TheMerry Pranksterswere followers of American authorKen Kesey.Kesey and the Merry Pranksters livedcommunallyat Kesey's homes inCaliforniaandOregon,and are noted for thesociologicalsignificance of a lengthyroad tripthey took in the summer of 1964, traveling across the United States in apsychedelicpainted school bus calledFurthur,organizing parties, and giving outLSD.[1]During this time they met many of the guiding lights of the 1960scultural movementand presaged what are commonly thought of ashippieswith odd behavior, tie-dyed and red, white, and blue clothing, and renunciation of normal society, which they dubbedThe Establishment.Tom Wolfechronicled their early escapades in his 1968 bookThe Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test,including a bit on the same epic 1964 cross-country trip onFurthur- a sojourn to Houston, stopping to visit Kesey's friend the novelistLarry McMurtry.[2]

Notable members of the group include Kesey's best friendKen Babbs,Carolyn "Mountain Girl" Garcia,Lee Quarnstrom,andNeal Cassady.Stewart Brand,Dorothy Fadiman,[3]Paul Foster,George Walker,the Warlocks(later known as theGrateful Dead),Del Close(then a lighting designer for the Grateful Dead),Wavy Gravy,Paul Krassner,and Kentucky Fab Five writersEd McClanahanandGurney Norman(who overlapped with Kesey and Babbs as creative writing graduate students atStanford University) were associated with the group to varying degrees.[citation needed]

These events are also documented by one of the original pranksters, Lee Quarnstrom, in his memoir,When I Was a Dynamiter.

Origin of name

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In an interview onBBC World Servicein August 2014,[4]Ken Babbssuggested that the name "The Merry Pranksters" was his idea:

Kesey and George Walker and I were out wandering around and the rest of the gang were sitting around a fire in Kesey's house in La Honda, and when we came back it was dark and Mike Hagen called out "Halt! Who goes there?" And just out of the blue I said, "'Tis I, the intrepid traveller, come to lead his merry band of pranksters across the nation, in the reverse order of the pioneers! And our motto will be 'the obliteration of the entire nation'... not taken literally of course, we won't blow up their buildings, we'll blow their minds!"

Membership

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On the bus

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Although a great many friends and associates spent time with Kesey at hisLa Honda, Californiaranch in theSanta Cruz Mountainssouth ofSan Francisco,the core group of 14 people who became the 'Merry Band of Pranksters' that drove across the country in 1964 were:[5][6]

  • Ken Kesey(The Chief, Captain Flag, or Swashbuckler), author (1935–2001)
  • Neal Cassady(Sir Speed Limit), driver (eastbound), author (1926–1968)
  • Cathy Casamo(Stark Naked), actress, girlfriend of Larry Hankin (1938–1992)[7]
  • Ron Bevirt(Hassler), photographer (1939–)
  • Ken Babbs(Intrepid Traveler), author, boyfriend of Paula Sundsten (1939–)
  • John Babbs(Sometimes Missing), Ken Babbs' older brother (1937–2012)
  • Jane Burton(Generally Famished), Stanford philosophy professor, pregnant at the time[8]
  • Sandy Lehmann-Haupt(Dis-Mount), sound engineer, younger brother of Carl Lehmann-Haupt (1942–2001)
  • Paula Sundsten(Gretchen Fetchin or Slime Queen), girlfriend of Ken Babbs
  • Mike Hagen(Mal Function), cameraman
  • George Walker(Hardly Visible)[9][10]
  • Steve Lambrecht(Zonker), businessman (1942–1998)[11]
  • Chuck Kesey(Brother Charlie), Ken's brother
  • Dale Kesey(Highly Charged), Ken's cousin, "bus chaplain"[12]
  • Linda Breen(Anonymous), a 14 year old runaway who hopped on in Canada during the original trip

Off the bus

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Other on-again, off-again Pranksters (all of whom did not participate in the first cross-country journey, but may have the later trips) include, but are not limited to, the following:[13][14]

  • Roy Sebern,artist (painted the name "Furthur" [sic] on the bus)
  • Carolyn Adams Garcia(Mountain Girl), wife ofJerry Garciaand George Walker, mother of Ken Kesey's daughter Sunshine (1946–)[15]
  • Chloe Scott,dancer (1925–2019)[16][17][18][19]
  • John Page Browning(Zea-Lot or Cadaverous Cowboy), light show operator (1938–1984)[20][21]
  • Gordon "Dass" Adams,Mountain Girl's brother (1940–)[22]
  • Anthony Dean Wells(The Hermit)[23]
  • Denise Kaufman(Mary Microgram), musician withThe Ace of Cups[24]
  • Ron Boise,sculptor (1931–1966)[25]
  • Paul Foster,cartoonist (1934–2003)
  • Peter Demma,co-owner of Hip Pocket Bookstore with Kesey[26]
  • Norman Hartweg,columnist (1947–)[27]
  • Dorothy Fadiman,filmmaker (1939–)
  • Kathy(Zonker's girlfriend) (aka Sensuous X)
  • June(aka June the Goon)
  • Stephanie Kesey(Lips)
  • Zane Kesey(Chicken Leopard)
  • Allan Terk(Gut)OaklandHells Angel,Acid Test graduation poster artist, designed first Grateful Dead shirt (1939-2018)
  • Matt Wade(Little Jack-Hammer)-OaklandHells Angels'Dago Joe's' son, Author and Bus Mechanic
  • John Terrence Tracy(Terry The Tramp)-OaklandHells Angel,Actor, La Honda alumni(1939-1970)
  • Simon Babbs(Lightning)
  • Margie Piaggio(Marge the Barge)[28]
  • Laurence Shurtliff(Ramrod) Lead Roadie forGrateful Dead(1945–2006)
  • Elaya Cassady(Firefly) Singer, Artist, alumni of Kesey's writing class, daughter ofThe Fillmorelight tech 'Teddy Bruce'
  • Euphoria Foster(Marie) Paul's Daughter, artist
  • Stewart Brand,author and futurist (1938–)
  • Del Close,comedian and performance coach (1934–1999)
  • Wavy Gravy,entertainer and activist (1936–)
  • Paul Krassner,author (1932–2019)
  • Lee Quarnstrom,author (1939–2021)
  • Ed McClanahan(Captain Kentucky), author (1932–2021)
  • Gurney Norman,author (1937–)
  • Robert Stone,author; met the bus in New York City (1937–2015)
  • Emilia Hazelip,organic gardener (1937–2003)

Eastward bus journey

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Furthur,Ken Keseyand the Merry Pranksters' second bus

On June 17, 1964, Kesey and 13 Merry Pranksters boardedFurthurat Kesey's ranch inLa Honda, California,and set off eastward. Kesey wanted to see what would happen whenhallucinogenic-inspired spontaneity confronted what he saw as the banality andconformityof American society. Ken Babbs has suggested that the bus trip reversed the historic American westward movement.[29]

The trip's original purpose was to celebrate the publication of Kesey's novelSometimes a Great Notion(1964) and to visit the1964 World's Fairin New York City. The Pranksters were enthusiastic users ofmarijuana,amphetamines,andLSD,and in the process of their journey are said to have "turned on" many people by introducing them to these drugs.[30]

The psychedelically painted bus's stated destination — "furthur" — was the Merry Pranksters' goal: a destination that could be reached only through the expansion of one's own perception of reality.[30]

NovelistRobert Stone,who met the bus on its arrival in New York, wrote in his memoirPrime Green: Remembering the Sixties(2007) that those accompanying Kesey on the trip wereNeal Cassady(described by Stone as "the world's greatest driver, who could roll a joint while backing a 1937Packardonto the lip of theGrand Canyon"), Ken Babbs (" fresh from theNam,full of radio nomenclature, and with a command voice that put cops to flight "), Jane Burton (" a pregnant young philosophy professor who declined no challenges "), George Walker, Sandy Lehmann-Haupt (dis-MOUNT), Mike Hagen (Mal Function), Ron Bevirt (Hassler), Chuck Kesey, Dale Kesey, John Babbs, Steve Lambrecht and Paula Sundstren (aka Gretchin Fetchin, Slime Queen).[31]

Zane Kesey and Simon Babbs edited the video and audio clips made by the Pranksters on the trip to produce a DVD (1999) called simplyThe Acid Test,which is distributed by Key-z Productions.

Hells Angels

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Kesey and the Pranksters also had a relationship with theoutlaw motorcycle gangtheHells Angels,whom Kesey introduced to LSD. The details of their relationship are documented in Wolfe's above-mentioned book, inHunter S. Thompson's book,Hell's Angels: The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs(1966), and inAllen Ginsberg's poem about the Kesey/Angels relationship, titled "First Party at Ken Kesey's with Hell's Angels" (December 1965).[32]

Later events

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In 1969,Furthurand the Pranksters (minus Kesey) attended theWoodstockrock festival. In the same year, they attended theTexas Pop FestivalatLewisville, Texas.[33]

Kesey'sDemon Box(1986), a collection of short pieces, several about the Merry Pranksters, was a critical success.[34]A subsequent novel,Sailor Song(1992),[35]was not, with critics complaining it was too spacey for comprehension.[citation needed]In 1994, Kesey toured with the Pranksters, performingTwister: A Ritual Reality in Three Quarters Plus Overtime if Necessary,a play he wrote in 1989 about the millennium, influenced byL. Frank Baum's Wizard of Oz works.

The Merry Pranksters filmed and audiotaped much of what they did on their bus trips. Some of this material has surfaced in documentaries, including the BBC's Dancing In the Street.[36]Some Pranksters have released footage on their own, and a version of the film edited by Kesey is available through his son Zane's website.[37]On August 14, 1997, Kesey appeared with the Merry Pranksters at aPhishconcert during a performance of the song "Colonel Forbin's Ascent" from the albumThe Man Who Stepped Into Yesterday(1987). Kesey and the Pranksters also helped stageThe Enit Festival,held at theBill Graham Civic Auditoriumon November 22, 1997, withJane's Addiction,Funky Tekno Tribe,Goldie,andRes Festrounding out the bill.

The original Prankster bus is at Kesey's farm in Oregon. In November 2005, it was pulled out of the swamp by Zane Kesey and family and a group of the original Merry Pranksters with the intent of restoring it.[38][39]TheSmithsonian Institutionsought to acquire the bus, which is no longer operable, but Kesey refused, and attempted, unsuccessfully, to prank the Smithsonian by passing off a phony bus.[40]

Kesey diedof complications due toliver cancerin November 2001.

On December 10, 2003,Ken Babbshosted a memorial to Kesey withString Cheese Incidentand various other old and new Pranksters. It was held at theMcDonald TheatreinEugene, Oregon.The proceeds helped to raise money for theKen Kesey Memorialsculpture designed by Peter Helzer. The bronze sculpture depicted a life-size Kesey reading to three children while seated on a curved granite bench covered with quotations from Kesey's novelsOne Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest(1962) andSometimes a Great Notion(1964). (Pulitzer Prize-winning photographerBrian Lankersupplied the image.) Other benefactors for the project includeBob Weir,Paul Newman(who starred in the 1971 film adaptation ofSometimes a Great Notion) andMichael Douglas(who produced the 1975 film version ofOne Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest).

2011 documentary

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Alex Gibneyand Alison Ellwood directed adocumentary filmMagic Trip(2011) about the Merry Pranksters, which was released on August 5, 2011.

50th Anniversary Trip

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In April 2014, Zane, along with friend Derek Stevens, announced aKickstarterto fund a 50th anniversary Furthur Bus Trip, offering donors a chance to rideFurthur.The fundraiser was successful, and the trip took place between June and September 2014.[41]Over 100 participants were invited to ride on legs of the trip as a new batch of Merry Pranksters. The 2014 journey was over 15,000 miles, 53 different events, took place in 29 different states and was 75 days of Merry Prankster mayhem and fun on the road. A group of filmmakers documented the journey, releasing a film titledGoing Furthur.[42]

References

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  1. ^"Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters".Univie.ac.at.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  2. ^Anderson, Kurt (2011-08-12)."Ken Kesey's Magic Trip and Extreme Tango".Studio 360.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  3. ^The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.p. 5.
  4. ^"LSD Road Trip".BBC World Service.2017-07-28.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  5. ^"Cathryn Marie Casamo".cathryncasamo.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  6. ^"Merry Pranksters | History".Furthurdowntheroad.org.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  7. ^"Cathryn Marie Casamo".Cathryncasamo.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  8. ^Frank Collins (2011-11-27)."MAGIC TRIP - Ken Kesey's Search for a Kool Place / Blu-Ray Review".Cathode Ray Tube.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  9. ^"Pamplin Media Group - Pamplin Media Group".Portlandtribune. 2014-02-07.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  10. ^Archived atGhostarchiveand theWayback Machine:"Merry Prankster George Walker December 4th 2015 Felton, California".YouTube.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  11. ^"Google Groups".Retrieved2017-07-28.
  12. ^The Further Inquiry,page 133
  13. ^Colin Pringle."Who's Who of the Haight-Ashbury Era".Wild-bohemian.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  14. ^Johnson, Jason (2010-09-10)."Furthur and Furthur | Oregon Life | Eugene, Oregon".Projects.registerguard.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  15. ^Brian Robbins (2012-11-19)."Mountain Girl And The Magic Trip: A Conversation With Carolyn Garcia".Brian-robbins.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  16. ^"Dancing queen (May 27, 2005)".Paloaltoonline. 2005-05-27.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  17. ^Brundage, Sandy (2013-07-09)."Fate of Merry Prankster tree in limbo as neighbors rally | News | Almanac Online |".Almanacnews.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  18. ^"Chloe Keighly-Peach Scott: May 16, 1925 ~ September 9, 2019 (Age 94)".
  19. ^"Chloe Scott".
  20. ^"Google Groups".Retrieved2017-07-28.
  21. ^"tHrouGh The Looking Glass - The Merry Pranksters".Pooterland. Archived fromthe originalon 2016-02-11.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  22. ^"She Never Got Off The Bus".SFGate. 1997-05-25.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  23. ^"Editorial & News Images: News Photography, Pictures, Awards, Events, Sports, Celebrity Photos | Getty Images".Corbisimages. 2016-05-02.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  24. ^"Ace of Cups".lysergia.Archived fromthe originalon 2008-11-21.
  25. ^"BoiseLifeWorks".Boiselifeworks.info.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  26. ^"Peter Demma".ralph-abraham.org.
  27. ^"Bohemian 24, Why Norman's Still on the Bus".Dabelly.Retrieved2017-07-28.
  28. ^"Zero, Northwest Florida: 11/11/2007 - 11/18/2007".robertoreg.blogspot.
  29. ^Cavallo, Dominick (1999).A Fiction of the Past: The Sixties in American History.New York: St. Martin's Press. pp.110–11.ISBN0-312-21930-X.
  30. ^abStudio 360: Episode #1232
  31. ^Stone, Robert (2007).Prime Green: Remembering the Sixties.HarperCollins. p. 120.
  32. ^Ginsberg, Allen (1988).Collected Poems 1947-1980.Harper Perennial Library Edition. p.374.ISBN9780060914943.
  33. ^"Texas Pop Festival".About.Archived fromthe originalon 2010-11-28.
  34. ^Kesey, Ken (1987).Demon box.New York, NY: Penguin Books.ISBN9780140085303.OCLC15016784.
  35. ^Kesey, Ken (1993).Sailor Song.Penguin Books.ISBN9780140139976.
  36. ^"Dancing In the Street".IMDb.1995.
  37. ^Kesey, Zane (Producer) (2011).Magic Trip: Ken Kesey's Search for a Kool Place.
  38. ^"Ken Kesey's original magic bus being restored".Today.January 20, 2006.RetrievedJuly 15,2012.
  39. ^Barnard, Jeff (9 January 2006)."Kesey's bus on magic road to resurrection (Associated Press)".The Seattle Times.Archived fromthe originalon 24 May 2011.Retrieved18 July2011.
  40. ^"Kesey's Merry Prank: Bus Isn't The Original -- Smithsonian Says It Doesn't Want '47 Model".community.seattletimes.nwsource.
  41. ^"Furthur Bus 50th Anniversary" Trip "".Kickstarter.April 28, 2014.
  42. ^"The Film - Going Furthur".Going Furthur.
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