Posted on 03/03/2005 8:04:59 AM PST by Mr. Silverback
On February 20, two 1960s cultural icons died: journalist Hunter S. Thompson and actress Sandra Dee. The days following their deaths were filled with eulogies about their lives and careerseulogies that say much more about us than about the deceased.
Thompson was the inventor of what came to be known as gonzo journalism. Like the so-called new journalism, pioneered by Tom Wolfe and others, gonzo journalism put the writer at the center of the story. But unlike Wolfe and company, you could never be sure whether what Thompson was describing actually ever happened. Thats mostly because, as he told us, he had taken literally mind-blowing amounts of LSD. For all we know, he may never have left his hotel room.
Following the news of Thompsons suicide, nearly every major paper and magazine ran appreciation articles. While they all noted what the New York Times called his long and sophisticated romance with drugs and his other excesses, Thompson was hailed as a legend and as an an avenging proxy for the American polity.
In contrast, Dees death from kidney disease was greeted with a mixture of irony, snickers, and condescension. Writers couldnt resist the urge to show the distance between her Hollywood persona, the perky blonde teen matinee idol, and her more complicated personal life: an abusive childhood and marriage, her subsequent alcoholism, even the fact that her real name was Sandra Zuck and that she was from Bayonne, New Jersey.
This deconstruction of Dee, as blogger Kathy Shaidle pointed out, allowed critics to deconstruct the wholesome, All-American girl ideal that Dee portrayed onscreen: the one satirized in the song Look at Me, Im Sandra Dee from the musical Grease.
It allows them to cue up that stock footage of 50s suburbia and snicker knowingly about the cesspool of incest, murder, and Wonderbread we just know . . . is lurking beneath the plastic pastel surface. They can, as does Holden Caulfield, the protagonist of Catcher in the Rye, decry the phoniness of it all.
But, as Shaidle tells us, the joke is on them. Dees story, not Thompsons, is the stuff of real life. Dee responded to abuse and addiction by [getting] help, [keeping] up appearances, [and, in due course, she] died of natural causes. This is the normal, boring stuff of real life. Dees artifice, Shaidle tells us, was grounded in the real.
In contrast, Thompson, faced with the unbearable prospect of being an intelligent, able-bodied American, spent much of his life in a chemically altered state and devoted himself to small-scale violence and irresponsibility. As even his admirers noted, his final act of self-destruction was consistent with how Thompson lived his life: without a sense of meaningful limits.
Even this gonzo bit was an act; it wasnt real. Limits, and the appearances they require, are the stuff that good societies are built of. In fact, its because most people acknowledge limits and keep up appearances that the occasional gonzo character is possible. Theyre the exception, and their excesses dont pose a real threat to the societys well-being. Oddly, its the Sandra Dees that create room for the Hunter Thompsons, an underappreciated bit of irony lost on the critics.
I'm not saying we should go back to the 50's...butI find it interesting that more than one psycho like Mark "I killed John Lennon" Chapman think of themselves as Holden Caufield figures. It's as if the hatred of the "normal" and the belief that it's all a charade betrays a certain sickness...
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Hunter S. died a coward's death.
Touche.
I just wonder where the ducks go in the winter in central park lake???
I continue to fail to understand the appeal of Hunter S. Thompson and his narcissistic obsessions. To me, he's just another dead leftist druggie who spent the majority of his life trying to convince the American public that we are the worst people in the world.
Bless Sandra Dee. She was a survivor. Sometimes it's alot harder to live than to die.
Sandra Dee on the other hand was a capable actress. Her roles in A SUMMER PLACE and GIDGET were good even though those films missed the mark.
Boca Raton.
Eggs Ackley!!
I didn't know Sandra Dee died. What a shame! I enjoyed her Moondoggie movie with James Darren and Cliff Robertson about young unrequited love, Summer Place with Troy Donahue about premarital sex and pregnancy, Tammy movies about southern honesty and hospitality. Now that saddens me. Who the heck is Hunter Thompson anyway? Never heard of him.
Just enter his name in our keyword search. There were many threads on Hunter Thompson last week.
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Agreed.
I agree. I had never even heard of him before he killed himself. It doesn't look like I was missing much. Too bad he is the type of person who is glorified in our America.
Whatever her personal problems, Dee contributed beauty to the culture. Credible, genuine memories.
By contract, Hunter contributed ashes; just ashes.
Serve the Lucifer and get a devil's reward.
I didn't know Sandra Dee had died either. I watch and listen to the news every day. Wonder where I was.
I will always remember her as fresh, wholesome, and oh so American apple pie and the girl next door.
she's up there splish splashin with husband Bobby Darin.
Well said. I'm gonna go pop some corn now, and wait for the "Hunter-o-philes" to show up and start arguing with you.
Don't know if you will see it anywhere else, but Hot August Nights in Reno IS the 1950's. You'll see more poodle skirts and 'cuffed' jeans than just about anywhere in the country. Hot rods, cruisin' and Golden Oldies bring back a more simple era.
Small towns and 'good clean fun' are almost ancient history. I'm still tryin' to live the simple life. When the traffic gets to congested and people don't care if they run over you, it's time for me to move on.
A loser.
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