Tag Archives: Carolyn Cassady

Talking News with Carolyn Cassady: A Conversation with the Matriarch of the Beat Generation

By David Whittaker, Writer and Content Specialist, NewsBank

Closing in on her 88th year, Carolyn Cassady is still gracefully full-speed ahead. The wife of Neal Cassady, one-time lover and confidant of Jack Kerouac, and a somewhat reluctant Beat Generation icon herself, she’s recently returned to her home in England after a whirlwind trip to the U.S. for the production wrap-up of Walter Salles’ new film version of Kerouac’s masterpiece “On the Road,” in which she is portrayed by actress Kirsten Dunst. Her daily duties include sheaves of mail in need of reply, books to sign (her own “Off the Road: My Years with Cassady, Kerouac, and Ginsberg,” a treasure in itself), the occasional visiting rock star, and interviews to grant and subsequently deliver. It isn’t odd for the BBC to call or knock requesting a quote or access to the private mementos of her storied past.

A decade after I did my undergraduate work at Marlboro College on Beat Generation writers, with focus on the women, Carolyn and I became friends through correspondence. And as one might assume a fan would, I’ve peppered her with whatever questions cross my mind. Many times, she’ll implore me back to her book. “Didn’t I cover that in ‘Off the Road’?” And of course many times I find she has, to my chagrin. But she is always welcoming, reminding me that a simple sign in her kitchen reads “Ask Carolyn.” So I do.

I’ve come to also relish the questions she asks me because I learn something of her even by the reversal of our typical pattern of inquiry. Recently, we revisited my career with NewsBank. I’d glossed over that topic in the early days of our chats, explaining I work not as a journalist but rather as a writer of teaching activity-plans based on current news and historical events. This time around however, I expanded upon the details of NewsBank’s Readex division: how we not only preserve historical newspaper archives through the digitization process, but also make said archives more easily retrievable through a search-interface. She thought that was interesting, or at least feigned so out of politeness. Whether her interest was authentic or not, I began to wonder about her ideas on newspapers, past and present. So yet again, I asked Carolyn.

It turns out that today in England her news-reading routine is sparse to none. “I don’t take a newspaper and hardly ever see one. I used to buy the Friday late Evening Standard in London just to read Brian Sewell’s great art criticism.”

I read her reply with a slight shudder, but I could sympathize with her to some extent when she elaborated, “They are more interested in stories that will sell papers, and not all of them accurate, just sensationally doctored.”

Well then, I thought to myself. Not much further I can go with that line of questioning. But what of her interaction with newspapers in the past, and more pointedly, when she was a young girl in Lansing, Michigan, and later Nashville, Tennessee?

“I don’t remember any newspapers from my early childhood in Michigan. I think my parents read the Nashville Tennessean and the Nashville Banner, but I never did. I don’t know what interested them in newspapers other than the current news.”

Hmm. This was going to be trickier than I’d thought. I’d have to take the conversation in a different direction. But first I resolved to use one of my favorite functions of the Readex interface, the one that allows a user to save a PDF image of any chosen document, to send her this article.

Surely she’d be interested in reading an item about the Nashville Community Playhouse circa 1937. In that era, and at that playhouse, she excelled in set design and ascended to the top spot in the make-up department. I created the file to send her and tip-toed up to my next question.

“I was recently thinking of Gilbert Millstein’s 1957 review of Jack Kerouac’s ‘On the Road.’ What impact do you think newspaper coverage had on not only the Beat writers’ literary careers, but also on the public’s conception of the Beat Generation itself?” I asked.

“Now then,” came the beginning of her response and I instantly knew, with just those two words, that I’d queried well. “I do remember the reviews of ‘On the Road.’ I was appalled by the many journalists who so thoroughly trashed the book! I thought they sounded threatened! All I could conclude was that society at that time was so smug and hypocritical; I suspected these guys were probably living much as Jack revealed he and Neal did, but had so far been successful in covering it up. Well, that’s just a guess, but why else such fury?”

Carolyn’s observations made sense to me. How else could a book with characters deviating so radically from the cultural norms of the era be received? The press was in fact all over the Beat Generation with criticism and condescension in the late 1950s.

Kerouac, for one, was deeply affected by the press’s mischaracterization of “Beat,” which he held to be a state of beatitude, of bliss and happiness in art and life. And the press came down hard on him, especially after the publication of “On the Road.” If only he hadn’t passed away from alcoholism in 1969 at the still-tender age of 47, I’d again reach for my old friend, the digitized historical newspaper, to remind him of the better sentiments towards his epic tome.

Thinking of Jack, I decided next to query Carolyn on Readex’s system of delivery – that somewhat surreal realm most of us navigate daily, the Internet. Specifically I wondered what Jack and Neal would have thought not only of the technology, but also their robust presence on the web.

“Jack and Neal would be dumbfounded by the Internet and all the stuff about them on it. They only had radio and tape recorders in those days. Of course, they would be pleased by the notice but not the errors nor exploitation.”

I was particularly pleased with her reply as it had been my assumption. But her answer also rings true within the Readex database. A simple search on the names “Jack Kerouac” and/or “Neal Cassady” within America’s Historical Newspapers brings back a plethora of results. Everything from book reviews, movie reviews, and milestone anniversaries of major Beat Generation works and events, to the way generations ever since the Beats have utilized and advanced their influence and art forms.

Pondering preservation, I decided to tackle that question next. After reiterating the process by which Readex accomplishes this task, I asked, “What value do you see in preserving newspapers in this way?”

“I think preserving newspapers is a good idea. It will give future generations intimate history.”

“In your opinion, are newspapers more valuable than textbooks in that they offer first-hand accounts of events as they unfolded?”

“Well, it depends on how accurate either the newspapers or the textbooks are. There are so many myths and errors in history. Any decent author would do careful research, including newspapers, on his or her subject,” she said.

I liked that answer. I liked it so much that I decided to search just one more time on that very topic. And there it was: a 1906 article from the Dallas Morning News in which an “experienced teacher” came to much the same conclusion as Carolyn.

An “experienced teacher.” I let that thought set with me for awhile and decided I needed nothing more from her on the topic. We could move on to other things.

In so many ways, Carolyn has become one of my experienced teachers. The education she has bestowed upon me, and countless others, is an education in history — and what is history if not the echoes of our collective lives, unfolded? Beyond its imprint upon our impressionable hearts, we reflect our history in our artistic endeavors, in our emergent technologies, in our modes of business, and in our foundational principles, among other things. And as history is learned, and new history is subsequently made, newspapers have, and do (despite their changing landscape), endeavor to chronicle the events that make it.

(My express thanks to Carolyn Cassady for her graciousness, perpetual patience, and generosity with time and spirit.)

Source

Thanks to Elle for posting over at Garrett Minds :)

Leave a Comment

Filed under ON THE ROAD

Love, literature, and friendship at the heart of the Beat Generation

As you probably all know, Garrett has recently finished filming his latest project On The Road, based on the novel of the same name by Jack Kerouac. One central character in the novel is Dean Moriarty, the alter ego of the legendary beat figure Neal Cassady, and Garrett’s character in the adaptation.

I’m a massive fan of the book, and I can’t wait to see the film.

So with this in mind, I’m using my almighty powers of admin to suggest you take a look at Off The Road, Neal’s wife Carolyn Cassady’s take on her husband and his friends. I’ve been meaning to order a copy for myself since a friend visited the Beat Museum and highly recommended it, I think it’ll be a fascinating read.

Following are details of the book and where to order it, feel free to take a look. :)

Love, literature, and friendship at the heart of the Beat Generation

Off the Road tells the intimate story of the now legendary Neal Cassady and his remarkable friendship with Jack Kerouac (who immortalized Cassady as Dean Moriarty in On the Road) and Allen Ginsberg. Written by the woman who loved them all–as wife of Cassady, lover of Kerouac, and friend of Ginsberg—this riveting memoir spans one of the most vital eras in twentieth-century literature and culture, including the explosive successes of Kerouac’s On the Road and Ginsberg’s Howl, the flowering of the Beat movement, and the social revolution of the 1960s. Carolyn Cassady reveals a side of Neal Cassady rarely seen–that of husband and father, a man who craved respectability, yet could not resist the thrills of a wider and ultimately more destructive lifestyle.

“Bursts with emotions of joy and enlightenment, anger and restlessness, delight and desolation.”-Boston Herald

“A great book as well as a wonderful autobiography.”-Washington Post Book World

“Intensely readable.”–Peter Ackroyd

“This is the book to be read in tandem with Kerouac’s On the Road, Ginsberg’s Howl, and Tom Wolfe’s Electric Kool Aid Acid Test. It fits like the lost half of a broken plate.”–Literary Review (London)

“Carolyn Cassady’s book is the one that I have been waiting to read for the past forty years, the one that sets the record straight…one hell of a story.”–Jay Landesman, Sunday Times (London)

About the Author
Carolyn Cassady was born in Michigan in 1923. She graduated from Bennington College, Vermont and earned an MA in Fine Arts and Theater Arts from the University of Denver. While at Denver, she met Neal Cassady, Jack Kerouac, and Allen Ginsberg, and in 1948 she and Cassady married in San Francisco. They had three children. She now lives in Berkshire, England.

(Description taken from Amazon.)

Links to buy:

Borders ~   Amazon ~   kerouac.com

And finally, this is a wonderful interview with the woman herself HERE

Thank you Laura for the links.

Leave a Comment

Filed under GENERAL STUFF, ON THE ROAD

Garrett Hedlund talks Tron and Country Strong

Garrett Hedlund and I bonded over his rural northwest Minnesota roots. I used to live on the border, there, and got lost driving a friend to where he grew up (Roseau and Strandquist) the first winter I lived in North Dakota. No road signs, dark, snowing, and finger drifts crossing the road in front of my tiny, Southern-born Chevy.

“You need to look for Cattle Crossing signs,” he says. “Only thing that shows you where the road is.”

The last time Hedlund was up there, “It was 40 below,” he says. Same here, I say. And you remember what they used to say about OUR kind (people who have moved away)? “Forty below keeps the riff-raff out.”

Got a laugh out of him on that one.

Here’s my piece on GH, which I wrote initially to coincide with the “TRON” release, but which I may re-jigger (lots more notes of him talking about ‘Country Strong’) when it hits print and the wires.

In the annals of moviedom, December 2010 could go down as the month that Garrett Hedlund became a movie star.

This weekend, he’s front and center in Disney’s big budget (as much as $200 million) 3D blockbuster, “TRON: Legacy.” Then there’s the awards season country music romance “Country Strong,” starring Gwyneth Paltrow as a fading singer, Tim McGraw as her manager husband and Hedlund as the struggling young singer-songwriter who might be just what she needs. That opens in some cities in December, in the rest of the country in January.
And he just finished shooting a film based on Jack Kerouac’s Beat novel, “On the Road.”

“Two nights ago I was hanging out with Carolyn Cassady,” Hedlund says. Cassady’s the widow of Neal Cassady, Hedlund’s character, a pivotal person in Keroauc’s life and one of the inspirations for  “On the Road.” “Yesterday morning, I was driving a 1949 Hudson Hornet across the Bay Bridge in San Francisco. We finished the scene, I stopped the car, jumped on a plane, and flew to LA for the premiere of ‘Tron.’ Hollywood Boulevard was all lit up and ‘TRON’ blue. Surreal.
“Then the next morning, I get up and start talking to reporters about these movies I’m so proud of,” Hedlund says. “I just don’t know how to express my unbelievaty at all this. I know unbelievaty’s not a word! It’s more than unbelievable to me.”

Hedlund was in the 2004 big screen “Friday Night Lights,” playing the kid living with an abusive dad (Tim McGraw). He had a role in the hit 2005  action hit “Four Brothers,” billed well below star Mark Wahlberg.

Now, at 26, he’s getting his shot in “two roles, two films, that could not be more opposite.” But they both came about, he believes, because of “On the Road,” which he was cast in way back in 2007.

“Two years went by, and we were all at a point of giving up…I was still completely on board, utterly believing in the project. I was going to the Coinstar machine just to come up with walking around money.

“But I had the confidence of having ‘On the Road’ in the works when I walked into rooms to meet with casting people. I had that going in to read for ‘Tron.’ And I had it with ‘Country Strong,’ too. This movie that was in danger of not being made backed me up.”

The Roseau, Minnesota native says his rural Midwestern roots played a part in landing his big break roles, starring opposite two Oscar winners (Jeff Bridges in ‘Tron,’ Paltrow in ‘Country Strong.’).
“Joe Kosinski, who directed ‘Tron,’ is from Iowa, and we met and had this immediate Midwest connection. I bought into his vision, the movie he was going for, and he believed in me as Sam Flynn.”

“And ‘Country Strong,’ growing up on a farm, Tim McGraw and the other great country stars filled the airwaves around our house. Our only radio station played only country music.”
He landed the roles, buffed up and brushed up on 1982’s ‘Tron,’ ready to bring his game face to his scenes with “the incredibly inspiring” Jeff Bridges. But that was nothing like the work he had to put in to be a convincing singer and guitarist in “Country Strong.”

“From August (2009) onward, I was practicing, hard-core guitar training. I would go into the studio and practice, cutting old Hank [Williams] Sr. tracks, just to chart some progress at building credibility.”

His co-star, singer-turned-actor McGraw, gave him polish.

“Tim let me stay In his cabin down near Nashville for a month and a half. I needed to be there, be around it, just to absorb it.

“Tim’s advice to me was ‘just leave and breathe country music, all day every day. Be singing it, listening to it and thinking about it.’ That’s what I did, along with playing all day every day. I didn’t want to use a hand double or have somebody else do the singing. You’ve got to get past the un-coordination, falling on your face trying to sing and play a song.”

“TRON: Legacy” is pulling down mixed reviews, with Hedlund “decent if vanilla” notices (Empire Magazine) in the rare review that even mentions the sci-fi spectacle’s acting. The acting showcase “Country Strong” may be where he wins his spurs. Meanwhile, he’s just soaking up what just happened, and what may be about to happen.

“I’m planning on sitting on the couch through the holidays, maybe even by myself, and waiting to see what the new year holds.”

Source

Thanks to Elle :)

Leave a Comment

Filed under COUNTRY STRONG, TRON: LEGACY