|
Maria Grazia Accorsi
jack kerouac as gourmet what eat sal paradiso on the road-- essay on apple pie sellerio editore --- courtesy newspaper laRepubblica
Carl Adkins * *
Willie Loco Alexander
[ is a massachusets based songwriter who released an early independent 45(mid 70's) called-kerouac ]
Nelson Algren walk on the wild side friend to simone de beauvoir and lou reed
Donald Allen [ The Evergreen Review, editor, poet, Grey Fox Press ]
Steve Allen
[ he played piano on some of Kerouac's recordings, steve allen was the host of an early (50's) television talk show...he mixed interviews and comedy much like the current late night programs..he took a liking to kerouac and had him on his show...kerouac would read and allen would accompany him on piano..they also did the hanover? recording...i believe allen also accompanied kerouac live in some clubs at the time...allen has always spoken well of kerouac and i believe he had an actual fondness for him...he is still alive today, has written many books and many songs, but is somewhat forgotten ]
David Amram David Amram has composed more than 100 orchestral and chamber music works,
written many scores for Broadway theater and film, including the classic scores for
the films "Splendor in The Grass" and "The Manchurian Candidate;" two operas, including
the ground-breaking Holocaust opera "The Final Ingredient;" and the score for the landmark
1959 documentary "Pull My Daisy," narrated by novelist Jack Kerouac. He is also the
author of two books, "Vibrations," an autobiography, and "Offbeat: Collaborating With
Kerouac," a memoir.
A pioneer player of jazz French horn, he is also a virtuoso on piano, numerous
flutes and whistles, percussion, and dozens of folkloric instruments from 25 countries,
as well as an inventive, funny improvisational lyricist. He has collaborated with
Leonard Bernstein, who chose him as The New York Philharmonic's first
composer-in-residence in 1966, Langston Hughes, Dizzy Gillespie, Dustin Hoffman,
Willie Nelson, Thelonious Monk, Odetta, Elia Kazan, Arthur Miller, Charles Mingus,
Lionel Hampton, E. G. Marshall, and Tito Puente. Amram's most recent work
"Giants of the Night" is a flute concerto dedicated to the memory Charlie Parker,
Jack Kerouac and Dizzy Gillespie, three American artists Amram knew and worked with.
It was commissioned and recently premiered by Sir James Galway, who also
plans to record it. He is also completing his third book Nine Lives of a Musical Cat.
Today, as he has for over fifty years, Amram continues to compose music while
traveling the world as a conductor, soloist, bandleader, visiting scholar, and narrator
in five languages. He is also currently working with author Frank McCourt on a new
setting of the Mass, "Missa Manhattan," as well as on a symphony commissioned
by the Guthrie Foundation, "Symphonic Variations on a Song by Woody Guthrie."
Amram and his son live on their family farm in upstate New York, when not on tour.
Amram's webpage www.davidamram.com -
website at www.davidamram.com
Laurie Anderson performance artist
Kenneth Anger film maker, _Scorpio Rising_
Alan Ansen * Poet, playwright, teacher, translator , thanks courtesy John Zervos
Dave Archer North Beach Wannabeat 1961 http://davearcher.com
Jerry Aronson
Al Aronowitz
journalist http://www.bigmagic.com/pages/blackj
John Arnoldy
He appears in Beatitude 28 (1977) as the author of a many page prose poem series titled, ''Portraits.'' He appears as an editor of the Lawrence Kansas Underground News Paper Vortex, (1970). I found he also edited a literary magazine in Kansas City called Harrison Street Review (1972) where he published Seymour Krim and Dan Propper and art work by Bukowski. He is credited with writing the jazz film Last of the Blue Devils in a shared credit at the end of the movie. I found him again as the author of a reflection on Richard Brautigan's death in the LA Weekly, December 21-27 1984. I was told he appears on the credits of a film made of Simone de Beauvoir's novel The Blood of Others but I haven't seen the film directed by Claude Chabrol. He apparently lives in Los Angeles.--AM Desoto. photo of John Arnoldy taken in Los Angeles in the spring of 2005 Apparently he has finished a novel about a female jazz pianist based on the fictional grand daughter of Panonica Koeningswarter titled, Dead Mothers Day. Yours, AM
Levi Asher
Roberto Ayala
photographer friend to michael bowen
Albert Ayler
from Cleveland, Ohio, Albert Ayler: not the greatest of the '60s free jazz/new thing musicians (that was Coltrane), but easily the weirdest. I've heard him called a jazz dadaist, but "medievalist" seems to fit him better: he plays a kind of demotic jazz that goes from low taste to avant-garde, and it's all the same music. Best albums: MY NAME IS ALBERT AYLER: his first, done in Europe with a well-meaning and thoroughly competent set of Danish sidemen, who seem to love him without quite getting what he's doing. BELLS: the best of his new-thing period. Total freedom music, comparable to Coltrane's ASCENSION, but good-humoured at the same time. NEW GRASS and LOVE CRY: Albert trying to reach the masses, with lyrics and R&B backup. The amazing thing is that Albert is playing the same stuff throughout, against different backgrounds.---Rob Moody
Joan Baez
poetess, pickin' guitar
Barry Baldaro
*
Barry
Baldaro, Canadian actor and comedian. He took part in the first
official Canadian 'happening' at Don Cullen's Bohemian Embassy coffee
house.
more on canadian beat generation
Vincent Balestri
actor, director, playwright toured "Kerouac: the Essence of Jack for 17 years in North America. Also has appeared as Charles Bukowski & Jack Micheline.---Reda remembertheatre.org
Lester Bangs
journalist, _psycotic reactions and carburetor dung_
Russel Banks
*
[friend to Jack Kerouac, _Affliction_]
Erni Bär
It was just a bold try by someone (me!) who admires the Beats sice almost 40 Years. As a matter of fact I mconsider myself very serously as a genuine "Dharma Bum" since I have studied quite some time with Tibetan masters but never left the Beat background totally behind. On my website you learn that I refer to them and compare their high energy level with the concept of Tibetan lineages. I feel "BEAT", though never had any real contact with one of the guys. I have been to Marin County and have climbed Mount Tamalpais where Jack slept outside sometimes. I have seen Sausalito and I have strolled around a little bit in Greenwich Village where the guys used to roam around half a century ago---Erni Bär --- visit me on
www.erni-baer.de
Amari Baraka (LeRoi Jones)
poet
Rick Barton
Then there is Rick Barton, the great "original beat" artist who died around ten years ago. Man, he was something else. I've written a lot about him too. Here's an article I wrote that toward the middle gets into Harold and Rick a lot. Hope you enjoy it. Below is a photo of Rick Barton and I, "On the Road" in Mexico City in around '64, our painting books, ready for a day of painting from life. The picture below Rick and me is of Harold LaVigne, a self portrait the day he toured (with a friend who worked there) the art collection in the White House.
The article, HYPERKULTUREMIA, can also be found on my Myspace blog page, with lots and lots of art work by all of us beats
Dave Archer (L) Rick Barton '64
courtesy of dave archer, photo by harold la vigne
Stephen Jesse Bernstein
*
Poet, author, beat, suicide in 1992, Seattle WA USA
James Baldwin
*
[{1924-1987} author playwright civil rights activist. Friend of certain members of the groups of core Beat writers, especially Kerouac and Ginsberg, who he legendarily referred to as "The Suzuki Rhythm Boys." ---thanks, Daniel Brooks]
Ted Berrigan
*
[second beat generation]
Joseph Beuys
environmentalist , painter, artist
Luciano Bianciardi
italian contributor during translation of jk's subterraneans published by giangiacomo feltrinelli editore
Jack Black
journalist and writer of the book
You Cant'Win
he was for twenty-five years a criminal and served severals prison terms; what he says about the criminal's state of mind and the effect on him of society's present method of combating crime is, therefore, based upon direct personal knowledge-- ''Harpers Magazine'' 1929. In 1988 William Burroughs prefaced is book. A great thanks to
Alet Edizioni
Paul Blackburn
{ 1926 - 1971 } [contributor to Black Mountain Review, nyu and the univ. of wisconsin]--photo by elsa dorfman
Robin Blaser
[poet, critic, associate of Duncan, Spicer]
Bono
[Allen Ginsberg appeared before he died reading a song that Bono had written called "Miami", William Borroughs appeared in one of the videos of that album before he died (the video was from the song "last night on earth", included in "Pop" also).---Pablo Garc¡a]
Walter Bowe
*
Michael Bowen
...
i put the human be in together in 67, the oraclenewspaper with alan cohen, the march on the pentagon, created flower power as a way of mantric protection for our assault on the society by loading each haight ashbury press conferance we called with masses of flowers spending all our money even to fill up the ready to bite hard ass crime reporters who were sent to cover our events with a little natural beauty so they called it flower power then remember the daisys down the gun barrels photo i brought those thousands of daisys their is a funny story relating to all this...---michael bowen
Michael Bowen artist on wikipedia
Paules Bowles
novelist
Billy Bragg
*
[English Singer, "Talking with the taxman about poetry" and other great work was asked by Woodie Guthrie estate to put music to some of the songs woodie left behind....thanks Scott Rex]
Alain Brault
*
*
Lasse Braun
American Desire, filmaker hard movie icona in the '70s
Richard Brautigan
{ 30 jan 1936 - 26 oct 1984 }[Change, novelist _Trout Fishing in America_]
Jacques Brel
chansonnier
Bonnie Bremser
*
[wife of Ray, is now known as brenda frazer..inc. in the recent women of the beat generation book]
Ray Bremser
*
Justine Brierly
*
friend of Neal Cassady, Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg in Denver
Robert Briggs
*
_homage to beat generation_ book
Chandler Brossar
*
[New York]
James Broughton
poet ( A Long Undressing: Collected Poems 1949-1969 Jargon 1971)
filmmaker ( “The Pleasure Garden” “The Bed” “Golden Positions” )
playwright ( “The Playground” )
essayist ( Seeing the Light City Lights 1977 ) -- courtesy Alex Gildzen
Kenneth H. Brown
a photo of me standing in front of the new Living Theatre in NYC on the opening night of my play, The Brig, on April 26, 2007. If you want to add me to your list with the photo, by all means do. The play has had terrific reviews and appears to be a hit again after 44 years. It will be awarded a whole new set of Obie awards at the Village Voice ceremony on May 21, 2007. ---
Kenneth H. Brown
Norman O. Brown
_life against death_ counterculture book
Lenny Bruce
[comic]
Lord Buckley
*
[comic]
Charles Bukowski
{Ardenach 16 aug 1920 - San Pedro 10 mar 1994} [poet] "Henry Chinaski"
William S. Burroughs
{ 5 Feb 1914 - 2 Aug 1997 } "Bull Hubbard, Frank Carmody, Will Dennison, Old Bull Lee" [William, when I first met him in Texas, around 78--Patricia Elliott.]
William S. Burroughs Jr.
[_Kentucky Fried_]
Tim Burton
film director Nite before Xmas
Herb Caen
{1916-1997}[journalist, San Francisco Chronicle]
John Cage
{ 5 sep 1912 - 12 aug 1992 }[Black Mountain School]
Edgar Cayce
*
*
Albert Camus
[late journalist and author]
Bill Cannastra
*
was a law student and a drinking buddy of Jack's in New York
Aldo Carotenuto
psycologist friend to fernanda pivano
Caleb Carr
[Son of Lucien _The Alienist_]
''Damion''
Paul Carroll
*
*
Jim Carroll
*
[writer _ musician]
Louis R Cartwright
*
*
Carolyn Cassady
"Camille"
John Allen Cassady
Neal Cassady
{ 8 Feb 1926 - 4 Feb 1968 } "Cody Pomeray, Dean Moriarty"
Nick Cave
writer _ vocalist
Joseph Chaikin
_Living Theatre_ _The War in Haeven_
Hal Chase
[beat core]
Ann Charters
*
Peter Christopherson
*
Jim Christy
*
[journalist _THE BUK BOOK_]
Norris Church
*
[wife of Norman Mailer]
Jerry Cimino
he runs a little beat store on the web and the BEAT MUSEUM ---james stauffer
Tom Clark
*
Paris Review
Andy Clausen
*
*
Frans Clein
*
famous artist
Kurt Cobain
*
Allen Cohen
Allen Cohen
(April 23, 1941-April 30, 2004).
Allen Cohen edited the San Francisco Oracle, a psychedelic, rainbow-hued
underground newspaper published in the Haight-Ashbury in the late sixties.
Allen Cohen was an elder statesmen of the psychedelic era and a true
spirit of the counterculture. A humble man who lived very simply, he had
wonderful sense of humor and a truly dazzling smile. Some even say he
was the inspiration for the song " If You're Going to San Francisco ",
an early Hippie anthem. He was a kind and brilliant human being who
cared very deeply about his friends and the world at large. Wavy Gravy
said Allen Cohen was "tie-dyed to the bone."
He was a well loved friend of many of the people already on your list.
With his gifts of a visionary mind, a compassionate heart and the
sincere belief that Peace, Love and Justice could be achieved through
organized non violent effort rather than violent confrontation and armed
only with his pen and his words, he inspired his generation.
To learn more about him and his work, please visit
http://www.sfheart.com/cohen.html
---peace and love,
Nicole Savage ---- and of course, Nicole many thanks for your courtesy .
Ira Cohen
poet and photographer as well as filmaker, editor and opera singer _ photo by Gerard Malaga _ Storie all write http://www.storie.it _
Leonard Cohen
[novelist _Beautiful Losers_, songwriter]
Al Cohn
*
{ 1925 - 1988 } [saxophonist who recorded together Zoot Simms often throughout the 50's]
Ornette Coleman
the Fisher King of all jazzmen
John Coltrane
[_A Love Supreme_]
Bruce Conner
*
[filmaker]
Albert Cossery
egyptian avantgarde writer friend to henry miller and albert camus in paris saint-germain-des-pres
Conzal
*
[an artist]
Francis Ford Coppola
*
Gregory Corso
''Raphael Urso, Yuri Glicoric''
Jayne Cortez
[poetess]
Mohamed Choukri
*
_writer_ friend to paul bowles, ginsberg, burroughs
Elise Nada Cowen
[poetess]
Carmen Cox
*
*
Robert Creeley
[Black Mountain School, poet]
David Crosby
guitarist friend to Jerry Garcia
Henry Cru
{ 1923 - 1993 }''Remi Boncoeur''
Robert Crumb
[cartoonist]
Don Cullen
Don Cullen (b. 1933)—Canadian comic actor and humanist,
probably best known for his supporting roles on Wayne &
Shuster comedy specials. He was owner of the Bohemian Embassy
coffee house in Toronto, Ontario in the early to mid 1960s, where the
first official Canadian 'happening' took place in early 1963
http://archives.cbc.ca/clip.asp?IDClip=3080&IDCat=365&IDCatPa=262
Mr. Cullen's official website:
http://doncullen.com/index.html
more on canadian beat generation
The Cunnies
*
a married artist couple
Merce Cunningham
black mountain college
Walt Curtis
street writer of Portland Oregon, translated Neruda and Garcia Lorca - La Mala Noche inspired the Gus Van Sant movie - photo courtesy by newton compton editori s.r.l.
John Darren
*
[was in The Living Theatre(actor and set designer), owned Darvin studio(sound mixing studio) in St. Mark's Place and wrote for "The film-makers newsletter" he was also a poet and worked at Gurdy's(The scene)]
Miles Davis
bebop
Fielding Dawson
*
[who was around the cedar bar nyc scene in the 50's...later he had books released by black sparrow]
Gilles Deleuze
Deleuze thinks immediately of one of the writers he admires greatly from the
point of view of style, Jack Kerouac.
Johnny Depp
*
Baby Dumpling
*
*
Jay deFeo
*
San Francisco Painter The Rose
DeMartiis Plinio
_photographer_ of jack kerouac in rome
Bob De Niro
actor son of the painter robert deniro
Robert De Niro
[father of the actor robert deniro..he was a street poet and artist..his art is included in some of the poetry journals of the time...kerouac mentions him in one of his books] photo taken in 1982 by Tony Michelantonio Vaccaro in New York City
Giada Diano
Alan Dienstag
Beat poet Alan Dienstag at 80 on the back porch of his home in
Fairfax, California. Hopefully this confirms
you're on the right track with your evolving lives. Optimistically, Pete
Marlene Dietrich
where have the flowers gone?
Matt Dillon
_actor_ drugstore cowboy
Diane di Prima
[Floating Bear, poetess,_Memoirs of a Beatnik_]
John Doe
*
*
Kirby Doyle
*
*
[Portrait Photographer
http://elsa.photo.net/housebook/the-camera.html
]
Edward Dorn
*
[Black Mountain School]
Robert Duncan
[Black Mountain School, Experimental Review, SF poet, associate, Spicer, Blazer] ''Geoffrey Donald''
Bob Dylan
[poet]
Bill Ectric
I am a writer who's influences include surrealism, the beats, mystery, science fiction, humor & satire, and postmodernism. My website is called billectric. The link is:
http://billectric.org/billectric.html
Bill Ectric
Peter Edler
Peter Edler lived in San Francisco North Beach and Marin County from 1960 to 1976 as a writer artist in the beat underunderground street avantgarde.
pete wrote the book _forever beat_ it's about beat street writers in North Beach in 1964 -
Larry Eigner
*
Black Mountain School
Patricia Elliott
she's friend to William S. Burroughs
http://www.sunflower.com/~pelliott/
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
[playing tunes for folks, Stories about Jack abound, like the time he played for James Dean in a Hollywood parking lot; or the time Jack Kerouac read him the entire then-unpublished manuscript for On the Road; or the time he serenaded a group of young British schoolchildren on a railway platform, later running into one of the kids years later who said the encounter prompted him to buy his first guitar. The "kid" was Mick Jagger.]
Kenward Elmslie
*
[Z]
Elliott Erwitt
[*]
William Everson (Brother Antoninus)
*
{ 1912 - 4 apr 1996}[Poet, Monk]{At UC Santa Cruz he set up an old hand press and produced wonderful broadsides and books. My brother inlaw worked with him, as a student. The press sits waiting for new hands to work the ink, set the letters,stamp words into handmade paper...--Gary Mex Glazner}
Mary Fabilli
*
[was married with William Everson]
Larry Fagin
*
Adventures in Poetry
Marianne Faithfull
black rider wsb
John Fante
bukowski saint patrone _ask_the_dust Denver 1911 - 1983 a picture of writer Dan son of John Fante
Richard Farina
*
[novelist _Been Down So Long_, songwriter, second beat generation]
Christopher Felver
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
[San Francisco Poetry Reinassance] _Lorenzo Monsanto, Larry O'Hara, Danny Richman_ --- courtesy Edizione Minimunfax
Tom Field
*
[Spicer Circle, JK's favorite painter] ''Larry Meadows''
Warren Finnerty
*
[actor in The Living Theatre]actor in Living Theater productions of “The Connection” & “The Brig”
movies include “Cool Hand Luke” & “Easy Rider co-author with Parker Tyler of The Young and Evil (1933) which has been calld
“the novel that beat the beat generation by a generation”
---courtesy of friend Alex Gildzen
[photographer _Route 66_]
Charles Henri Ford
*
[View, surrealist writer]co-author with Parker Tyler of The Young and Evil (1933) which has been calld
“the novel that beat the beat generation by a generation” ---courtesy of friend Alex Gildzen
Elaine Forzano
I was in New York when I was 16 in 1960 and moved to San Francisco in 1970
where I lived for 23 years. Now I am back in New York, what a shock. I have
been trying to pen my own book about Greenwich Village in the '60s, but it
is tough going.---Elaine Forzano
Charles Foster
*
Venice, author of essay "The Troubled Makers" published in the Evergreen Review, friend and associate of Alexander Trocchi.
Charlie Foster’s body of work went to the Bancroft Library at Berkeley.
--- courtesy of Daleth Foster
Judy Foster
*
I just realized this community is the only one that might be interested in My Mothers work, which is poetry and such from 1950’’s Village, 1960’ SF, 1970’s-2000 Berkeley --- courtesy of Daleth Foster
James Franco
actor
Robert Frank
[filmaker]
Jimmy Frankfort
[cartoonist, i painted, did drawings for village voice from 1955-1974 under the pen name jaf--james frankfort]
Jerome John (Jerry) Garcia
{1942 - 1995}[Grateful Dead]
Slim Gaillard
*
the bop artist in Kerouac's -On the Road-. You can get some -On the Road- text about him (also Thelonious Monk and Dizzy Gillepsie) from my jazz page. There's also a link to Slim's picture on that page (click on his name). See http://student- www.uchicago.edu/~narusso/shack/data/gaillar.htm for a bio.---Mary Sands
http://home.earthlink.net/~beatnews
Bill Gargan
[moderator of mailing list Beat-L 1995-1998]
Bill Garver
*
was a friend of William Burroughs. He was a morphine addict and lived in Mexico City
Terry Gilliam
monty python
Alex Gildzen
poet / editor
student of Kenneth Koch
contributor to Buddhist Third Class Junkmail Oracle (1967)
editor of Toucan (which publishd d.a. levy & Richard Krech)
one of “Eleven Cleveland Poets” in Asylum (1968)
LSD poem in Psychedelic Art (1968)
editor of d.a. levy issue of The Serif (1971) which first publishd Gary Snyder’s essay
anthologizd in Hugh Fox’s The Living Underground (1973)
editor of A Little Anthology of Lists (1976) which includes work by r.j.s. & Jonathan Williams
cataloger of papers of James Broughton
bibliographer of Joseph Chaikin
included in Todd Moore’s list of outlaw poets
(photo by Jonathan Williams)
Allen Ginsberg
3 Jun 1926 - 5 Apr 1997 Irwing Garden, Adam Moorad, Alvah Goldbook, Leon Levinsky, Carlo Marx
John Giorno
*
_poet_
David Gitin
My own work from 1962 onward is indebted to some of the Beats who were personal friends: Allen Ginsberg, John Wieners, Gregory Corso, Michael McClure (who continues to be), Janine Vega. You don't have Kay Johnson there, who was one of the first active women in the 'movement'.
When I produced Poets Theater in San Francisco in the '60s, I presented her, Janine, Herbert Huncke, Diane DiPrima, Lew Welch, Philip Whalen, et al. I also had a poetry program on KPFA in Berkeley where I promoted these and others. The magazine I edited, Bricoleur (1969), included McClure, Wakoski, Meltzer, etc. and a later one, The Amphora, featured DiPrima, Levertov, et al.
My first book, Guitar Against The Wall, was published in San Francisco (1972). The first responses I received were from Ginsberg and Ferlinghetti. Now in my seventies, I live in Florida, far from my beloved San Francisco/Berkeley 'former' home. It's good to see your list, which brought me many memories. If you look me up on Amazon or Google, you'll see that my books bear comments by Robert Creeley, Michael McClure, and others.
Anyway, this is to introduce myself to you. Keep up the good work!
Philip Glass
[Requiem, Bardo, Nirmanakaya]
Artie Gold
Artie
Gold (1947-2007)—Canadian bard associated with the Véhicule
poets of Montreal. Known for his dark and rather imaginative sense of
humour, he published the majority of his volumes of verse in the
1970s before prematurely 'retiring', more or less. Ill health—mostly
allergies and emphysema—plagued him for most of his life, and
he passed away on St. Valentine's Day, 2007. More information on
Artie Gold can be found at
http://www.skarwood.com/ArtieGold.htm"
more on canadian beat generation
Herb Gold
*
(81) - in fine shape and writing - is San Francisco's novelist emeritus, literary comrade-in-arms to the late Herb Caen. A chronicler since the 50s - in fiction and prose - of San Francisco bohemia, beat North Beach.---Peter Edler
Kim Gordon
*
Paul Goodman
*
[psycologist, sociologist, _Growing Up Absurd_]
Gary Goodrow
*
[actor in The Living Theatre]
Edward Gorey
[painter, friend to Frank O'Hara]
Robert Gover
*
*
Joseph Grant
_writer_
James Grauerholz
[Burroughs aid and heir]
Morris Graves
*
*
Alberto Grifi
underground filmaker new american cinema
Rick Griffin
RICK WAS ALWAYS A GOOD PAINTER
--- michael bowen
The art of Rick Griffin, whether in cartoons for Surfer magazine, psychedelic posters, Zap Comix, or Christian imagery, mirrors the values and spiritual yearning of a whole generation of youth.
more information
Miguel Grinberg
[poeta y ec¢logo. Edit¢ numerosas publicaciones literarias y alternativas desde los sesentas hasta hoy. En algunas de ellas como "Eco Contempor neo", de los sixties, hay muchas cartas, poemas y colaboraciones beats. Incluso, aparece citado en alg£n libro de Ginsberg (biografia de Allen Ginsberg "Dharma Lion, a biografy of Allen Ginsberg"; p gina 423) y hasta en una foto con ‚l, un poco mas arriba de Bob Dylan.--Sergio Alejandro Balardini "scannear" a picture of Miguel]
Emmet Grogan
*
[second beat generation, was one of the founders of the Diggers]
Robert Jasper Grootveld
Felix Guattari
beat aficionado
Ernesto Guevara de la Serna
_notas de viaje_
Hammond Guthrie
Woody Guthrie
{ 1912 - 1967 }[_Bound For Glory_, _This land is your land_, leftist trade union song, [Woody Guthrie has a couple books besides "Bound For Glory" which might deserve mentioning. ''Seeds of Man'' and ''Born to Win''.---david rhaesa]]
Brion Gysin
Burroughs collaborator, painter who exhibited with the surrealist. Invented the Dream Machine, and the cut - up method of which was utilized in manipulating written texts and audio tapes
Philip Hackett
poet sf north beach area
Larry Hankin
Back in the 60's (before and after the summer of 1997) I was an original member/performer in San Francisco with Scott Beach at The Committee (a political and social satirical improv group) that entertained and worked with many of the S.F. people on the list already, including Michael Bowen and Peter Edler, Dino Valenti, Richard Brautigan, Wavy Gravy - when he was Hugh Romney, Michael Mclure, Bill Hicks & The Charlatans, etc... On my days off, Edler and I wrote and performed political and social satire at the Coffee Gallery in North Beach, regularly on Monday nights --- Larry Hankin
www.larryhankin.com
Larry Hankin is one of the best people to ever be creative in san Francisco. How he got missed so far is beyond me. I just kind of assumed he was on your now very important list. I cant think of a more important person in the entire beat scene than larry hankin.
---Michael Bowen
Keith Haring
painter
Howard Hart
*
jazz drummer, poet
Richie Havens
freedom woodstock festival 1969
Dave Hazelwood
*
printer of chapbooks , Auerhahn Press
Wally Healey
*
Wally Healey, a painting done over magazine page ... you can read about Wally at the url below. He really needs to be remembered. Wally was in a group beat show put on by Harold LaVigne in the mid 60's at Harold's gallery, The Joker's Flux:
http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendId=365102386&blogId=516454160
There is probably no photo of him, but if you look at this blog you will find what remains of his artwork.
fuseaction blog
courtesy by dave archer thanks a lot
Wally Hedrick
*
[Gallery Six, husband of Jay DeFeo]
LouAnne Henderson
*
Jimi Hendrix
guitarist - star spangled banner
Judy Henske
“Queen of thte Beatniks”
legendary singer / songwriter
opening act for Lenny Bruce at LA’s Unicorn Coffee House
landmark albums on Reprise & Electra
Alex Gildzen
Santa Fe
_______________________
blog: Arroyo Chamisa http://www.arroyochamisa.blogspot.com/
videos: You Tube http://www.youtube.com/user/gildzen
website: Gildzen http://www.cybermesa.com/~takis
Gildzen http://www.cybermesa.com/~takis
---courtesy and thanks to Alex Gildzen
Freddy (Freddie) Herko
Bill Hicks
{December 16, 1961 -- February 26, 1994}[God's Comic]
Jack Hirshman
_poet_
Tehching Hsieh
*
*
Abbie Hoffman
[Youth International Party, Yippies, Steal This Book]
Albert Hofmann
chemist
John Clellon Holmes
novelist Go
Dennis Hopper
actor filmaker
Vaclav Hrabe
[czech beat V clav Hrabe was the writer (Horecka-The Fever) and poet (e.g. Blues).--- Martina ]
Herbert Huncke
guru to Ginsberg Kerouac and Burroughs hustler Guilty of Everything
Byron Hunt
Byron Hunt / original beat poet Byron Hunt, great beat poet and trickster, also mentioned in article below. He is the poet who gave Allen Ginsberg "Moloch" that Allen used in Howl. He always said, "Allen and I were up on the hill overlooking the financial district and I started jumping up and down waving my arms yelling 'MOLOCH!, MOLOCH!, MOLOCH!' and Allen used it in Howl and never thanked me for it. Some poets are like that". Ha! Byron passed years ago. God I loved that man.
courtesy dave archer
Evan Hunter
*
_Blackboard Jungle_,_Second Ending_, sociologist
Robert Hunter
*
[poet / song writer]
*
*
Natalie Jackson
*
Mick Jagger
rolling stones
Jim Jarmusch
filmaker
Robinson Jeffers
*
*
Ted Joans
[Jazz Poetry, Heralded as the only authentic African American Surrealist by Andre Breton. Poet, Painter, Jazz Musician and roommate of Charlie Parker]
Ted Joans,
1928-2003
by Robin D. G. Kelley
May 16th, 2003 3:30 PM
On May 7, Ted
Joans, extraordinary poet and world citizen, joined the ancestors. If you
didn’t know Ted, then you couldn’t really dig how the Village became hip in the
1950s. The truly "teducated" knew Mr. Joans as a tornado of a man,
slight in stature, copper in tone with big dancing eyes, who spoke in up-tempo
cadences, as if he swallowed a horn and had a rhythm section under his hat. Meeting
Ted eight years ago, I learned to possess the power to pull the marvelous out
of a pot or a champagne glass, a sliver of garlic or a tattered roll of paper,
a memory, story, or song.
Born in
Cairo, Illinois, Joans came into the world on July 4, 1928, but contrary to
myth he was not born on a riverboat. He studied trumpet, sang bebop, and earned
a B.A. in Fine Arts from Indiana University before moving to Greenwich Village
in 1951 and becoming a true bohemian. He was one of the original Beat poets,
though you wouldn’t know it from most Beat anthologies. He was the author of
over 30 books of poetry, prose, and collage, including Black Pow-Wow, Beat
Funky Jazz Poems , Afrodisia , Jazz is Our Religion , Double
Trouble , Wow , and Teducation . Joans was the granddaddy of
bringing jazz and "spoken word" together on the bandstand. When his
former roommate, the great saxophonist Charlie Parker, passed away in 1955, it
was Joans who began scrawling "Bird Lives!" all over Lower Manhattan.
A well-known
black expatriate, Joans initially bypassed Europe and went straight to the
Motherland in the early 1960s. Timbuktu became his home base, but he traveled
around much of the world—a boho hobo and proud of it—doing poetry readings,
writing jazz criticism, creating "happenings" as such events came to
be called. He exchanged ideas with the leading figures of surrealism, hung out
with Jack Kerouac, met an admiring Malcolm X, broke bread with Afro-Cuban
painter Wifredo Lam and African American painter Bob Thompson, swapped bread
tales with singer and hustler "Babs" Gonzalez, and played invisible
man when the invites came with no bread. In recent years, he lived and traveled
with his companion/compatriot, artist Laura Corsiglia Joans.
Joans’s
mantra was "Jazz is my religion and surrealism is my point of view." While
Andre Breton acknowledged Joans as the only African-American surrealist he ever
met, Joans’ main man was Langston Hughes. There are echoes of Hughes in Joans’s
poems and his performance style. In his best known poem, "The Truth,"
he warns us not to fear the poets among us, for they speak the truth; they are
our seers, clairvoyants, and visionaries. Joans also knew that speaking truth
is a dangerous thing—he called one series of poems "hand grenades"
since they were intended to "explode on the enemy and the unhip." While
his topics ranged from love, poverty, and Africa to the blues and rhinos, all
of his writing, like his life, was a relentless revolt.
In 1968,
Joans dispatched his nearly-forgotten "Black Flower" statement, a
surrealist manifesto that envisioned a movement of black people in the U.S. bringing
down American imperialism from within with the weapon of poetic imagery,
"black flowers" sprouting all over the land. While some of the poems
explode like a bomb, others only spring up like a toy snake from a can. His
imagery is rich with humor, joy, and sensuality, all evident in works like the
"Flying Rats of Paris" or the darkly humorous "Deadnik."
Joans died in
his apartment in Vancouver, Canada. He and Laura had moved there after the
acquittal of the officers who fatally shot Amadou Diallo; he vowed then not to
reside in these United States ever again. When he left us, he had no money,
suffered from diabetes, and was surviving by reading poetry and selling his
personal papers to libraries. He had just completed his "Collaged
Autobiography," a remarkable memoir waiting for the right publisher. Although
one of his favorite lines to admirers who proffered invitations was "no
bread, no Ted," money was never really his bag. He just wanted to get by
so he could live life "surreally." He lindy-hopped on the
"American Dream" and its attendant industrial work ethic and chose a
life of play.
"So in
my rather sorrowful impecunious state," he recently wrote, "I find
myself filled to the beautiful brim with love and with this shared love I
continue to live my poem-life." A few poets in the know have already left
chalked salutes in the streets. Let the Village know: "Ted
Lives!"
Hettie Jones
*
Joyce Johnson
[JK's girlfriend during 1957/58, in 1984 she won the National Book Critics Circle Award]
Janis Joplin
*
Abdul Kader
writer hippie in iraqi on the seventies
Lenore Kandel
[poetess, _The Love Book_ East/West house, ''Ramona Schwartz'']
David Kammerer
*
_was a friend of Burroughs_
Jerry Kamstra
[Jerry Kamstra and Michael McCracken, Jr. in Santa Cruz 11-99.
Jerry and my father were best friends, along with Arthur Monroe and Michael Bowen.
---Michael McCracken, Jr.]
Allan Kaprow
happening performer
Michael Karoli
monster movie holger czukay group
Alan Kaufman
[A new young Kerouac...Alan Kaufman's poetry has the bebop sound
of the best Beat poetry." Ruthe Stein, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE]
Bob Kaufman
{ 18 Apr 1925 - 12 Jan 1986 }[poet Bob Kaufman,
photo copyright Roberto Ayala. collection of, I Paoli,
private library Florence Italy "poet Bob Kaufman died penniless
and suffering in San Francisco, while a few blocks away his publisher,
Lawrence Ferlingheti of City Lights books, continued to sell and profit
by the great black poets most important works. The black people of
America have been treated as an invisible race while the whites
either enslaved or exploited them. In this sense, Bob Kaufmans fate
at the hands of Lawrence Ferlingheti is no different than the fate
of millions of tortured American black people from the times of
slavery until today." statement by Michael Bowen see Bowens
article "Satty is Dead" an excerpt from his forthcoming book.
"The San Francisco Mandalla" on zpub or woodstocknation .]
Aki Kaurismäki
filmaker ,Leningrad Cowboys go America,
Larry Keenan
Larry Keenan, who took lots of photos of the Beats, Hippies, and other counter-culture people---
http://billectric.org/LarryKeenanOne.html
Bill Ectric interview Larry The photograph of Larry Keenan is by Chelsea Keenan.
www.emptymirrorbooks.com/keenan/ Larry Keenan website
Harvey Keitel
[actor friend to allen ginsberg praha 1968]
John Kelly
*
[Beatitude]
Robert Kelly
_the blue yak_
Barry L. Kennedy
Attached please find photo of B.L. Kennedy (aka Bari).
This photo was taken by Anne Menebroker, another fine poet (and co-hort of Charles Bukowski).
Correction to previous e-mail: Bari graduated from Naropa in 1993.
In addition to the Kerouac tributes previously mentioned,
Bari was also the creative catalyst for The World's Longest Poetry Marathon,
held in Sacramento, CA. July 25-Aug. 3, 1996 (200 hours of continuous poetry/24 hours a day).
Reading On The Road is what lured Bari out to California in the first place.
I am a friend of Bari's (and a poet too);
it gives me much pleasure to see him added to this list.--Kitt
Jack Kerouac
{ 12 Mar 1922 - 21 Oct 1969 }"Jack Duluoz, Leo Percepied,
Ray Smith, Jack, Peter Martin, Sal Paradise"
Jan Kerouac
[_Baby Driver_]
Ken Kesey
[novelist, psychedelic revolutionary]
Chuck Kinder
_friend to Ken Kesey_
Larry Kincaid
Alfred Charles Kinsey
psycologist interviewed kerouac and ginsberg on the road
Jewel Kircher
vocalist, neobeat, _Chasing down the dawn_
Mati Klarwein
*
*
Franz Kline
*
*
Seymour Krim
New York
Glad to see
you have Seymour Krim on the list.
I'd be happy to write something on him for your page in exchange for a link
to my page on Krim.
My new collection of his work will be out in April from Syracuse U. Press.
It is here
spring-2010/missing-a-beat
My Krim blog is here
http://stumblingintojews.com/category/seymour-krim/
Best,
Mark Cohen
Seymour Krim was born in 1922 and moved into Greenwich Village in 1943 to hang around the New York Intellectuals and wait for the arrival of the Beats. Krim knew he was a writer, but he complained later that writing book reviews and literary criticism "made a cramped miniature" of his spirit. Then in 1957 On the Road appeared. Its commitment to what Krim called a "decent equivalent between verbal expression and actual experience" changed everything.
Immediately Krim began writing his innovative journalistic essays -- early examples of New Journalism -- for the Village Voice. He followed that by editing The Beats in 1960 and appearing in The Beat Scene that same year. In 1961 his collected pieces appeared in Views of a Nearsighted Cannoneer. The foreword by Norman Mailer announced that "in the work of Seymour Krim lives one of the truest beats of how horrible, how jarring, how livid and how exciting was this city."
Krim remained an essayist, New Journalist, and recorder of the scene as filtered through his intelligent slanted vision. He published two more collections of his work -- Shake It For The World, Smartass in 1970 and You & Me in 1974 -- taught writing at Columbia University and at Iowa, won a Guggenheim and a Fulbright, and lived in the Village until his death in 1989.
Missing a Beat: The Rants and Regrets of Seymour Krim is a new collection of Krim's work.
Best,
Mark Cohen
Kenneth Koch
{1925-2002} _poet_
Paul Krassner
*
[Realist, satirist]
Jerry Kulek
*
(70) has lived in San Francisco since the 50s, still lives and writes there today. During the 60s he published Nexus, an avantgarde literary magazine. He didn't make it that morning in 1970 to be on the family picture but he's an avantgarde writer and permanent component of the North Beach bohemian tapestry.---Peter Edler
*
[Freep]
Tuli Kupferberg
[Birth, The Fugs]
Joanne Kyger
[poetess, wife (briefly) G. Snyder, girlfriend, Lew Welch, East/West house]
La Loca
*
[poetess]{I remember a reading of hers I attended in 1989 in Santa Monica that was totally fantastic. She had just published her collection for city lights _Adventures on the Isle of Adolescence_ (pocket poets series no 46) - and she read the entire thing, cover to cover. When she got to the final lines of 'The Mayan' a friggen riot practically broke out! People jumping around screaming, clapping wildly, total mayhem...Fantastic stuff--David Schwarm}
Philip Lamantia
[Poet Philip LaMantia photo, late 1970s copyright Roberto Ayala collection, I.Paoli, Beat private library. Florence Italy Philip LaMantia is known as the greatest living American surrealist poet.]
Michael Lang
woodstock 1969
Irving Layton
Irving
Layton (1912-2006)—Canadian poet. Born Israel Pincu
Lazarovitch to Jewish parents in Romania, he emigrated with his
family to Montreal in 1913. As a teen, he joined the Young People's
Socialist League (YPSL), and began reading Nietzsche and Marx,
resulting in his expulsion from Baron Byng High School before
graduating in 1930. Shortly after, he met A.M. Klein, with whom he
developed an interest in poetry. He earned an M.A. in Economics and
Political Science from McGill in 1946, and a decade later he became
known as an outspoken debater on the CBC's Fighting Words
television program. From that point onward, he became more and more
of a 'celebrity author', publishing such critically acclaimed volumes
of verse as A Red Carpet for the Sun and Lovers and
Lesser Men along the way. Considering himself a Marxist for
much of his early life, he later turned against the Left and came out
in support of the Vietnam War--not unlike Jack Kerouac. Known for
being something of a "ladies' man", he divorced and
remarried frequently. He also served as Leonard Cohen's early teacher
and life-long literary mentor. He died at age 93 in 2006 after a long
battle with Alzheimer's disease. (Layton's Home Page, maintained by
the Univeristy of Toronto:
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/canpoetry/layton/index.htm
more on canadian beat generation
Ute Lemper
femme fatale influenced by Philip Glass and Tom Waits
Jay Landesman
*
*
Fran Landesman
*
*
Erica Lann
*
[poet]
Bill Laswell
*
*
James Laughlin
{ 1914 - 1997 } [poet]
Harold LaVigne
Harold LaVigne is still painting. He is Bob LaVigne's brother, and a great artist in his own right. Lives in Nevada now and we stay in touch, often every day. I've written a lot about him over the years.---thnks courtesy by Dave Archer
Robert La Vigne
Peter LeBlanc
*
[artist, best known for series of portraits of famous beat poets. --Bill Raney]
Alvin Lee
*
Turk LeClair
Turk was born Lawrence (Larry) LeClair in Brooklyn, New York. He was a figure on the beat scene in New York's Greenwich Village from
the mid-1950s. An aspiring artist and actor, he performed in the art film, "The Flower Thief" with Taylor Mead in 1960. Turk was totally free-spirited and his East 9th Street pad was a venue for a number of psycho-sexual experiments, sometimes observed and recorded by university students. He
developed his talent as a painter and was active in the DADA movement, as he traveled the world incorporating local art styles into his Dadaist paintings. While many people drifted in an out of the "beat scene" and eventually moved on, Turk never "squared off" and was absolutely "beat" to the core until his death from cancer in 2004. Eeeeyaaah, fuckin' beautiful, baby!! (As Turk would say....)
http://www.metroactive.com/papers/sonoma/07.13.00/leclair-0028.html
--- courtesy by Elaine Forzano
Hi I could not find Turk. A lot of other friend’s though. Dino valenti and I were very close. I was with Turk for the 4 months before he died in Pahoa Hawaii. He spent a great deal of time at my house. As the end of this life approached he became more and more like a real saint, a beat saint, a guy who saw that it is all really perfect. I was with him at his last breath also and have the photos thru out the entire time. Also the photos of his incredible smile, a collection of his poems and pictures. We played music together until the last day under the Hawaiian stars. His happiness was infectious. I never saw such a transformation.
Love to all
Michael
---courtesy of Michael Bowen.
John Lennon
*
J.T. Leroy
*
Denise Levertov
{ 1923 - 1997 }[contributor to Black Mountain Review]
Timothy Leary
[chemical revolutionary]
d.a levy
[from Cleveland, Ohio, d.a.levy: one of the transitional generation -- too young to be beats, too intellectual to be altogether hippies. A great poet. The classic collection of his poetry is UCNHAVYRFUKNCITIBAK. There's an essay about him by Gary Snyder in THE OLD WAYS.---Rob Moody]
Alfred Leslie
*
[filmaker]
Gordon Leckenby
*
[i followed the beat movement first as a poet, then as a painter. Currently some of my works are on
http://www.leckenby.com
---Gordon Leckenby ]
James Liddy
*
[As a post-beat, SanFran 60's poet one must consider James Liddy; Irish Mystic, Barroom Mystic, Deep drunk Catholic soul. He was born and raised in the pubs and monastaries of Ireland, became friends with many from Spicer's circle in SF, and is garnering more and more esteem in Irish Literary Circles. But is his work is seldom heard of. Read his Collected poems, or one of his many fine chapbooks for sublime, beautiful poems on Kerouac. They are worth looking for. He now teaches at the U. of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Poems of wit, humor, lost love, personal myth and symbol. Concise, sublime, vastly overlooked. A major poet, and one of Ashbery's favorite contemporary Irish poets. His latest book, "Gold Set Dancing" deserves to be known and read widely.]
Lawrence Lipton
[The Holy Barbarians]
Ron Loewinsohn
*
[Change]
Gerald Locklin
*
[poet, _The Long Beach Freeway_]
Philomene Long
Venice, the beatnik nun, poet, lover of Stuart Perkoff, zen master, American Zen Bones, Wife of poet John Thomas, coauthor Bukowski in The Bathtub.
To Rinaldo Rasa
From Betty Goldstein
With sadness, I forward the following to update your website:
http://www.smmirror.com/MainPages/DisplayArticleDetails.asp?eid=6157
http://blog.myspace.com/carmabum
Steve Lowe
poet / archivist
secretary to William Burroughs
ran Beat Hotel in Desert Hot Springs - courtesy and photo by Alex Gildzen
Malcom Lowry
[novelist, Under the Volcano]
Ira Luis
*
[he was in The Living Theatre and wrote Chinese Coffee which was preformed on broadway ]
John Lurie
*
Angus Mac Lise
*
*
*
[Painter, Spicer Circle]
John Macker
*
[poet/editor of Moravagine & HARP Arts Journal,
featuring Kerouac letters, Scibella, Rios, Ginsberg Bukowski, Perkoff
etc. Friend & student of Venice Beats.
Tony Scibella illustrated his first book, THE CUTTING DISTANCE, Denver,
1984. Poetry featured in Scibella's Black Ace Anthologies throughout
90's. Author of BURROUGHS AT SANTO DOMINGO. Hard-core New Mexico poet.---Calder Powell]
Man Ray
photographer
Robert Mapplethorpe
photograph friend to patti smith
Locke McCorkle
*
[was a Buddhist and he quickly became friends with Kerouac]
Norman Mailer
"Harvey Marker"
Gerard Malanga
*
*
Lenard Malfee
*
[he wrote Birdbath]
ManWoman
A friend and natural psychedelic artist beat poet. If you were interested, he would be good for your list. He lives in a tiny town called CRANBROOK in Canada and every year parades down Main Street dancing dressed as Mr Death peanut ---michael bowen
Thanks for
including me. I'm honored to be in such company.
ManWoman
_________________________________________________________________________
"On
occasion, words force me into their living quarters
to form
bedrooms of pleasure by the cooing of my voice. "
The poet
ManWoman
____________________________________________
Manny's You
Tube
http://www.youtube.com/user/godmadfool
___________________________________________________________
http://www.manwoman.net
_____________________________________________________________
Bizarre Magazine
http://www.bizarremag.com/weird-news/tattoos-body-art/8146/swastika_tattoo_man.html
Howard Marks
mr nice
Edward Marshall
*
*
John Martin
*
[Black Sparrow Press]
Peter Martin
*
*
Lorenzo Mattotti
illustrator influenced by 70s counterculture --- photo Neri, laRepubblica
Valerio Mastandrea
[actor] _A Farewell to Beat_ lectures
Martin Matz
Lewis McAdams
*
*
Joanna McClure
[wife to Michael, poetess]
Michael McClure
[Journal for the Protection of All Beings, poet] "Pat McLear"
Caryl Joseph McCracken
[She was a frequent singer at the Coffee Gallery and long time friend of Michael Bowen and Arthur Monroe. She was good friends with Janis Joplin, as they sang together often. Picture of her picked up from Arthur Monroe.]
Michael McCracken
[Beat Artist, friend of Michael Bowen.; Currently has three pieces in the famous Wennesland Collection in Norway. Deceased 1968. - he was a very important painter in san francisco and his works have been preserved in norway in the wennesland collection. some of his pieces have been printed in a new book from norway.--michael bowen]
Carson McCullers
*
Fred McDarrah
village voice beat photographer - photo by Janie Eisenberg
Jackie Mclain
*
[Jazz Band of The Living Theatre]
Marshall McLuhan
mass media guru
Don McNeill
*
[hippie journalist]
Judith Malina
*
Taylor Mead
*
*
Johannas Mekas
*
- a writer
David Meltzer
Richard Meltzer
Richard Meltzer is one of the best rock writers there ever was. He lives in Portland. He moved there from Los Angeles in 1995.
Natalie Merchant
hey jack kerouac 10000 maniacs
Frank Messina
Richard Hell Meyers
[_Wanna go out_]
Russ Meyer
filmaker _beneath the valley of the dolls_
Jack Micheline
{ 1930 - 27 feb 1998 }[Kerouac wrote: He has that swinging free style I like ... and his sweet lines revive the poetry of open hope in America.]
Barry Miles
Willam S. Burroughs long time friend
Henry Miller
{ 26 Dic 1891 - 8 Jun 1980 }
Joni Mitchell
Joni Mitchell, Canadian-born singer-songwriter and painter.
Ralph Moonie
*
[he started the Judson Church downtown for homeless boys]
Arthur Monroe
[Beat Artist, friend of Michael bowen; current registar at the Oakland Museum in Oakland, CA; Also has pieces in the Wennesland Collection (beat-boheme)]
www.museumca.org/global/art/deptstaff.html
John Montgomery
*
*
Todd Moore
[my best know work is a 40,000 line poem called DILLINGER, abt the american bandit John Dillinger. Part of this poem has appeared from Primal Publishing. in addition, i have a long poem abt to appear from Kings Estate Press on Lorca, the Duende, New Mexico, and Death.---Todd Moore]
Malcom Morely
*
[famous artist]
Mark Murphy
[his best-known recording, 1981's Bop for Kerouac, a music/spoken-word project inspired by the writings of the legendary Beat novelist.]
James Douglas Morrison
["The Lords and The New Creatures" "An American Prayer"]
Shigeyoshi (Shig) Murao
*
[City Light Bookstore fixture]
Ron "Dante" Myers
[Ron "Dante" Myers is a native of Virginia Beach,
Virginia. He studied creative writing at Indiana
University in the mid-1970s but moved to San
Francisco before completing his studies to be
closer to the Beat writers he admired. There, he
participated in a poetry workshop with
Allen Ginsberg and began a long friendship with
Harold Norse, his mentor in the “American Idiom.”
In 2013, he obtained a degree at San Francisco State University with a double major in Studio Art and Geographic Techniques.]
Grazia Neri
photographer
Charlie Newman
_writer_
http://www.unit-n.com
Nico
velvet underground vocalist
Gerald Nicosia
_Memory Babe_
Anais Nin
*
Merri Nisker
peaches avant-jazz
Laura (Nyro) Nigro
[late songstress & poetess]
Ken Nordine
*
*
Harold Norse
*
Alice Notley
[poetess,
http://www.naropa.edu/notley.html
- photo by Rochelle Kraut]
Frank O'Hara
*
[poet]
Paddy O'Sullivan
*
[Paddy O'Sullivan (or Paedric O'Sheamus O'Sullivan), minor poet ("Weep Not My Children"), major character--wore Three Musketeers costume, part owner of Coffee Gallery (I think), friend of Bob Kaufman in Kaufman's last years at the Swiss American Hotel, that cheap dive at Broadway & Columbus. Minor character actor, was in "Little Rascals," played "Stinky," the little rich kid who wouldn't share his toys. His parents were Vaudevillians. He is mentioned in Kamstra's "Frisco Kid." --ljardine]
David Ohle
[Burroughs Circle, _Mortified Man_ _Cows are freaky when they look at you_]
Phil Ochs
[folk singer, activist, friends with Dylan, Ed Sanders and Abbie Hoffman---Kelly and Scott]
Charles Olson
{ 27 dic 1910 - 10 jan 1970 }[Black Mountain School]
Joe Olvera
[journalist]_I wrote a review of "The Mexican Girl" chapter that comes out in On the Road. That review was published in Dharma Beat, and in a Chicano site called: Aztecanet. That review is titled: "Jack Kerouac As a Mexican.-- Joe Olvera"]
www.eastsidereporter.com
Yoko Ono
[artist]
Joel Oppenheimer
[ writer _black mountain college_ ]
Peter Orlovsky
[poet - friend to Allen Ginsberg] "George, Simon Darlovsky"
Genesis P. Orridge
*
Al Pacino
[hung out at The Living Theatre]
Breece Pancake
[writer]
Charlie Bird Parker
{ Kansas City, 29 August 1029 - New York City, 12 March 1955}[musical innovator]
Thomas Parkinson
*
[Ark, UC Berkeley Prof, Casebook on the Beat]
Rebecca Parris
[vocalist]
Kenneth Patchen
{ 1911 - 1972 } [Kenneth Patchen was a beat writer. Two of the books that he authored are "The Journal of Albion Moonlight", and "The Biography of a shy pornographer".---Gordon Leckenby]
Joe Pelanconi
writer
Claude Pelieu
[Bulletin From Nothing]
collages www.atol.fr/lldemars2/pelieu/indexpelieu.htm
Fernando Pessoa
avantgard poet
Pertenço a uma geração - supondo que essa geração seja mais pessoas que eu - que perdeu por igual a
fé nos deuses das irreligiões antigas e a fé nos deuses das irreligiõ modernas.
Nancy Peters
*
[partner with L. Ferlinghetti in City Lights,
married to P. Lamantia]
Stuart Z. Perkoff
[Regarding Stuart Z. Perkoff. In 1963 i met him in Venice California when he was "poet in residence at UCLA". He read some of my poetry and viewed some of my paintings. At the time i had a couple of pieces hanging in Sams Pizza Parlor in Venice, a gallery many of us showed in. By then most of the Venice beats had moved north to San Francisco to be in the middle of the scene.---Gordon Leckenby]
River Phoenix
actor my private idaho
Gian Pieretti
[folk singer he was a italian friend of jack kerouac]
[she translated in 1968 the poem Howl in italian language]
Charles Plymell
[North Beach, hobohemian poet, novelist]{Leaving K.C. Mo. past Independence past Liberty Charlie Plymell's memories of K.C. renewed-- Allen Ginsberg} Charles Plymell was born on the high plains in Finney County, Kansas in 1935 in a converted chicken coop during one of the blackest dust storms of that period. His father was a cowboy born in the Oklahoma Territory, his mother of Plains Indian descent. He completed his freshman year in high school and dropped out. After working in most all the western states at many types of laboring jobs, he drifted between Los Angeles and Kansas City during his hipster years, steeped in jazz, race music, and country. He later attended Wichita State for a few years, not obtaining a degree.
While working on the docks in San Francisco, he was recruited by students and the founder of The Johns Hopkins Writing Seminars to earn an Masters in Writing. He then settled in Upstate New York with his wife and children teaching and tutoring courses in institutions where he could apply his knowledge and experiences. Many of them were courses in prisons until their population, increasingly victimized, due to the unconstitutional mandatory sentencing and the terrorizing political war on drugs made the experience too overwhelmingly emotive.
His master's thesis at Hopkins was quickly published by City Lights titled Last of the Moccasins and then by Europa Verlag in Austria. After it went out of print, it was reissued with the Los Angeles' artist Robert Williams' painting on the cover (now available as an ebook). Williams went against his own policy of never doing covers only because Plymell was the first printer of Robert Crumb's Zap Comix. A few copies remain in print and are available from Water Row Books in Sudbury, MA, which has published a Plymell Reader titled Hand on the Doorknob. Many books, among them the Scarecrow Press book, Forever Wider, edited and introduced by Robert Peters; and other items including a collage book by 12 Gauge Press are listed in collectors' catalogues such as Water Row, Ken Lopez, or on Bibliofind or e bay.
Plymell was cited by Governor Finney of Kansas for his contribution to the people as well as the World Book for being the most promising poet of 1976. He opposes the National Endowment for the Arts and has criticized it in print. He claims it became a politicized unjust system feeding on its own mediocrity and self-contradiction. He views were mentioned in the New York Times in " Notes on People" and again in "Washington Talk". He was subsequently blacklisted and has never received any funding from any federal, state, or academic agency to pursue his creativity.
Books:
Apocalypse Rose, Dave Haselwood Books, San Francisco, CA, 1967.
Neon Poems, Atom Mind Publications, Syracuse, NY, 1970.
The Last of the Moccasins, City Lights Books, San Francisco, CA, 1971; Mother Road Publications, 1996.
Moccasins Ein Beat-Kaleidoskop, Europaverlag, Vienna, Austria, 1980.
Over the Stage of Kansas, Telephone Books, NYC, 1973.
The Trashing of America, Kulchur Foundation, NYC, 1975.
Blue Orchid Numero Uno, Telephone Books, 1977.
Panik in Dodge City, Expanded Media Editions, Bonn, W. Germany, 1981.
Forever Wider, 1954-1984, Scarecrow Press, Metuchen, NJ, 1985.
Was Poe Afraid?, Bogg Publications, Arlington, VA, 1990.
Hand on the Doorknob, Water Row Books, Sudbury, MA, 2000
Anthologies:
Mark in Time, New Glide Publications, San Francisco, CA, 1971.
And The Roses Race Around Her Name, Stonehill, NYC, 1975.
Turpentin on the Rocks, Maro Verlag, Augsburg, W. Germany, 1978.
A Quois Bon, Le Soleil Noir, Paris, France, 1978.
Planet Detroit, Anthology of Urban Poetry, Detroit, MI, 1983.
Second Coming Anthology, Second Coming Press, San Francisco, CA, 1984.
The World, Crown Publishers, 1991.
Editors' Choice III, The Spirit That Moves Us, New York, 1992.
The Age of Koestler, The Spirit of the Wind Press, Kalamazoo, MI, 1995.
Patricia Marvin
email pelliott@sunflower.com
Claude Powell
*
[photographer, friend to Charles Bukowski]
Domenico Procacci
filmaker
Dan Propper
*
*
Wayne Propst
Wayne Propst. resides Lawrence, KS
artist, writer, slightly mad genius, friend of William S.Burroughs, dear
friend of many, can be mean as a snake, with heart that doesn't falter ---courtesy patricia elliott
Henry Prost
*
[actor in The Living Theatre]
Al Purdy
Al Purdy (1918-2000)Canadian poet, one of the most respected and popular that Canada has produced. Born and raised in Ontario,
he served in the Royal Canadian Air Force durring World War II. Fiercely non-academic
(poet-novelist Margaret Atwood once dumped a glass of beer over his head when he accused her of being "an academic"),
he published such award-winning volumes as The Cariboo Horses and Collected Poems, and was eventually awarded the Order of
Canada and the Order of Ontario. Purdy was a friend of Charles Bukowski, and the two corresponded for many years.
Many people considered him the unofficial Poet Laureate of Canada, years before the country even adopted the practice of selecting a laureate.
(Purdy's Home Page, maintained by the University of Toronto:
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/canpoetry/purdy/index.htm )
more on canadian beat generation
Madame Rachou
*
[owner of Beat Hotel in Paris where beats lived]
Lee Ranaldo
[he's the guitarist from sonic youth, and has primo kerouac influence he read at the dedication ceremony for selected letters and portable jack, and titled his solo album "scripture of the golded eternity"--Paul Bissa]
Margareth Randall
poetess
Robert Rauschenberg
black mountain college painter
Lou Reed
*
Freddie Red
*
[Jazz band of The Living Theatre]
Tim Redfearn
*
friend of Neal Cassady, Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg in Denver
Kenneth Rexroth
*
{ 22 dic 1905 - 1982 }[Berkeley Reinassance, San Francisco Reinassance, Six Gallery reading] "Reinhold Cacoethes"
Steve Richmond
*
[introduction for Bukowsky]
Mordecai Richler
Mordecai
Richler (1931-2001)—Canadian comic novelist, essayist and
screenwriter, generally regarded as one of Canada's two or three
all-time greatest authors. Often rather controversial in his approach
to English-French relations in his native Quebec, as well as to his
own Jewish heritage, Richler avoided the trappings of both the
socially conservative Right and the politically correct Left. He
started his career as a novelist while living throughout France and
Spain in the early 1950s, and divided his time between Canada and
England from the mid '50s to the end of his life. Three of his novels
have been turned into motion pictures: The Apprenticeship of Duddy
Kravitz (1958; film, 1974), Joshua Then and Now (1980;
film, 1985), and St. Urbain's Horseman (1971; film, 2007).
Richler received several awards for his writing, was nominated for a
Best-Screenplay Oscar for The Apprenticeship of Duddy
Kravitz , and—despite his curmudgeonly attitudes towards his
own country—was made a Companion of the Order of Canada shortly
before his rather-sudden death in the summer of 2001.
more on canadian beat generation
Frank Rios
Poet, together with Stuart Perkoff and Tony Scibella
were The Three Stooges of Venice.
Larry Rivers
*
books : Another Roadside Attraction, Still Life With Woodpecker ---courtesy of ben
Robbie Robertson
*
Cynthia Robinson
*
Edoardo Roditi
*
[anarchist poet, friend of Gregory Corso]
Theodore Roethke
*
*
Ned Rorem
friend to John Cage
Anton Rosenberg
*
[perhaps the model for the character Julian Alexander in Kerouac's novel "The Subterraneans". See San Francisco newspaper (Chronicle or Examiner, I'm not sure which) on February 23, 1998 for obituary. Its pretty funny, they write that he "never amounted to much of anything". Thanks,--- M.]
Michael Rumaker
[Michael Rumaker is a 1955 graduate of Black Mountain College in North Carolina and is the author of the novels THE BUTTERFLY (1961), short story collection,GRINGOS AND OTHER STORIES (1967), which was reissued in a new and more comprehensive edition in 1991, A DAY AND A NIGHT AT THE BATHS (1979), MY FIRST SATYRNALIA (1981), TO KILL A CARDINAL (1992), and PAGAN DAYS (due Spring 1999); the play QUEERS (1970); and the memoirs ROBERT DUNCAN IN SAN FRANCISCO (1997) and BLACK MOUNTAIN DAYS (still to be published).---Mike Rumaker]
Peter Samuelson
*
[1960-1963 Bay Area Painter]
Ed Sanders
[Peace Eye Bookstore, The Fugs]
Edoardo Sanguineti
[avantagard poet, friends to beat]
Albert Saijo
[One name that I thought should be included is Albert Saijo. JK and Lew Welch took a cross country trip in 1959. They wrote haikus all the way across the big buldge of land. These haikus eventually ended up in an out of print book called Trip Trap--Jonathan Pickle] "George Baso" - Zen Master/writer Albert Saijo and artist Michael Bowen have been friends since the late 50s. Albert Saijo lives, writes and contemplates reality at Volcano Village Hawaii. There in the mists of the mountain and the glow of the volcano, Kilauea, he composes his work. photo copyright Maitreya Bowen. I.Paolis "Beat Collection" Florence Italy - here is a photo taken in San Francisco 1996 of Michael Bowen, I.Paoli, Indra Bowen/Paoli, Albert Saijo.
Jerome Savary
jazzist friend to jack kerouac
Arturo Schwarz
surrealist writer librarian open a beat bookstore in Milan in the sixties, friend to Marchel Duchamp and Andre Breton
Colin Shaddick
I live and work in the UK and I am a poetry magazine publisher (Saw), poet, performer, musician and illustrator.
I have published works by: Amiri Baraka, David Amram, Ron Whitehead, Bob Holman, George Wallace, Ed Sanders, Bingo Gazingo, Charlie Newman, John Rocco, Billy Childish, Sexton Ming, Charles Thomson, Bill Lewis, Michael Horovitz and many, many more. Saw magazine has been described by Ron Whitehead as " Excellent! One of the best Beat poetry magazines available."
I have also toured Kentucky with Ron Whitehead and Sarah Elizabeth Whitehead, reading poetry and playing music with them on a fantastic10 day road trip.
My poetry webpage: http://www.myspace.com/sawinghorse
My music page, under my performance name of Uke Stanza: http://www.myspace.com/ukestanza
---Colin
Mario Schifano
italian painter, friend to Frank O'Hara
Mark Schorer
*
[UC Berkeley Prof, critic]
Tony Scibella
*
Pete Seeger
We shall overcome and Where Have All the Flowers Gone?
Graham Z Seidman
[artist photographer - co-abitant of Beat Hotel in Paris 1955-1959] I met Graham at the 2nd Avenue Deli in NYC in 2003.
This is a photo I shot of him.
Lucky to have met him, I was saddened to hear that he
passed away in Dec. 2005.
I built a small site for him. This is the link:
http://www.geocities.com/privaj/Graham.html
Judih
Hubert Jr. Selby
NY, LA Novelist
Shakey (alias neil young)
it's good to have someone like him out there talk the way he talks and walk the walk too--- james taylor quoted by jimmy McDonough
Jack Shea
Martin Sheen
*
was in The Living Theatre
Sheldon Mack Thomas
*
writer
Gilbert Shelton
cartoonist freak brothers
Larry Simms
*
*
Zoot Simms
*
{ 1925 - 1985 }[saxophonist who recorded together Al Cohn often throughout the 50's]
Bill Smith
Bill Smith who was the Beatnik candidate for President in 1960. For President:
Bill Smith, Beatnik
by Murray Rothbard
(Summer 1960)
Surely the high point in the 1956 conventions was that glorious moment when the irrepressible Terry Carpenter of Nebraska proposed to nominate one Joe Smith for President, and grand old Joe Martin, in his usual role as bastion of the democratic process, told Carpenter to "take your Joe Smith and get out of here." No other incidents marred the smooth unity of the convention. Well, now I am proposing for President a man equally obscure, but who actually exists and is running for the post: William Lloyd Smith of Chicago.
Bill Smith is a bookstore owner, duly nominated in solemn conclave by the national convention of the Beat Party of America, held in the beatnik Greenwich Village nightclub, the College of Complexes. To forestall any misunderstanding, I wish to state at once that I am unalterably and 100% opposed to the overall Beatnik philosophy. I am a champion of almost all the bourgeois values against which the Beatniks are rebelling. But politics, as we all know, makes strange bedfellows, and it is the political philosophy to the Beats that now deserves our attention.
First we must note that Bill Smith is the leader of the responsible beatniks. The Irresponsible, or outnik, faction, apparently headed by one Joffre Stewart of Chicago, fought the very idea of nominating a candidate (like, only square parties really nominate someone), or of insisting on binding the nominee to the adopted platform ("only finks play to win, anyhow.") But I am happy to point out that, after a bitter floor fight, the responsibles won out, and Bill Smith will campaign on the platform.
Why should we squares vote for Bill Smith? Well, in the first place, this was perhaps the only convention this year that wasn’t rigged. The voting went to four ballots, something unheard of since the Television Age decreed that no one have to stay up too late to watch the balloting. Seven men were originally placed in nomination; three of them were Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, Senator Eastland, and Senator Kennedy, presumably without their express consent. Hurried conferences with the parliamentarian came up with the ruling that only people attending the convention were eligible, which ruled out the august Congressmen. Ballotting was then confined to Smith, Big Brown of Washington Square, Tom Condit, and the Golden Greek. The convention was nip-and tuck, with Big Brown (the "big" refers to his height, 6’6") the local favorite son, in the lead. But after a long recess and much caucusing, Bill Smith, the golden-voiced orator who had delivered the keynote speech, was selected.
Joffre Stewart, by the way, was selected for Vice-President. The final ticket does lack geographical balance, it is true (both Smith and Stewart are from Chicago), but selecting Stewart was nonetheless a gesture as shrewdly and coolly political as Kennedy’s pick of Johnson. For in picking Stewart, Smith, too was bringing much-needed unity to his party by selecting his bitterest opponent to run with him. Furthermore, the party is now fully integrated, since Stewart is a Negro. It is to be hoped that the irreconcilable extremists on both sides of the fence will face the facts and close ranks.
What are Bill Smith’s qualifications? Well, not the least is that Bill, too, is a symbol of 1960’s New Men of Youth. Yes, Bill is a representative of the post-war generation that is now staking its claim to political power. In fact, Bill is 36, which is younger and therefore more representative and more symbolic than even Jack Kennedy. Bill is unmarried, not I take it for the usual squalid Bohemian reasons, but because "when you declare war on the values of society, it’s a hell of a thing to drag a women into it." Well, what could be more forthright or heroic than that? Bill, like his Republican and Democratic opponents, is also a veteran of World War II. But Bill was not a PT-boat hero. Not quite. In fact, Bill Smith rather proudly proclaimed that he was brought up five times on charges of court martial. I submit that this is a most welcome change – even a New Frontier. Not only does Bill Smith’s war record touch a chord of American sentiment that has seldom been tapped by the major party candidates, but we can be sure that Smith is a firm anti-militarist, and will not lightly surrender the principle of civilian control of the armed forces.
But the real glory of the Beat Party is not so much that candidate as the platform. Let me hasten to say that the platform is, at times, vague and even inconsistent, but what platform isn’t? There is no point in being too purist about all this; after all, every platform is a compromise of contending interests. One plank calls for "abolition of the working class," presumably a reference to the future glories of automation. Another calls for a $10,000,000,000 subsidy to artists – apparently a sop to the socialist faction. A third was a little unclear in transmission, but it called for something like a "balanced debt" and a "repudiated budget," instead of the other way around. (So, all right, do you think Galbraith’s economics any better?) But the true greatness of the Beat Party platform lies in its foreign policy plank, and its main political philosophy plank. Both are the most libertarian to be found in any party this year, if not any year. The foreign policy position is remarkably clear-cut and free of contradiction: absolute peace with all nations, because the "Beatniks are cowards."
The all-time purest libertarian plank, however, is the following: Bill Smith pledges that, when elected, his first act will be the immediate announcement of the dissolution of the Federal government. His second act will be his instant resignation. No one, not Barry Goldwater, not even J. Bracken Lee, will ever top that one.
And so – Mr. And Mrs. Conservative, if you want a real choice this year, if you are tired of the socialism of the Democrats and the me-tooism of the Republicans, and if you have given up hope of the third party that has been long promised and never fulfilled, awake and take heart! There is a real choice this year, there is a real third party in the field. Maybe it’s not everything you hoped for, but in is by far the best you will have. So face the facts of political life, and vote for Bill Smith for President and Joffre Stewart for Vice-President. Don’t waste your vote again!
*
*
Jared Smith
I have just looked over your list of the Beat writers, including a great many of my friends, living and deceased. I'd like to be listed among them, if you think it appropriate.
I came to poetry among the likes of Gregory Corso, Harry Smith, William Packard, and others in Greenwich Village in the mid to late 1970s. Harry Smith was the publisher of my first volume of poetry. My five volumes include: Song Of The Blood: An Epic (The Smith Press (editor Harry Smith, New York, 1986); Dark Wing (Charred Norton Publishing, Camillus, NY, 1987); Keeping The Outlaw Alive (Erie Street Press, Chicago, 1988); Walking The Perimeters Of The Plate Glass Window Factory ( Birch Brook Press, NY, 2001); and Lake Michigan And Other Poems (Puddin'head Press, Chicago, 2005). My works have received strong critical acclaim and/or blurbs from such poets as Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Harry Smith, William Packard, U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser, Walter James Miller, Andrew Glaze, and others Poetry of mine has been adapted to stage in Chicagoland and at New York City's Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.
My poetry and essays on literature have appeared hundreds of times in literary journals in the U.S. over the past 30 years, and have recently started to appear in the U.K. and in translation in China, as well as in international e-zines. I have coordinated readings at numerous venues in New York and Chicago over the years, am on The Advisory Board of The New York Quarterly, have served as Guest Columnist for Home Planet News and Guest Editor for The Pedestal. Publications of mine appear in The Small Press Review, The New York Quarterly, Bogg, Seventh Quarry, Poet Lore, Vagabond, Presa, Epoch Quarterly, Home Planet New, The Pedestal, Confrontation, Bitter Oleander, Bitterroot, The Smith, and hundreds of others. My craft interview with Ted Kooser was published in New York and then immediately translated into Chinese by Taiwan Poet Laureate William Marr for publication in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Peking.
All Best,
Jared Smith
Harry Smith
Musicologist, Painter, film maker, anthropologist, poet, publisher. Compiled the Folkways Anthology of American Folk Music, and Peyote Rituals also on Folkways. Had an exhibition of paintings with Duchamp at the Louvre. Films include #12 Heaven and Earth Magic, and Mahogony. Publisher of Pulpsmith, and The Smith.
[poetess]
Mark Snow
*
*
Michael Snow
*
*
Gary Snyder
[Poet, Reed College group] "Japhy Ryder,
Jarry Wagner, Gary Snyder"
Carl Solomon
[_with you in Rocklin_, friend Ginsberg's]
Lois Sorrells
*
[poet, FOUR POEMS]
Ettore Sottsass
[ italian beat publisher ]
Terry Southern
*
[novelist, _Candy_]
Jack Spicer
_ 30 January 1925 - 17 August 1965 _ poet, associate of Duncan, Blazer
Jacqueline Starer
books _Les Ecrivains beats et le voyage, Paris, Didier, 1977_ _Chronologie des ‚crivains beats jusqu'en 1969, Paris, Didier, 1977_ http://keith-barnes.com
James Stauffer
san francisco bay area thanks!
Jacques Stern
cranky beat poet
Pat Steir
artist
Lee Stringer
street writer
Michael Stipe
[I'd like to propose the inclusion of Michael Stipe, or the whole band, R.E.M., in your list for some reasons. Not that they ARE or WERE beats, but they were surely heavily influenced by the writings, and you can see this in their songs, like they citate Ginsberg in more than song, and in the XFiles album, Burroughs himself "sings" Star Me Kitten, which original version is in Automatic For The People (1992).---Rodrigo Seabra]
Nicole Stoffmann
Nicole
Stoffmann (b. 1972), Canadian actress, jazz singer-musician and
performance artist. Stoffmann is probably best known for playing the
role of 'Stephanie Kaye' on the first two seasons of controversial
Canadian adolescents' show Degrassi Junior High in the mid to
late 1980s. Since then, she has appeared in various other television
shows and movies, and launched her career as a jazz vocalist and
guitarist with Nicole Stoffman's Jazz Boheme. In the fall of 2006,
she launched I Want Rhythm: a series of improvised dance happenings
performed throughout the streets of Toronto. More recently, she
collaborated with poet R. W. Watkins on a haibun (prose interspersed
with haiku). (Stoffman's official website:
http://www.nicolestoffman.com/
more on canadian beat generation
Joe Strummer
*
Michael Stutz
[writer] _ I sang out Father Death Blues at the house where Jack died.
Andrew Susac
Adam Szostkiewicz
*
[a cultural journalist of 68'generation÷ translator of Keouac's and Snyder's poetry]
Leon Tabor
[friend to Neil Cassady]
Cecil Taylor
*
*
James Taylor
_West Coast_ Sweet Baby James
Luigi Tenco
beat italian chansonnier in the sixties
Thelonious Monk
jazz music be bop
Tony Trigilio
beat scholar
http://english.colum.edu/faculty/trigilio.html photo by Micki Leventhal
John Tytell
*
biographer
Stanley Twardowicz
*
He was a great painter and photographer who was friends with Kerouc, Corso, etc. . Many of the great photos of the great poets were taken by Twardowicz.
Hunter Stockton Thompson
journalist
The Living Theatre
*
Bob Thiele
*
[jazz poetry]
John Thomas
Venice Poet, published in the Floating Bear - {Tue, 14 May 2002: I wish to inform that my husband Beat poet John Thomas passed away this Good Friday. He was 71 years old. --- Philomene Long}
Mark Tobey
*
*
black mountain college painter
Alexander Trocchi
Living Theatre
Giuseppe Ungaretti
these are my rivers
Charles Upton
*
*
[Dino Valenti was a beat generation folksinger with a big following in the early '60s, before heading out to California. He was part of the early hip music scene there, with David Crosby and the Byrds, then in San Francisco where he played at the Spaghetti Factory with Jimmie Hendrix. He wrote the song "Get Together", recorded by the youngbloods. He was a big influence on other singers, such as Richie Havens.--Elaine Forzano]
Dave Van Ronk
folksinger greenwich village
Gus Van Sant
filmaker Drugstore Cowboy
Gore Vidal
enfant terrible
Kurt Vonnegut
sci fi writer
Joan Vollmer
*
poetess
William Trevor Vollmann
_Thirteen Stories and Thirteen Epitaphs, Whores for Gloria, You Bright and Risen Angels, The Atlas_Yesterday's Crash_
the californian rimbaud william t. vollmann portaied by eunice choi courtesy by
http://www.aletedizioni.it
Tom Waits
[songwriter, Foreign Affairs]
Diane Wakoski
[poetess]
Anne Waldman
*
Naropa Institute, St. Mark's Poetry Project, New York
Charlie Ware
*
Andy Warhol
avantgarde artist friends to beats
Lewis Warsh
*
*
R. W. Watkins
R. W. Watkins (b. 1969)—Canadian poet, essayist and
underground publisher, best known for his haiku and helping
popularize the ghazal in the English language. In the mid 1980s,
while still attending senior high in small-town Newfoundland, Watkins
and a few friends began ditching their punk and heavy-metal regalia
and attitudes in favour of retro-beat clothing and mannerisms; this
served to counter 1980s mainstream fashion, entertainment and
ambitions, which they saw as mired in nostalgia for the boring,
supposedly innocent side of the 1950s. Their circle gradually grew to
include artsy types, anarchic dropouts, young sailors, disillusioned
Catholic schoolgirls and enterprising incest victims—anyone
bright, talented and disaffected by mainstream culture. By the early
1990s, Watkins and most of his associates were attending
post-secondary institutions throughout the Atlantic region, and their
scene effectively spread out into the Grunge movement that had found
a home in Canada's four easternmost provinces (with Halifax, Nova
Scotia as its cultural Mecca). One by one, most of this circle has
since passed away, disappeared or settled down into middle-class
existence. Watkins, however, continues to write, publish and make his
often-contentious views be known—although he has lived an
increasingly secluded life since the mid 1990s, with his online
presence (
http://myspace.com/rw_watkins_ghazals_haiku
)
being his only major connection to the outside world. Other notable
names from Watkins's circle include experimental poet Robin Tilley,
singer-songwriter Kent Burt (a.k.a. The Linger Effect) and
anarchist/sometimes-poet Gregory S. Young.
more on canadian beat generation
Mike Watt
Alan W. Watts
{ 1915 - 1973 }[philosopher, author, lecturer, teacher, became well known in the 1960s as a pioneer in bringing Eastern philosophy to the West, _Beat Zen, Square Zen_] "Arthur Whane, Alex Aums"
Wavy Gravy (Wavey Gravey Hugh Romney)
[photo by John Clifford - 1999] He organizedÿ 'Be Ins' all over the country. www.wavygravy.net
Ken Weaver
the fugs
Ruth Weiss
[photo: Daniel Nicoletta 1987 "A fine funkiness: Beat Generation goddess ruth weiss (she launched the jazzpoetry readings at The Cellar) and trumpeter Cowboy Noyd will have their first reunion since what John Ross calls the bad old days." February 15, 1993, item in Herb Caen's column in the San Francisco Chronicle]
{ 16 aug 1926 - 23 may 1971 }[_Ring of Bone_, Reed College Group, East/West House] "Dave Wain" -
a critical piece by Charles Upton
Massimo Wertmuller
_actor_ beat aficionado
Philip Whalen
Poet, Reed College Group "Warren Coughlin, Ben Fagan"
John Wieners
Black Mountain School, _Hotel Wentley Poems_
Elias Wilentz
*
*
Hank Williams
1923-1953 popular music
Jonathan Williams
Black Mountain College
William Carlos Williams
*
17 sep 1883 - 4 mar 1963
*
*
Michael Wilson
Michael Wilson grew up in a den of bohemians and has now come out
with the early beat artist's on his website
http://www.ferusgallery.com
The Ferus Gallery (1957-66) was a gallery and community of artist's
culture, born out of the beat movement and creating some of the well
known artist's today, most having their first exhibits at the Ferus.
George Whitman
*
owner of Shakespeare&Co KM 1 Paris,France.
Ruth Witt-Diamant
*
San Francisco's Poetry Center
Dick Woods
*
James Wright
*
[Minnesota]
Richard Yates
writer _Revolutionary Road_
Yod
This is father yod. One of the great action beats of all time. A pure
anarchist- courtesy of michael bowen
Neil Young
*
Neil Young, Canadian-born singer-songwriter and musician.
Frank Zappa
*
Andrea Zanzotto
italian poet, sympathy to beats
Wulf Zendik
[was a Beat-era writer]
http://www.zendik.org
Warren Zevon
_My Ride's Here_ post-beat friend to Hunter S. Thompson
Louis Zukofsky
Circle _ photo courtesy by Elsa Dorfman _
|
|