Ken Kesey(1935-2001)
- Writer
- Actor
- Director
Kesey burst into the literary scene with the "Cuckoo's Nest" in 1962
which he wrote from his experiences working at a veterans hospital.
During this period, he volunteered for the testing on the drug LSD.
After writing his second novel, "Sometimes A Great Notion," he bought
an old school bus dubbed "Further." With Neal Cassidy at the wheel and
pitchers of LSD-laced-Kool-Laid in the cooler, Kesey and a band of
friends who called themselves The Merry Pranksters took a trip across
America to New York's World Fair. It would be 28 years until Kesey
published his third major novel, "Sailor Song," in 1992, and he later
said he lost interest in the novel as an art form after he discovered
the magic of the bus. The bus ride was immortalized in Tom Wolfe's 1968
account, "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test." The movie version of the
"Cuckoo's Nest" swept the 1974 Academy Awards for best actor, best
actress, best director, and best picture. But Kesey, who has never seen
the film, sued the producers because it took the viewpoint away from
the character of the schizophrenic American Indian, Cheif Bromden.
Kesey was diagnosed with diabetes in 1992 and set down root in Pleasant
Hill, in the mid 1960s, after serving four months in jail for a
marijuana bust in California. His rambling red barn-house has become a
landmark of the psychedelic era, attracting visits from myriad
strangers in tie-dyed clothing seeking enlightenment.