JOHNNY'S
TRIBUTE TO HUNTER S. THOMPSON
"Buy the
ticket, take the ride." These are the words that echo in my skull. The
words that our Good Doctor lived by and, by God, died by. He dictated, created,
commanded, demanded, manipulated, manhandled and snatched life up by the short
hairs and only relinquished his powerful grasp when he was ready. There's the
rub. When he was ready. That is what we are left with. We are here, without him.
But in no way are we left with nothing, far from it. We have his words, his
books, his insights, his humor and his truth. For those of us lucky enough to
have been close to him, which often meant rather lengthy and dangerous occasions
that would invariably lead to uncontrollable fits of laughter, we have the
memory of his Cheshire grin leading us wherever he felt we needed to go. Which,
by the way, was always the right direction, however insane it may have seemed.
Yes, the doctor always knew best. I have, seared onto my brain, the millions of
hideous little adventures that I was blessed enough to have lived through with
him and, frankly, in certain instances, blessed to have lived through. He was/is
a brother, a friend, a hero, a father, a son, a teacher, a partner in crime. Our
crime: fun. Always, fun.
In December 1995 I was vacationing in Aspen, Colorado..... The f**king town is
just lousy with "beautiful people." My first instinct was to stay
inside and drink grog, or as the twinkling jet set refers to them, "hot
toddies." My time in Aspen was spent as far from the madding crowd as
humanly possible until, in spite of my self-induced seclusion, I ran into Alan
Finkelstein. Alan, being no stranger to fun, sprang the news on me that Dr.
Hunter S. Thompson lived nearby, and would I like to meet him that night at
Woody Creek Tavern?
A few of us wandered out into the snow and waited for lightning to strike.
Somewhere around 11 P.M., an unusually loud noise stole my attention and then
demanded the room's attention - a hush on one side, fearful murmurings on the
other, were replaced by mounting screams, as what appeared to be an electric
saber swung wildly near the entrance of the bar. A deep, raspy voice was
hollering for people to get out of his way, threatening to shock the living s**t
out of any swine who lingered in his path.
Tall and lanky, wearing a woolen Native American-looking knit hat that trailed
down past his shoulders, the ubiquitous aviators tight to the face attached to
that smile - a massive hand shot toward me. I placed my hand in his firm hold
and gave back what I got. The beginning, I knew, of a long and deep-rooted
friendship.
He plopped himself into a chair, laid his armaments on the table - a giant
cattle prod and a hefty Taser gun. We had a rounds, talked about this and that
and connected on more than a few levels, not the least being the discovery that
we both hailed from the same dark and bloody ground, the great state of
Kentucky. That fact alone sent Hunter into eloquent tirades ranging from
Southern chivalry to hillbilly moonshine-running to our fellow Kentuckian
Cassius Clay. Within no time, group was invited back to Owl Farm, Hunter's
fortified compound just up the road from the tavern. Upon arrival, we were
greeted by Hunter's assistant, Deborah, Fuller, who would later become known as
the Vitamin Queen, because of her painstaking and meticulous nursing of Hunter -
and myself when I moved into the house. Her daily delivery of B's, C's, D's and
E's and general TLC kept us as healthy and alive as was within reason, bless her.
Hunter and I hunkered down in the kitchen, better known as the "command
center," babbling ourselves silly, when I paid him a compliment concerning
a smart-looking nickel-plated shotgun hanging up on a rack. Before I knew what
was what, I found my hands wrapped around a rather large propane tank, and he
was meticulously instructing me to duct-tape a first-size box to the side of it.
While in the process of this bizarre ritual, I inquired as to the box's contents.
"Oh, yeah ... that??? Uh ... nitroglycerin." Panicked, I instantly and
deftly heaved the cigarette I was smoking into the kitchen sink and continued
the job.
At roughly 2:30 A.M. we strolled out to Hunter's back yard. My larger-than-large
propane bomb sat approximately fifteen yards dead ahead. The Good Doctor was off
to my right coaching and coaxing, giddy with anticipation. Shotgun firmly in
hand, I pumped a shell into the chamber and leveled the beast at our
preposterously explosive target. Pitch-black night, a thousand million stars in
the sky, dead calm, the neighbors safely tucked in for a pleasant nighty-night
and then, BLAMMO! A direct hit and the target exploded into an eighty-foot
fireball. "Good shooting, man!" Hunter feverishly screamed, "That
was one hell of a shot ... Hot damn! Yes!"
Sometime later, I was working in New York City. One morning at about 5:30 A.M.,
slugging it out with a treadmill on a radical incline, huffing, puffing, sweat
roping off me, training like a bastard for the film Donnie Brasco. The phone
rang. Hmm. Odd time for someone to be calling, I thought. "Hello?"
"Johnny...Hunter. What's wrong with you, you sound sick! Good God, there
was no way in hell that I could've explained a treadmill to him at this time,
far too mortifying. I jumped into the conversation: "Nothing, no ... just
getting ready to go to work. How are you?" Fine, fine...listen, if they
were going to do a film of the Vegas book...would you be interested? Would you
want to play me?" I was stunned. I hopped off that dastardly whore of a
treadmill and tried to gather myself. "Well... what about it? Are you
in?" Of course I was. Who wouldn't have been? I was beyond interested. We
spoke a bit more about it, the hows, the whos, the whens, the whys, etc. It was
then that I learned that that there really weren't any - no script, no director,
no production at all. It simply didn't exist. Not yet, anyway. He'd inquired for
his own edification. He did that sort of thing a lot. Hunter was always way
ahead of the curve - even in what appeared to be absolute chaos, he was all too
aware of exactly where the chips would fall.
After a gathering in New York to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of Fear
and Loathing in Las Vegas, or, as he called it "the Vegas book," a
handful of us ended up at Hunter's hotel suite for several nightcaps. I took
advantage of the opportunity and cornered the Good Doctor to say that if I was
to do the film, I would first need him blessing - if he was comfortable giving
it - and that if I did even a remotely decent job playing him, there was a damn
good chance he might well hate me for the rest of his life. Bang. Those black
eyes shot into mine, twinkling like stars. I remember the smile on his face like
it was yesterday. Cheshire. "Well, what the f**k ... buy the ticket, take
the ride, eh? ... And let's hope for the best, hee, hee ... for your sake."
The "Vegas film" finally got set up, and the time had come for some
serious soul-stealing. I flew into Aspen and was greeted at the airport by
Hunter in his '71 Chevy convertible, a.k.a the Red Shark. I was sporting a
woolen toque on my head, having already done the razoring to my skull. Hunter
was leery to see what I was hiding under my cap. "Oh, Jesus.... Let's see
it," he reluctantly said. I whipped the f**ker off and felt the wind on my
bald pate. "Holy Christ! You look terrible.... f**k, man...put that hat
back on, it's making me sick!"
We serpentined our way through the mountains and arrived at Owl Farm, where I
was swiftly invited to put my things in the basement. Hunter and Deborah had,
very kindly, set up a room for me and gave me access to pile after pile of
manuscripts, work notes, trinkets, bars of soap from Vegas and other holy relics.
I lived in that basement for much longer than was planned and grew to be kind of
comfortable with the brown recluse spiders I shared the room with.
One night I was sitting on my bed having a smoke and going through some Hunter's
notes from the Vegas days and brilliant scenes that, for some reason, were
edited out of the book. I placed my cigarette in the ashtray that was sitting on
the nightstand. For some reason, I began to examine the nightstand, a barrel of
sorts-wooden slats, steel bands, the whole bit. As I scrutinized it a bit more,
a wave of fear hit me, the likes of which I'd never experienced. My nightstand
was a keg of gunpowder. Sprinting up the stairs as fast as a cheetah, I located
Hunter sitting at command central. "Hunter ... you've gotta come with
me.... I need to know if ... come on, come downstairs!" He looked confused
but humored me and walked down to my room. "What's gotten into you, Colonel?
Is it those filthy little brown recluses again?" "No. It's that thing!"
I pointed to the offending object and egged him to tell me if was actually full
and active. A look of recognition came across his face. "Oh, God, that's
where it is! I've always wondered what happened to it."
"YIKES! Is it full?" I was flipping.
"f**k, yes, it's full! Holy s**t, that goddamn thing could've blown us all
off the map, especially with you smoking near it! Ye gods, man. What's wrong
with you?" He giggled for weeks, even years about that. So did I. I'm still
giggling.
For days and nights on end, we would sit in that command center, and talk about
anything and everything from politics to weapons, our home state, lipstick,
music, Hitler's paintings, literature, sports. Always sports. We were talking
one night about which ones he preferred and didn't. We were watching plenty of
basketball and loads of football, so I asked him if he was ever a baseball fan,
to which he replied flatly, "No. Baseball is like watching a bunch of angry
Jews arguing on the porch." Once, a year later, we'd made a bet on the
World Cup soccer tournament, France vs. Brazil. He was positive that Brazil was
going to cream France. I took that bet, one thousand dollars. We teased and
prodded each other for weeks leading up to the match. The outcome bent in my
favor; he promptly wrote me a check and sent it with this letter:
WELL, COLONEL, I TOLD YOU THE f**king GAME WAS FIXED. I just didn't think those
prissy quadroon boys would go totally into the tank. They acted like stupid
animals. They s**t all over themselves and disgraced a whole nation of gutless
whores in the eyes of the world. And it taught me another good lesson in WHY
amateurs shouldn't f**k around with gambling on games they know nothing about.
Anyway, here's a check for $1,000.
They you very much for yr.business. I'll be back.
Okay,
Doc
His generosity was astounding. Never once did he try to wriggle away from my
never-ending barrage of questions. He was always exceptionally patient and very
giving. He was always totally open regarding the details of his exploits and
personal experiences, even the more intimate particulars of his past. The more
time together, the more intense the bond. The connection was profound and
becoming more so.
I used to tease him that we were becoming a perversely twisted version of Edgar
Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, which really made him uncomfortable. I had, by this
point, purloined an impressive amount of his clothing from the Vegas period and
adopted the same mode of dress: the aviator shades, a bush hat, short pants,
athletic socks, Converse sneakers, cigarette holder clenched tightly between the
teeth. We'd saunter out of the house to take a drive in the car like freakish
twins.
So, for good or ill, there we were, a pair of deviant bookends on the prowl.
Truly, the man should be sainted for putting up with my continual scratching
away at the layers of his life. He stuck it out like a champion and couldn't
have been a better friend.
When the film was done, a fresh print was put on a fast horse to Aspen for
Hunter's consumption. This was it, the moment of truth. I feared that our
friendship would come crumbling down as a result of my interpretation of him and
his work. I pulled up my bootstraps and made the call, more than half expecting
him to either not pick up or chew me out in a hideous finale that would've
crushed me. "Well, Doctor ... do you hate me?" His diagnosis was calm
and dazzling. "No, no...Colonel, I feel good. Watching that film was like
an eerie trumpet call over a lost battlefield." My elation at not letting
him down shot skyward.
There are endless other moments and experiences that I was fortunate enough to
have gone through with Hunter, far too many to write about at this time. I
cherish the seconds and milliseconds I shared with him. I was well aware that it
was all going to happen only once in a lifetime. These were fantastic
experiences. Some of the best moments of my life were happening to me and,
luckily, I knew it.
Speaking as a fan: You owe it to yourselves to not be cheated, or shortchanged,
by believing merely the myth. Read the work. Read his books. Understand that his
road and his methods were his and only his. He was, in no way, irresponsible
when it came to his writing. He lived it, breathed it - twenty-four hours a day.
There are those of you who, based on Hunter's journey's and the mad stories that
surround his life and memory, might think that because of his lifestyle, the
excess and the wild rantings, he was simply some hedonistic lunatic, or as he
always put it, "an elderly dope fiend". I promise you, he was not. He
was a Southern gentleman, all chivalry and charm. He was a hypersensitive medium
who channeled the underlying currents of truth, concealed in veils of silken
lies that we have become accustomed to swallowing.
Hunter was a genius who revolutionized writing in the same way that Marlon
Brando had done with acting, as significant, essential, and valuable as Dylan,
Kerouac and the Stones. He was, without question, the most loyal and present
friend I have ever had the honor of knowing. I am privileged to have belonged to
the small fraternity of people in his life who were allowed to see more than
most. He was elegance personified. I miss him. I missed him when he was alive.
But, dear Doctor, I will see you again.
<<---- BACK