of Grotesque, was held at the Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions Centre.
Art in Americas Max Henry likened them to the works of a "psychiatric patient given materials to use as
therapy" and said his work would never be taken seriously in a fine art context, writing that the value was "in their celebrity, not the work". On September 14–15, 2004, Manson held a second exhibition on the first night in Paris and the second in
Berlin. The show was named 'Trismegistus' which was also the title of the center piece of the exhibit – a large, three-headed Christ painted onto an antique wood panel from a portable embalmers table. Manson named his self-proclaimed
art movement Celebritarian Corporation. He has coined a
slogan for the movement: "We will sell our shadow to those who stand within it." In 2005 he said that the Celebritarian Corporation has been "incubating for seven years" which if correct would indicate that Celebritarian Corporation, in some form, started in 1998. Celebritarian Corporation is also the namesake of an
art gallery owned by Manson, called the
Celebritarian Corporation Gallery of Fine Art in Los Angeles for which his third exhibition was the inaugural show. From April 2–17, 2007, his works were on show at the Space 39 Modern & Contemporary art gallery in Fort Myers, Florida. Forty pieces from this show traveled to Germany's Gallery Brigitte Schenk in
Cologne to be publicly exhibited from June 28 – July 28, 2007. Manson revealed a series of 20 paintings in 2010 entitled
Genealogies of Pain, an exhibition showcased at Vienna's Kunsthalle gallery which the artist collaborated on with
David Lynch.
Video games Manson has made an appearance in the video game
Area 51 as Edgar, a
grey alien. His song "Cruci-Fiction in Space" is featured in a commercial for the video game,
The Darkness. His likeness is also featured on the
Celebrity Deathmatch video game for which he recorded a song for the soundtrack (2003). The song "Use Your Fist and Not Your Mouth" was the credits score of the game
Cold Fear as well as
Spawn: Armageddon. The song "Four Rusted Horses" had an alternate version used in trailers for the video game
Fear 3. A remix of the song "
Tainted Love" appears in the debut trailer for the 2010 video game,
Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit and in the launch trailer of the 2012 video game
Twisted Metal. Manson's song "The Beautiful People" was featured in
WWE SmackDown! Shut Your Mouth,
KickBeat and
Brütal Legend. The song "
Arma-goddamn-motherfuckin-geddon" is also featured in
Saints Row: The Third. His music video to the song "Personal Jesus" was used in some parts of the
Buzz! game series.
Hell, etc. Hell, etc. was Manson's third
art exhibition, held in
Athens, Greece. The exhibition was open to the public from April 28, 2010, until May 2, 2010. Manson's more recent artworks and newly revealed pieces at the time, were displayed. The art exhibition was scheduled to run until April 25, 2010, however due to a volcanic ash cloud, it was postponed to run from April 28, 2010, until May 2, 2010. The exhibition was held at the Athenian Cultural Centre. The exhibition opened at 10:00 daily and was open until 22:00. Flash photography was prohibited inside the exhibition, as the watercolor paintings were extremely sensitive to the
flash.
Other ventures Manson launched "Mansinthe", his own brand of Swiss-made
absinthe, which has received mixed reviews; some critics described the taste as being "just plain", but it came second to Versinthe in an Absinthe top five and won a gold medal at the 2008 San Francisco World Spirits Competition. Other reviewers, such as critics at The Wormwood Society, have given the absinthe moderately high praise. In 2015, Manson stated he was no longer drinking absinthe. == Vocal style ==