# Today I Learned > connecting Peter Bogdonavich to the Grateful Dead: **Published by:** [Connections](https://paragraph.com/@alb1/) **Published on:** 2025-03-10 **URL:** https://paragraph.com/@alb1/today-i-learned ## Content Peter Bogdanovich, who directed The Last Picture Show, co-wrote it with Larry McMurtry. McMurtry joined Ken Kesey's Merry Pranksters on his bus Further. I have been reading about Roger Corman in the book Fast, Cheap and Under Control, which details his methods and the directors he mentored, such as Francis Ford Coppola, Ron Howard, and Bogdanovich. Bogdonavich also authored the books "Who the Devil Made It" and "Who the Hell's in It". Ken Kesey wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, the royalties of which financed his Merry Pranksters, which was detailed by Tom Wolfe in his book The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. At those tests a band was hired to play in the background, or not play, whatever they wanted, and you can see the remnants of that band at the Sphere in Las Vegas these days. Wolfe also wrote The Right Stuff and Bonfire of the Vanities, the latter of which is required primary reading by all men seeking their fortune; best practice would be to read it once per decade at the age of 25, 35, and 45. As Munger is said to have said (but where and when?), "There are some things you learn best by experience. But there are some things you don’t have to learn by experiencing yourself—like not pissing on an electric fence." \n\nThe Last Picture Show is a 1971 American coming-of-age drama film directed by Peter Bogdanovich and co-written by Bogdanovich and Larry McMurtry, adapted from the 1966 semi-autobiographical novel by McMurtry. The film's ensemble cast includes Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges, Ellen Burstyn, Ben Johnson, Cloris Leachman, and Cybill Shepherd. Set in a small town in northern Texas from November 1951 to October 1952, it is a story of two high school seniors and long-time friends, Sonny Crawford (Bottoms) and Duane Jackson (Bridges).\n The Last Picture Show was theatrically released on October 22, 1971, by Columbia Pictures. It was a critical and commercial success, grossing $29 million on a $1.3 million budget, and was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actor for Johnson and Bridges, and Best Supporting Actress for Burstyn and Leachman, with Johnson and Leachman winning.\n","version":"1.0","provider_name":"Wikipedia","thumbnail_url":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/15fdb795e0aaf66f9d2297f2816ed7a2.jpg","type":"link","thumbnail_height":358,"image":{"base64":"data:image/png;base64,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","img":{"width":232,"height":358,"src":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/15fdb795e0aaf66f9d2297f2816ed7a2.jpg"}}}" format="iframe">The Last Picture Show - WikipediaThe Last Picture Show is a 1971 American coming-of-age drama film directed by Peter Bogdanovich and co-written by Bogdanovich and Larry McMurtry, adapted from the 1966 semi-autobiographical novel by McMurtry. The film's ensemble cast includes Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges, Ellen Burstyn, Ben Johnson, Cloris Leachman, and Cybill Shepherd.http://wikipedia.org\n\n\nLarry Jeff McMurtry (June 3, 1936 – March 25, 2021) was an American novelist, essayist, and screenwriter whose work was predominantly set in either the Old West or contemporary Texas.[1] His novels included Horseman, Pass By (1962), The Last Picture Show (1966), and Terms of Endearment (1975), which were adapted into films. Films adapted from McMurtry's works earned 34 Oscar nominations (13 wins). He was also a prominent book collector and bookseller.\n His 1985 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Lonesome Dove was adapted into a television miniseries that earned 18 Emmy Award nominations (seven wins). The subsequent three novels in his Lonesome Dove series were adapted as three more miniseries, earning eight more Emmy nominations. McMurtry and co-writer Diana Ossana adapted the screenplay for Brokeback Mountain (2005), which earned eight Academy Award nominations with three wins, including McMurtry and Ossana for Best Adapted Screenplay. In 2014, McMurtry received the National Humanities Medal.[2]\n","version":"1.0","provider_name":"Wikipedia","thumbnail_url":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/a5c0bfa3cd4de1a821c7a82cf3d69b1d.png","type":"link","thumbnail_height":778,"image":{"base64":"data:image/png;base64,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","img":{"width":578,"height":778,"src":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/a5c0bfa3cd4de1a821c7a82cf3d69b1d.png"}}}" format="iframe">Larry McMurtry - WikipediaLarry Jeff McMurtry (June 3, 1936 - March 25, 2021) was an American novelist, essayist, and screenwriter whose work was predominantly set in either the Old West or contemporary Texas. His novels included Horseman, Pass By (1962), The Last Picture Show (1966), and Terms of Endearment (1975), which were adapted into films. Films adapted from McMurtry's works earned 34 Oscar nominations (13 wins).http://wikipedia.org\n\nPeter Bogdanovich (July 30, 1939 – January 6, 2022) was an American director, writer, actor, producer, critic, and film historian. He started out his career as a young actor studying under Stella Adler before working as a film critic for Film Culture and Esquire and finally becoming a prominent filmmaker of the New Hollywood movement. He received accolades including a BAFTA Award and Grammy Award, as well as nominations for two Academy Awards and two Golden Globe Awards.\n Bogdanovich worked as a film journalist until he was hired to work on Roger Corman's The Wild Angels (1966). His credited feature film debut came with Targets (1968), before his career breakthrough with the drama The Last Picture Show (1971) which earned him Academy Award nominations for Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay, and the acclaimed films What's Up, Doc? (1972) and Paper Moon (1973).[2][3] Other films include Saint Jack (1979), They All Laughed (1981), Mask (1985), Noises Off (1992), The Cat's Meow (2001), and She's Funny That Way (2014).\n","version":"1.0","provider_name":"Wikipedia","thumbnail_url":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/b07232699df72d74899abb1714d9146b.jpg","type":"link","thumbnail_height":1613,"image":{"base64":"data:image/png;base64,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","img":{"width":1200,"height":1613,"src":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/b07232699df72d74899abb1714d9146b.jpg"}}}" format="iframe">Peter Bogdanovich - WikipediaPeter Bogdanovich (July 30, 1939 - January 6, 2022) was an American director, writer, actor, producer, critic, and film historian. He started out his career as a young actor studying under Stella Adler before working as a film critic for Film Culture and and finally becoming a prominent filmmaker of the New Hollywood movement.http://wikipedia.org\n\n\nRoger William Corman (April 5, 1926 – May 9, 2024) was an American film director, producer, and actor.[2][3] Known under various monikers such as \"The Pope of Pop Cinema\", \"The Spiritual Godfather of the New Hollywood\", and \"The King of Cult\", he was known as a trailblazer in the world of independent film.[4]\n Many of the more than 500 features directed or produced by Corman were low-budget films that later attracted a cult following, such as A Bucket of Blood (1959), The Little Shop of Horrors (1960), The Intruder (1962), X: The Man with the X-ray Eyes (1963), and the counterculture films The Wild Angels (1966) and The Trip (1967). House of Usher (1960) became the first of eight films directed by Corman that were adapted from the tales of Edgar Allan Poe, and which collectively came to be known as the \"Poe Cycle\".[5][6]\n","version":"1.0","provider_name":"Wikipedia","thumbnail_url":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/f32ec1489938bf7be657e5a554d83435.jpg","type":"link","thumbnail_height":1236,"image":{"base64":"data:image/png;base64,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","img":{"width":927,"height":1236,"src":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/f32ec1489938bf7be657e5a554d83435.jpg"}}}" format="iframe">Roger Corman - WikipediaRoger William Corman (April 5, 1926 - May 9, 2024) was an American film director, producer, and actor. Known under various monikers such as "The Pope of Pop Cinema", "The Spiritual Godfather of the New Hollywood", and "The King of Cult", he was known as a trailblazer in the world of independent film.http://wikipedia.orghttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merry_PrankstersThe Merry Pranksters were followers of American author Ken Kesey. Kesey and the Merry Pranksters lived communally at Kesey's homes in California and Oregon, and are noted for the sociological significance of a lengthy road trip they took in the summer of 1964, traveling across the United States in a psychedelic painted school bus called Furthur, organizing parties, and giving out LSD.[1] During this time they met many of the guiding lights of the 1960s cultural movement and presaged what are commonly thought of as hippies with odd behavior, tie-dyed and red, white, and blue clothing, and renunciation of normal society, which they dubbed The Establishment. Tom Wolfe chronicled their early escapades in his 1968 book The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, including a bit on the same epic 1964 cross-country trip on Furthur - a sojourn to Houston, stopping to visit Kesey's friend the novelist Larry McMurtry.[2]\n Notable members of the group include Kesey's best friend Ken Babbs, Carolyn \"Mountain Girl\" Garcia, Lee Quarnstrom, and Neal Cassady. Stewart Brand, Dorothy Fadiman,[3] Paul Foster, George Walker, the Warlocks (later known as the Grateful Dead), Del Close (then a lighting designer for the Grateful Dead), Wavy Gravy, Paul Krassner, and Kentucky Fab Five writers Ed McClanahan and Gurney Norman (who overlapped with Kesey and Babbs as creative writing graduate students at Stanford University) were associated with the group to varying degrees.[citation needed]\n These events are also documented by one of the original pranksters, Lee Quarnstrom, in his memoir, When I Was a Dynamiter.\n","version":"1.0","provider_name":"Wikipedia","thumbnail_url":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/61fe830857e8ab1a83f6f78ebaa0b75f.jpg","type":"link","thumbnail_height":146,"image":{"base64":"data:image/png;base64,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","img":{"width":220,"height":146,"src":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/61fe830857e8ab1a83f6f78ebaa0b75f.jpg"}}}" format="iframe">Merry Pranksters - WikipediaThe Merry Pranksters were followers of American author Ken Kesey. Kesey and the Merry Pranksters lived communally at Kesey's homes in California and Oregon, and are noted for the sociological significance of a lengthy road trip they took in the summer of 1964, traveling across the United States in a psychedelic painted school bus called , organizing parties, and giving out LSD.http://wikipedia.org\n\nThomas Kennerly Wolfe Jr. (March 2, 1930 – May 14, 2018)[a] was an American author and journalist widely known for his association with New Journalism, a style of news writing and journalism developed in the 1960s and 1970s that incorporated literary techniques. Much of Wolfe's work is satirical and centres on the counterculture of the 1960s and issues related to class, social status, and the lifestyles of the economic and intellectual elites of New York City.\n Wolfe began his career as a regional newspaper reporter in the 1950s, achieving national prominence in the 1960s following the publication of such best-selling books as The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (an account of Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters) and two collections of articles and essays, The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby and Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers. In 1979, he published the influential book The Right Stuff about the Mercury Seven astronauts, which was made into a 1983 film of the same name directed by Philip Kaufman.\n","version":"1.0","provider_name":"Wikipedia","thumbnail_url":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/af7515611867acad38627d258922607f.jpg","type":"link","thumbnail_height":1414,"image":{"base64":"data:image/png;base64,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","img":{"width":1198,"height":1414,"src":"https://storage.googleapis.com/papyrus_images/af7515611867acad38627d258922607f.jpg"}}}" format="iframe">Tom Wolfe - WikipediaThomas Kennerly Wolfe Jr. (March 2, 1930 - May 14, 2018) was an American author and journalist widely known for his association with New Journalism, a style of news writing and journalism developed in the 1960s and 1970s that incorporated literary techniques.http://wikipedia.org ## Publication Information - [Connections](https://paragraph.com/@alb1/): Publication homepage - [All Posts](https://paragraph.com/@alb1/): More posts from this publication - [RSS Feed](https://api.paragraph.com/blogs/rss/@alb1): Subscribe to updates ## Optional - [Collect as NFT](https://paragraph.com/@alb1/today-i-learned): Support the author by collecting this post - [View Collectors](https://paragraph.com/@alb1/today-i-learned/collectors): See who has collected this post