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EXPERIMENTAL FILM # 1 - PULL MY DAISY - ROBERT FRANK (1959)
Pull my Daisy -
1959 Robert Frank Film A short film that typifies the Beat Generation. Directed
by Robert Frank and Alfred Leslie, Daisy was adapted by Jack Kerouac from the
third act of a stage play he never finished entitled Beat Generation. Kerouac
also provided improvised narration. It starred Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso,
Larry Rivers, Peter Orlovsky, David Amram, Richard Bellamy, Alice Neel, Sally
Gross and Pablo Frank, Robert Frank's then-infant son. Based on an incident in
the life of Neal Cassady and his wife Carolyn, Daisy tells the story of a
railway brakeman whose painter wife invites a respectable bishop over for
dinner. However, the brakeman's bohemian friends crash the party, with comic
results. The Beat philosophy emphasized spontaneity, and the film conveyed
the quality of having been thrown together or even improvised. Pull My Daisy was
accordingly praised for years as an improvisational masterpiece, until Leslie
revealed in a November 28, 1968 article in the Village Voice that the film was
actually carefully planned, rehearsed, and directed by him and Frank, who shot
the film on a professionally lit studio set. Pull My Daisy has been deemed
"culturally significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected
for preservation in the National Film Registry. (From Wikipedia Entry:
Pull My Daisy))