|
|
Neal Leon Cassady (February 8, 1926 – February 4, 1968) was a major personage of the Beat Generation of the 1950s and the psychedelic movement of the 1960s, perhaps best known for being characterized as Dean Moriarty in Jack Kerouac's novel On the Road.
BiographyChildhoodCassady was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, the son of Maude Jean Scheuer (1892–1936) and Neal Marshall Cassady (1893–1963).[1] After Cassady's mother died when he was ten, he was raised by his homeless alcoholic father in Denver. Cassady spent much of his youth living in skid-row hotels with his father and in reform schools. In 1940, the 14-year-old Cassady was arrested for car theft and spent five months in a reformatory. He was arrested again and charged with shoplifting and car theft one year later, and was arrested for receiving stolen goods on June 6, 1944. He served eleven months of a one-year prison sentence and was released from prison in April 1945. Shortly after he was released, he married the sixteen-year-old LuAnne Henderson in October 1945. In 1946, Cassady and his wife moved to New York City. Involvement with Beat GenerationIn 1947 Cassady met Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg at Columbia University in New York. Although Cassady did not attend Columbia, he soon became friends with them and their acquaintances, some of whom were artists and writers. He had a sexual relationship with Ginsberg that lasted off and on for the next twenty years[2], and he later traveled cross-country with Kerouac. Cassady was the basis for the characters Dean Moriarty and Cody Pomeray of some of Kerouac's novels. Ginsberg mentioned him as well in his ground-breaking poem, Howl ("N.C., secret hero of these poems..."). Additionally, he is credited commonly for helping Kerouac break ties with his Thomas Wolfe-inspired sentimental style and discover his own style through "spontaneous prose", a stream of consciousness type of writing. After Cassady's marriage to LuAnne Henderson was annulled, Cassady married Carolyn Robinson on April 1, 1948. The couple eventually had three children and settled down in a Monte Sereno ranch house, 50 miles south of San Francisco, California, where Kerouac and Ginsberg sometimes visited. Cassady committed bigamy by briefly marrying a woman named Diane Hansen two years after he married Carolyn Cassady. He worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad and kept in touch with his "Beat" acquaintaces even as they became increasingly different philosophically. Following an arrest during 1958 for offering to share a small amount of marijuana with an undercover agent at a San Francisco night club, Cassady served a sentence at San Quentin prison. After his release in June 1960, he struggled to meet family obligations, and Carolyn divorced him when his parole period expired in 1963. Cassady shared an apartment with Allen Ginsberg and Charles Plymell in 1963 at 1403 Gough Street, San Francisco. Merry PrankstersCassady first met Ken Kesey during the summer of 1962, eventually becoming one of the Merry Pranksters. During 1964 he served as the main driver of the bus Furthur, which was memorialized by Tom Wolfe's book, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. He later played a prominent role in the California psychedelic scene of the 1960s. In Hunter S. Thompson's book Hell's Angels: The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs, Cassady is described as "the worldly inspiration for the protagonist of two recent novels," drunkenly yelling at police at the famed Hells Angels parties at Ken Kesey's residence in La Honda, an event also chronicled in The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. Although his name was removed at the insistence of Thompson's publisher, the description is clearly a reference to the character based on Cassady in Jack Kerouac's works, On the Road and Visions of Cody. His name appears explicitly in the 50th anniversary edition of the original scroll of On the Road (On the Road - the original scroll, Viking 2007). Later life and deathIn January, 1967 Cassady traveled to Mexico with fellow prankster George "Barely Visible" Walker and longtime girlfriend Anne Murphy. In a beachside house just south of Puerto Vallarta, they were joined by Berkeley folk Barbara Wilson and Walter Cox. All-night storytelling, speed drives in George's psychedelic Lotus Elan and plenty of LSD made for a classic Cassady performance – "like a trained bear," Carolyn Cassady once said. At one point Cassady took Cox, then 19, aside and told him, "Twenty years of fast living – there's just not much left, and my kids are all screwed up. Don't do what I have done." During the next year, Cassady's life became increasingly nomadic. He left Mexico during May, traveling to San Francisco, Denver, New York and points in between: then went back to Mexico in September and October (stopping in San Antonio on the way to visit his oldest daughter who had just given birth to his first grandchild); visited Kesey's Oregon farm in December; and spent New Year's with Carolyn at a friend's house near San Francisco. Finally, during late January, 1968, Cassady returned to Mexico once again. On Saturday, February 3, 1968, Cassady attended a wedding party in San Miguel de Allende. After the party he went walking along a railroad track to reach the next town, but passed out in the cold and rainy night wearing nothing but a T-shirt and jeans. In the morning, he was found in a coma by the track and taken to the closest hospital, where he died a few hours later on February 4, four days short of his forty-second birthday. The exact cause of Cassady's death remains uncertain. Those who attended the wedding party confirm that he took an unknown quantity of Secobarbital, a powerful barbiturate sold under the brand name of 'Seconal', that can easily lead to overdose. Cassady was not a heavy drinker, though he may have participated in a toast to the bride and groom. The physician who performed the autopsy wrote simply "general congestion in all systems;" when interviewed later he stated that he was unable to give an accurate report, because Cassady was a foreigner and there were drugs involved. Exposure is commonly cited as his cause of death.[citation needed] Legacy and influenceKesey wrote a fictional account of Cassady's death in a short story named The Day After Superman Died (in his collected short stories published as Demon Box), where Cassady is quoted mumbling the number of ties he had counted on the railroad line (sixty-four thousand nine-hundred and twenty-eight) as his last words before dying. Cassady lived briefly with the Grateful Dead and is immortalized in the Dead song "The Other One" as the bus driver "Cowboy Neal." [3]. [4] A second Grateful Dead song, "Cassidy," by John Perry Barlow [5], might seem to be a misspelling of Cassady's name; in fact the song primarily celebrates the 1970 birth of baby girl Cassidy Law into the Grateful Dead family, though the lyrics also include references to Neal Cassady himself. The pop/folk band The Washington Squares did a song named "Did You Hear Neal Cassady Died?" The film The Last Time I Committed Suicide, with Thomas Jane as Cassady, was released in 1997 and is based on the "Joan Anderson letter" written by Cassady to Jack Kerouac in December, 1950. Although much of this letter had been lost, a surviving remnant was originally published in an early 1964 edition of John Bryan's magazine, "Notes From Underground". A 2007 film, Luz Del Mundo, deals with Cassady's friendship and adventures with Jack Kerouac. Cassady is played by Austin Nichols and Kerouac is played by Will Estes.[6] Another film, the biopic Neal Cassady, is slated for a 2008 IFC release. This film will focus more on the Prankster years and stars Tate Donovan as Neal, Amy Ryan as Carolyn Cassady, Chris Bauer as Kesey, and Glenn Fitzgerald as Kerouac. Noah Buschel wrote and directed the film. Shareeka Epps, Paz de la Huerta, Brendan Sexton, Josh Hamilton and Stephen Adly Guirgis co-star. The soundtrack to the movie includes Johnny Horton, Thelonious Monk, Pharoah Sanders, and Don Cherry. The film deals primarily with how Neal became trapped by his fictional alter-ego, Dean Moriarty. In previews the Cassady family has criticized this film as highly inaccurate. [7] Cassady's novel The First Third which was based on his life was published posthumously three years after his death in 1971. His complete surviving letters are published in "Grace Beats Karma: Letters from Prison" (Blast, 1993) and "Neal Cassady: Collected Letters, 1944-1967" (Penguin, 2007). Published works
Published biographies
References
Literary studies
Appearances in literature
Appearances in film
See alsoExternal links
CommentsNo comments have been added. |
Popular PagesEmail this Page | |||||||||||||||||||||