Charles Plymell

Charles Plymell
Charles Plymell
Born Charley Plymell
April 26, 1935 (1935-04-26) (age 76)
Holcomb, Kansas, United States
Occupation poet, publisher, author
Literary movement Postmodernism, Underground Comix

Charles Plymell (born April 26, 1935, in Holcomb, Kansas) is a poet, novelist, and small press publisher. Plymell has been published widely, collaborated with, and published many poets, writers, and artists, including principals of the Beat Generation.

He was a "hipster" in Kansas in 1950s subculture, and became involved with the Beat Generation in San Francisco, where he shared a house with Allen Ginsberg and Neal Cassady in the early 1960s. Plymell spent important, memorable times with Ginsberg, Cassady, and William S. Burroughs, who wrote introductions to his work. He visited with Ginsberg and Burroughs in Lawrence the last time they saw each other,[citation needed] and in New York City with Jack Kerouac and Ginsberg the last time they saw each other.[citation needed]

He has published, printed, and designed many underground magazines and books with his wife Pamela Beach, a namesake in avant-garde publishing. He published Ray Bremser and Herbert Huncke, whom he identified with from the hipster 1950s. He was influential in the underground comix scene, first printing Zap Comix artists such as Robert Crumb and S. Clay Wilson, whom he first published in Lawrence, Kansas.

Plymell received a citation for being a distinguished poet by Governor Joan Finney of Kansas and was cited in the 1976 World Book Encyclopedia as a most promising poet.

Contents

Biography

In 1935, Charley Plymell's father took his family to Holcomb, Kansas, where Charley was born April 26, "in a converted chicken shed built to protect us from the black dust storms that had long covered the once thriving Plymell stage lines a few miles away. My mother had to put wet rags over our faces so we could breathe. When she wasn't busy with us, she was gathering cactus and shooting jackrabbits ("Hoover steaks") to feed us. In my poetry, I speak of the madness that this desperation could, in frailer women evoke, and of seeing in a Washington, D.C., gourmet market a half-century later the kind of cactus she had gathered."[1]

Plymell performed Peyote rituals in Kansas in the 1950s and K.C. Jazz Benzedrine scenes. Allen Ginsberg credited him for inventing the Wichita Vortex.[citation needed] Plymell moved to a quiet Russian neighborhood, rented a flat on the corner of Haight and Ashbury in 1962, and watched kids appear one by one, playing sitars, smoking reefer, ingesting Sandoz, Owsley tabs and Mescaline.

In 1963, Neal Cassady and Allen Ginsberg moved in with Plymell at 1403 Gough Street, and had a party where Beats met Hippies. Ginsberg also said Plymell was the first to play Bob Dylan for him at Gough Street.[citation needed]

Plymell made experimental films which were accepted at the Ann Arbor Film Festival, and collages which were exhibited on the black walls of the Batman Gallery, along with works by Bruce Conner and Plymell's friend from his Wichita days, Bob Branaman. Plymell met Billy (Batman) Jahrmarkt, who gave Plymell his classic 1952 MGTD Roadster.[citation needed]

Plymell had a profound impact on underground comix by printing the first issue of Zap Comix on his printing press in San Francisco in 1968, with Don Donahue assisting (who would soon after take over his Multilith 1250). A few months earlier, Plymell printed a "lifted" R. Crumb "Head Comix" page from Yarrowstalks #2 in his tabloid newspaper The Last Times[2] before he actually met Crumb. (Plymell also published perhaps the second underground comic book ever, Bob Branaman's Robert Ronnie Branaman in 1963.)

Later, Plymell and his wife Pam traveled to Cherry Valley, New York, to visit Allen Ginsberg's farm, and moved into the village. There they founded Cherry Valley Editions to print a series of books by William S. Burroughs, Herbert Huncke, Robert Peters, Dick McBride, and others, including Plymell's own work, that are now out of print and rare. Jazz pianist Paul Bley moved to Cherry Valley at Plymell's suggestion and bought an old building once owned by Samuel Morse from Plymell.

Plymell underwent triple heart bypass surgery at the end of January 2009.[citation needed]

Books

  • Apocalypse Rose, Dave Haselwood Books, San Francisco, CA, 1967.
  • Neon Poems, Atom Mind Publications, Syracuse, NY, 1970.
  • The Last of the Moccasins, City Lights Books, San Francisco, CA, 1971; Mother Road Publications, 1996.
  • Moccasins Ein Beat-Kaleidoskop, Europaverlag, Vienna, Austria, 1980.
  • Over the Stage of Kansas, Telephone Books, NYC, 1973.
  • The Trashing of America, Kulchur Foundation, NYC, 1975.
  • Blue Orchid Numero Uno, Telephone Books, 1977.
  • Panik in Dodge City, Expanded Media Editions, Bonn, W. Germany, 1981.
  • Forever Wider, 1954–1984, Scarecrow Press, Metuchen, NJ, 1985.
  • Was Poe Afraid?, Bogg Publications, Arlington, VA, 1990.
  • Hand on the Doorknob, Water Row Books, Sudbury, MA, 2000
  • Eat Not Thy Mind, Eye Books Ecstatic Peace Library, Florance, MA, 2010
  • Found & Lost Magascene, Vol. 1 / No. 0 & 1 [Contributor], Back Room/Temple of Man, 2010

Anthologies

  • Mark in Time, New Glide Publications, San Francisco, CA, 1971.
  • And The Roses Race Around Her Name, Stonehill, NYC, 1975.
  • Turpentin on the Rocks, Maro Verlag, Augsburg, W. Germany, 1978.
  • A Quois Bon, Le Soleil Noir, Paris, France, 1978.
  • Planet Detroit, Anthology of Urban Poetry, Detroit, MI, 1983.
  • Second Coming Anthology, Second Coming Press, San Francisco, CA, 1984.
  • The World, Crown Publishers, 1991.
  • Editors' Choice III, The Spirit That Moves Us, New York, 1992.
  • The Age of Koestler, The Spirit of the Wind Press, Kalamazoo, MI, 1990.

References

  1. ^ Plymell, Charley. Kansa, Land of the Wind People.
  2. ^ The Last Times vol. 1, no.1 (Fall 1967).

External links

Interviews


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Charles Plymell — (* 26. April 1935 in Holcomb, Kansas), ist ein US amerikanischer Autor, Verleger, Herausgeber. Er zählte zur literarischen „Beat Generation“ . Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Werke 3 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Charles — ist ein männlicher Vorname, der auch als Familienname in Gebrauch ist. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Herkunft und Bedeutung 2 Bekannte Namensträger 2.1 Vorname 2.2 Familienname …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Charles Henri Ford — (February 10, 1913 September 27, 2002) was an American poet, novelist, filmmaker, photographer, and collage artist best known for his editorship of the Surrealist magazine View (1940 1947) in New York City, and as the partner of the artist Pavel… …   Wikipedia

  • Plymell, Charles — (1935– )    Poet, essayist, publisher, printer, artist, laborer, teacher Charles Plymell has worn almost as many hats as his friend Hat Man Jack, the legendary Wichita hat maker, has fashioned. According to allen ginsberg, Plymell and his friends …   Encyclopedia of Beat Literature

  • Last of the Moccasins — by Charles Plymell (1971)    First published in 1971 by City Lights Books, Last of the Moccasins is an impressionistic novel which chronicles charles plymell’s experiences in and out of San Francisco in the early 1960s when the “Wichita Vortex”… …   Encyclopedia of Beat Literature

  • Bulletin from Nothing — Das Bulletin from Nothing war eine kurzlebige Literaturzeitschrift (im englischen auch Little Mag genannt), das von Mary Beach und Claude Pélieu 1965 in San Francisco in zwei Ausgaben herausgegeben wurde. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Beschreibung 2… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • History of the hippie movement — A 1967 article in Time Magazine asserts that the foundation of the hippie movement finds historical precedent as far back as the counterculture of the Ancient Greeks, espoused by philosophers like Diogenes of Sinope and the Cynics.cite news title …   Wikipedia

  • Beat Generation — The Beat Generation is a term used to describe both a group of American writers who came to prominence in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and the cultural phenomena that they wrote about and inspired (later sometimes called beatniks ): a… …   Wikipedia

  • Udo Breger — (* 1941 in Göttingen) ist ein deutscher Übersetzer und Verleger. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Biographie 2 Publikationen 3 Übersetzungen 4 Als Verleger …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • History of the hippie movement/temp — Temp from HippieThe David Roca s History Project:History of the hippie movement is the history of Hippies.History of the movement in the USAntecedentsThe foundation of the hippie movement in the United States finds historical precedent as far… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”