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Yeah, yeah, right! right! right! A correspondence with Merry Prankster Ken Babbs By TOTR Ever since the Sixties, journalists and historians have tried to give an accurate description of the Merry Pranksters. Some have got it right, but many have failed - focusing on simplified myths of Dionysian decadence. In this article, I'm trying to straighten out some of the misunderstandings about the group. Who better to ask than Merry Prankster Ken Babbs?
Director Gus Van Sant is about to make a movie of Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. Have you been contacted by Van Sant or his team about the project? What do you think about making a movie of Wolfe's book?
- Gus Van Sant is an old friend. Coming off MILK, he will really do a great job with [The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test]. My take is to leave him alone. If he wants me to help he will let me know. There is already a movie finished, you know, the one Wolfe talks about in his book, the one we were shooting at the time, the one Kesey and I and our sons Zane and Simon finally put together on the computer. You can get episodes one and two from Zane's website. The titles are Intrepid Traveller and His Merry Band of Pranksters Look for a Kool Place part one and part two.
I did an interview with Grateful Dead soundman and acid legend Owsley "Bear" Stanley in 2003. He said that Tom Wolfe's book is a "poor choice of information, since the Prankster's were fucking with him". What do you think of Owsley's comment, and how do you feel about the book today? Would you say it's a true story?
- I don't think anything about Owsley's comment, in fact I don't ever think about any of that stuff anymore, water under the dam, over the bridge. I haven't looked at Wolfe's book since it came out in 1968 but it is a phenomenon since it has been in constant print ever since and that doesn't happen to too many books. As Chief Randall Stamper said in the great American novel, Sometimes A Great Cuckoo, "It's true even if it didn't happen."
How much time did Tom Wolfe spend with The Merry Pranksters? When reading the book one gets the impression he spent a lot of time with you. Would you say he was "on the bus"? Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test has become THE source of information when it comes to the Merry Pranksters, and I was surprised to hear from Ken Babbs that Wolfe only went to the acid test graduation in San Francisco. I'm sure many people think Wolf hung out at Kesey's place in La Honda, or was there when the Merry Pranksters met the Hells Angels. It sure sounds as if Wolfe was there... but maybe that's what makes him such a great writer.
What would you say is the most common misunderstanding about The Merry Pranksters? How did one become a member of The Merry Pranksters? Did you ever talk about membership, or were you more like friends hanging out, doing your thing? On Wikipedia.org it says that Allen Ginsberg was a member. Is that correct?
- The Merry Band of Pranksters became the name of our gang of friends who were getting together and creating improvisational acts of maturity in the face of the lack of deadlines to keep our noses on the gindstones. We were making a movie and the name of our group, like that one in England, Beetles or something like that, became the name we were and still are identified by, and you can tell us, but you can't tell us much, by the striped shirts we wore. We started out as 14 or 15 but as we got older others threw in on the deal, Allen Ginsberg certainly so circumsized, for he was on the stage in Boulder Colorado when we did Twister there.
In the mid-Nineties Ken Kesey went on a tour with the old Merry Pranksters. They performed Twister: A Ritual Reality, a musical play written by Kesey. The tour included a show in Boulder, Colorado. According to Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, Allen Ginsberg was also with The Merry Pranksters when they met up with the Hells Angels in 1965.
The Merry Pranksters is a great name! Do you remember who came up with it? I get the impression you were an informal group using a lot of improvisation, still, at least from a media perspective, people talk about The Merry Pranksters as pretty structured with Ken Kesey as the leader. Was there a hierarchy in the group or was that something the media just assumed? Before getting on the bus with Kesey and the other Pranksters, Ken Babbs was a helicopter pilot in the Vietnam War. When he got back to the USA, he wrote a novel about the experience. The book was never published, but there is actually a chance to read portions of it; Lost a Bird, Gained a Bird is a "chapbook", pressed in a beautiful limited edition of 400 copies, all signed by Babbs, with excerpts from his unpublished novel.
I've just ordered a copy of Lost a Bird, Gained a Bird through your web page, which I'm really looking forward to check out. Will there be a release of your Vietnam War novel Who Shot the Water Buffalo? in the near future? I got the chapbook through the mail only a week or so after the interview. The book was great. A couple of days earlier I had watched Apocalypse Now. Seeing the movie and reading the excerpt from Babbs' novel brought the meaningless acts of war to life. Coming straight from the Vietnam and meeting up with his old friend Kesey for one of the wildest experiments of the twentieth century, surely must have been a major shift in Babbs life. Kesey's free-flowing, psychedelic thinking was a blessing. Babbs ditched the darkness and horror - "the horror, the horror..." - of the Vietnam War, for a wild, rainbow-coloured bus trip through his home country, a trip that is reverberating to this day as a key event in the American counterculture. The story of the Merry Pranksters is a Sixties saga that will be told and retold for years to come, and the main storyteller up until now has been Tom Wolfe. But with the upcoming Gus Van Sant movie, it's possible that that will change; a whole new generation is waiting to hear the story of The Merry Pranksters again.
The group's mantra might have been "nothing lasts", but their legend sure lives on. Pictures from top to bottom: © 2009-2010 The Oak Tree Review
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