Douglas Adams Remembered By Those Who Knew Him 181
John "Widgett" Robinson writes "IGN FilmForce tapped a bunch of folks who knew and worked with Douglas Adams, asking them to share some stories of their time with the man himself. They've posted the results as an article that includes responses from Pythoner Terry Jones, author Neil Gaiman, actor Stephen Fry, Rutle Neil Innes, zoologist Mark Carwardine, and Monkee Michael Nesmith. I've never heard any of these stories before, so the thing winds up being a unique tribute to a very cool frood."
Hollywood Vultures (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hollywood Vultures (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hollywood Vultures (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hollywood Vultures (Score:3, Insightful)
Hey, M.J., thanks for taking what was supposed to me a fond remembrance of DNA and turning it into a soapbox; I'm sure the family is warmed by your se
Re:Hollywood Vultures (Score:3, Interesting)
TG, no thanks for failing to comprend "integrity" (and "intent"), or for misunderstanding a couple of sentences explaining why that posthumous publication of DNA's work might be more satisfying than either the film bringing the message to you, or even the rushed, inadequa
Re:Hollywood Vultures (Score:2)
Having seen a special screening of the movie last night, I can tell you that Douglas Adams' face shows up in the movie. It's actually the very last thing you see before the credits roll.
Re: (Score:2)
Slashdot Bittermen (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hollywood Vultures (Score:2)
So... are you expecting that Hollywood NON-Vultures shouldn't talk about the last highly anticipated movie you had a hand in both inspiring and in making?
Not everything's about money, Ass.
Re:Hollywood Vultures (Score:3, Insightful)
It's no different than when Titanic came out. All the news agencies that 'suddenly' did stories on the disaster weren't vultures, they were providing background and information. And, whereas DNAs death was covered by the sa
Re:Hollywood Vultures (Score:3, Interesting)
Adams slightly less remembered... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Adams slightly less remembered... (Score:2, Insightful)
And I thought I was the only one (Score:4, Funny)
who ever had this conversation.
Douglas Adams is dead?!! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Douglas Adams is dead?!! (Score:4, Informative)
Unfortunately it is true, he died in a Gym. Lalla Ward, actress and friend of Douglas Adams, had this to say on this matter:
I think the only thing that might conceivably have made Douglas laugh was the thought that some of us now have an excuse never to set foot in a b****y gym ever again, because that's where he died.
You can read/listen to the full interview of Lalla Ward here [bbc.co.uk]
There are some interesting bits in this interview that show just how many people Douglas Adams knew. For example Lalla Ward met her 2nd husband Richard Dawkins (Famous evolutionary Biologist and author of such books as "The Blind Watchmaker" through Douglas.
Re:Douglas Adams is dead?!! (Score:2)
Re:Douglas Adams is dead?!! (Score:2)
I think bloody is probably the "Chicken Korma" of swear words. For the benefit of those who are not exposed to the Indian style cooking, this is a very mild curry. I cut and pasted the text from the BBC transcript and have no idea why they put stars in, they didn't bleep the video version.
"Cool"?! (Score:5, Funny)
Clearly you do not know where your towel is.
Re:"Cool"?! (Score:5, Informative)
Actually it's hoopy and/or frood. [hhgproject.org] Froopy [pseudodictionary.com] was never actually used in the HH books. Note it says 'derived' in the linked definition.
You may commence eating your towel.
Re:"Cool"?! (Score:2)
Re:"Cool"?! (Score:5, Informative)
rememberance and full article mirror (Score:4, Interesting)
The mirror is here [networkmirror.com]
Re:rememberance and full article mirror (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:rememberance and full article mirror (Score:2)
Re:rememberance and full article mirror (Score:2)
As a fan of his work it was really enjoyable getting to spend time with him in that kind of setting.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Funniest comment (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Funniest comment (Score:2, Funny)
DNA (Score:3, Funny)
Re:DNA (Score:2)
Except if you had read TFA [ign.com] you would know that he _didn't_ know where his towel was.
"I thought, of course. You have to be the kind of person who doesn't know where his towel is to notice that the people who do are the truly cool people. And I was glad Douglas didn't."
An example of classic British humour (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:An example of classic British humour (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe they did try, come to think of it, and he just wasn't answering the...er...phone?
Re:An example of classic British humour (Score:4, Funny)
Only things I remember... (Score:5, Interesting)
Also a question of who inspired Ford Prefect, it wasn't Eric Idle (as I'd guessed, from his minor involvement with the Pythons) but a college roommate, whose name he didn't give.
There's my minor nuggets.
Re:Only things I remember... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Only things I remember... (Score:2)
Just Gotta Say... (Score:5, Funny)
Douglas Adams Remembered By Those Who Knew Him
Of course. He's not going to be remembered by those who knew nothing about him.
Re:Just Gotta Say... (Score:5, Funny)
Why not? It would seem to suit his humor.
Steve Jones, Auto Mechanic
"Douglas Adams? Wasn't he the guy that was busted for taking his dick out on the merry-go-round at the county fair?"
Mary Franklin, Attorney
"I can say, without a doubt, that Douglas Adams was the most underutilized character on that Adams Family show."
Saw him speak (Score:5, Interesting)
One example he told about was how 10 years ago, society's view of cell phones was that they were devices only bought by gabbers who liked to annoy other people. People had this viceral reaction when they saw a person with a cell phone, something like, "Oh God, that person thinks they are SO important, but they just look like an idiot gabbing away." His daughter (I think) told him one day, "Why should I use a phone with a cord when I can use a phone without a cord that I can take anywhere?" When Mr. Adams had this epiphany, he immediately went out and bought a cell phone.
This was an insightful story and really hit home because I was one of those people who had a very negative view of cell phones around 10 years ago, for no real reason other than they were new. Irony of all ironies though, Mr. Adams died on a treadmill (fake walking device) soon after.
Re:Saw him speak (Score:4, Interesting)
Ten years later and this view hasn't changed.
And no, this isn't a troll or flamebait. The next time you are out and are behind someone who's waddling along talking on their cell phone, actually listen to what they are saying. 99% of the time the conversation will not be about something important ("I'm at the store, do you need something?"; "Are you alright? I'll be right over.") but rather someone talking to someone simply because they have a cell phone.
Doubt me? Have a listen.
Re:Saw him speak (Score:5, Funny)
) Forget they're driving. This is Not Good with a capital WTF.
) Be totally oblivious that they're blocking an aisle or line in the store/restaurant/whatever.
) Talk really loudly as if they're the only ones in the general vicinity.
) ???
) Get stabbed in the face - profit!
Re:Saw him speak (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh ffs (Score:2)
I don't care that they're talking to someone about what the fuck ever they're talking about. I care because that act of talking on a cellphone inevitably distracts the bloody crap out of them
Re:Saw him speak (Score:3, Insightful)
Other side of conversation: "Yes, please get my nitro pills, as I am having heart palpitations.
Very unimportant. It's truely unfortunate that we all can't have as exciting and important conversations as you do.
Re:Saw him speak (Score:5, Funny)
"Ohmygod, did you see what she was wearing at the party last night!? I know! Totally! Total! Skank! So Joey says, he says, hang on a sec, I've got another call - Jamie! Ohmygod, where did you get that dress last night? That was so hot! No way. NO WAY. NOOO WAAY. Wow, cool! You'll have to take me by there sometime. Listen, my mom's on the other line, I'm at the store getting her medication. Thanks babe! - So anyway, guess who THAT was? Yep. I told her I was talking to my mom. Can you believe her? I just... hold on, I got another call - Heeey, Thom... what're you doing later tonight? I dunno, Joey's out of town... I thought maybe we could - yeah. Your place? Sure. Bye. - Ohmygod ohmygod ohmygod. THOM just called me. We are hooking up TONIGHT. SO SURREAL. No. No, of course not. Michelle, if you tell Joey you are DEAD. Do you understand me? Dea..."
and so on.
Re:Saw him speak (Score:2)
Why should cell phones be restricted to 'important' things?
I'll concede that no, you can't say anything on a cell phone when in a public space. But I can't for the life of me see why you can't talk about any of the things people talk about in public. As long as you adhere to the rules of etiquette that apply to public conversations. (E.g. don't be loud, don't talk about initimate things) And really, on a
Re:Saw him speak (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Saw him speak (Score:2)
Re:Saw him speak (Score:2)
Re:Saw him speak (Score:2)
Uh... saves gas, time, money... I'd say that's rather useful.
Re:Saw him speak (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Saw him speak (Score:2)
...and it was in their pocket ringing?
Re:Saw him speak (Score:2)
RIP Doug (Score:3, Funny)
So long, and thanks for all the books.
Re:RIP Doug (Score:2, Interesting)
Apparently, you didn't R the FA. To quote the imminently quotable Neil Geiman:
There was a sudden scurrying and commotion as a Douglasy sort of noise came from upstairs, followed by the arrival downstairs of Douglas's stepmother. "He says there aren't any towels in the bathroom and he's in the bath. Where are the towels?" she asked...
No David Prowse (Score:2, Interesting)
Also ... (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.towelday.kojv.net/ [kojv.net]
Remember this headline? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Remember this headline? (Score:3, Insightful)
I read down to the point where someone posted the bit where Marvin reads God's Last Message to his Creation and just busted out crying like a little kid. I think I scared my wife since I am normally extremely difficult to upset -- I just didn't know how to explain to her the sense of loss I felt. I mean, here I am an adult man bawling into my hands because one of my favorite authors had died. It was really strange.
In an unrelated sidenote, I have the words "Don't Panic" ins
Re:Remember this headline? (Score:3, Insightful)
Now that is a remarkably good idea...
Re:Remember this headline? (Score:2)
ISTR it was Sat May 12, '01 07:33 AM, but I may be wrong.
Stephen Frye is the new voice (Score:3, Informative)
Nice to see (Score:3, Insightful)
Goodbye and thanks for all the books.
hey wait! (Score:2)
What gives?
Dawkins on Adams (Score:5, Informative)
Two memorials by Richards Dawkins from 2001 are here [guardian.co.uk] ("a keening lament, written too soon to be balanced, too soon to be carefully thought through") and a eulogy here [edge.org].
The latter piece includes this quote from Adams:
It's a reminder that the best way to remember Adams is to re-read what he wrote.
That we might have known him... (Score:4, Informative)
We erected a tribute page on our website in his honor:
http://www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/abs/douglasadams / [ucla.edu]
Two years later, we finally ran our Big Event, with Bill Nye the Science Guy [nyelabs.com] and Dr. Jill Tarter [seti.org] of SETI fame. We opened with a dedication to Adams. Here are pictures from the event:
http://homepage.mac.com/uniace/PhotoAlbum21.html [mac.com]
The one thing that still nags me to this day... (Score:4, Insightful)
I wonder just how much the combined stress of trying to get Hollywood to make a movie, plus fighting off rabid publishers after another HHGTTG novel, contributed to his heart attack.
I think Stephen Fry says it best... (Score:3, Funny)
He was a huge man: when he was in a house it rattled and you always knew he was there. He did the same to the Earth. It doesn't rattle anymore now that he's gone.
Amen to that.
Re:I think Stephen Fry says it best... (Score:2)
I spoke with/met Adams on more than one occasion; once during a radio interview when he was talking about Last Chance to See, and once about 3 years earlier at a book signing - he signed a towel I brought in (and I still have and know where it is). Stephen Fry's comments brought the memory back of Adams trying to figure out how to sign the towel and hold it flat at the same time (in the end, I held the towel still while he signed it). After he signed it, we chatted for a few minutes and then
HHGTG Game Interview (Score:5, Informative)
The BBC has an interview with Meretzky about how his collaboration with Adams went, a great, long and detailed text, full of information. Now, that's good reporting!
Read it here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/hitchhikers/stevem.sh
Just got back from seeing the movie... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Just got back from seeing the movie... (Score:2)
"The earth has acquired a slight eccentricity in its orbit"
H2G2 review from a radio station (Score:2)
I received this comment today from a friend who has only recently begun to read Hitchhiker's. I'm taking him to see the movie tonight, so he's been forwarding me little tidbits here and there.
"Anywho, I was listening to 89.7 while flipping thru the radio stations because they had a review on Hitchhikers. And well it wasn't until the end where it said 'tries to explain the meaning of life through primarily
Knew the guy who killed him (Score:5, Informative)
Adams lived and worked out in Montecito, CA, right next to Santa Barbara where I live. At the time I worked out at a small gym called just "The Club" down on lower State Street. It was kind of a personal-trainer gym and most of the people who worked out there had trainers.
Three of the trainers decided to start their own private gym in Montecito, and one of them had Adams as a client. That was where he died.
Apparently the private gym didn't have defibrillator equipment, nor had these personal trainers had any classes in using that kind of equipment. Adams' unexpected heart attack didn't have to be fatal. As he lay gasping his last breaths at the foot of this trainer, a guy I had seen around The Club, the trainer just stood there staring helplessly, wondering what to do.
It's a sad story, and the lesson is, make sure your gym has defib equipment, and make sure the trainers know how to use it. It could save your life some day. Don't let yourself end up as another preventable tragedy like Douglas Adams.
Re:Knew the guy who killed him (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Knew the guy who killed him (Score:2)
The Defibrillator File
Begun on July 15, 1996
Latest Defib-Flubs from the Guild
While doing research for a novel that I've been working on for six years and I came across a piece of information that absolutely stunned me. I was discussing emergency room procedures with Darla Neff--an emergency room nurse--and we eventually got around to the "defibrillator."
You seen it in action hundreds of times on television. The doctor or nurse grabs these paddles, slaps t
GRAHAM CHAPMAN (Score:2, Interesting)
He did in fact pass away in 1989.
Didn't write the scripts.... (Score:2, Insightful)
I actually met him once (Score:3, Interesting)
Winton
Re:I actually met him once (Score:2)
Having spoken several times to both Terry and Douglas I strongly recommend that should you ever be in the position to repeat that observation to Terry, DON'T.
Re:I actually met him once (Score:2)
I've never actually spoken to Terry Pratchett, other than to say "err, its for my friend actually" at a book signing (kidding, he was very gracious, and signed all 30 paperbacks I brought with me). Again, falsehood
News From the Future! (Score:2, Funny)
Havoc brought the Internet to its knees today with the opening of the movie "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" across the United States. Millions of fans, a disproportionate number of whom work in information technology related fields, scrambled to connect to clogged servers to change their passwords. Apprarently, upon realizing the positive press the movie was receiving, and assuming that the resurfacing of certain plot elements into the public consciousness was imminent, h
Towels (Score:2, Funny)
Insofar as the towel goes.. (Score:2, Informative)
After a rather lengthy soliloquay on his doings, mostly consisting of his in depth searches for very rare animals on the planet (dolphins in the Yangzee for example), he opened the gathering to question and answer time. Fortunately he'd apparently already alotted half the time to doing this cause lets face it.. Fans Have Questions.
A friend of mine stood up and thanked him for taking a side trip
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Clue stick (Score:2)
I saw that! I believe they used a dustbuster to vacuum up his ashes too. Brilliantly stupid. I loved it.
Re:Graham Chapman ?!?? (Score:5, Informative)
A few years back, the surviving Python members got together on the Tonight Show (IIRC). It was the first time they had been together in years. One of them held an urn holding Chapman's ashes, saying that it really was all of them together again.
Then, not long into the interview, someone dropped the urn and the ashes spilled everywhere. The Python guys went nuts, cleaning it up (one pulled out a dusbuster, while someone else swept the ash under a rug) and then everyone realized it was a joke.
If only we could all be remembered like that.
Re:Graham Chapman ?!?? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Graham Chapman ?!?? (Score:3, Insightful)
HTH
HAND
Re:Graham Chapman ?!?? (Score:2)
Depending what you read:
Spinal and throat cancer [imdb.com]
Spinal cancer [lambda.net]
Throat cancer [nndb.com]
He died of having AIDS. Cancer killed him. A bit on the end [pythonline.com]
Re:Graham Chapman ?!?? (Score:2)
Re:Graham Chapman ?!?? (Score:3, Informative)
Terry Gilliam "accidentally" kicked the urn from a coffee table that was on the stage in front of him. A butler came out with a Dust Buster. Some of the other Pythons pushed some of the remaining ashes under the a
Re:Graham Chapman ?!?? (Score:2)
Re:coincidence? (Score:5, Interesting)
It's called cross-promotion, and companies that are completely unaffiliated "cash in" on it all the time. You see, because of the publicity and marketing driven by the movie, there is presently a market of people interested in facts about Douglas Adams, Hitchhiker's Guide, British Comedy, Old Science Fiction, and who knows what else.
Any editor worth his salt would consider running stories that capitalize on that interest. The interest is bigger than it was two years ago, and bigger than it will be in six months. It would be idiotic not to run stories like this if you have access to them. It's not "disingenious", people want to read about things like this right now!
Re:coincidence? (Score:2)
Re:Listen to people talk about Adams? (Score:3, Funny)
I'd pay real money to see that, actually.
Re:Listen to people talk about Adams? (Score:2)
Re:The REAL issue at hand here (Score:2)
Oh, they're working on it.
Just... they'll be using Nixon's head... in a jar.
I have seen it!
Odd things in the movie previews. (Score:2)