The real Alice of Arlo Guthrie’s 'Alice’s Restaurant' dies
ASPartOfMe
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Brock's longtime close friend Viki Merrick was with her when she died. Merrick said up until the end Brock remained poetic, hilariously funny, and full of puns. “That’s the way Alice has always been.”
The timing of Brock’s passing is poignant. It’s long been a Thanksgiving tradition for radio stations across the country to broadcast Guthrie’s 18-minute spoken word ramble that made "Alice” famous.
In a 2020 interview, Brock recounted how she became “the living-legend, Earth Mother, Alice of 'Alice's Restaurant.'” In the '60s she was chef-owner of The Back Room in the Berkshires. But an unfortunate trash dumping incident that originated in Brock’s home inspired Guthrie to write his song.
She was busy preparing a Thanksgiving feast in her house — which was a deconsecrated church, just like in the song — and Guthrie wanted to help out by disposing a heap of garbage. When he and a friend discovered the city dump was closed for the holiday, they opted to chuck the refuse off a cliff.
Brock described how a real policeman called the day after Thanksgiving to sniff out the littering offender. When he asked Brock if she did the deed she said, "No, but I know who did.”
Guthrie landed in the local jail, but Brock said she bailed him out with $50 worth of quarters and foreign coins.
The musician went on to craft a satirical cavalcade of events that transpired that Thanksgiving. He called his 1967 rant, “Alice’s Restaurant Massacre.” In it Guthrie intones the now famous line, “You can get anything you want at Alice’s restaurant.”
Brock said she got a kick out of her friend’s embellishments. The song would later be adapted into a movie, which catapulted her to unwitting fame.
She resented director Arthur’s Penn’s Hollywood depiction of a hippie’s life. “So not true,” she said in 2020. But Brock did write a spin-off cookbook that she filled with her favorite dishes, dry wit and illustrations. A tour promoting the book and movie gave her a higher profile, but also made Brock feel exploited. “Everybody had me locked into that character,” she said. “And that was not my character at all.”
Brock owned three different restaurants in Western Massachusetts between 1965 and 1979, including Take-Out Alice and Alice’s at Avaloch. The old church where she lived in Great Barrington is now the Guthrie Center, an interfaith worship and live performance venue.
Brock grew up in Brooklyn, but said her family spent summers in Provincetown where her father ran a shop. She fell in love with the idea of living by the sea.
“There are all these pictures of me happy, happy, happy just wearing a pair of underpants,” Alice recalled in 2020. “I think I didn't wear a bathing suit until I was about 12. But that's the way it was here.”
After leaving the Berkshires about four decades ago, Brock made a new life for herself as an artist and children’s book author in Provincetown. There she met Dini Lamot, who together with his husband Windle Davis founded the 1970s and ‘80s new wave band Human Sexual Response.
“I was starstruck,” Lamot recalled in 2020. “I would hear about all the stuff she did for all the people she took in, and just the food she made for everybody, and her generosity.”
According to Lamot, Brock was always helping others and taking in wayward souls. She also supported the gay community in Provincetown during the AIDS epidemic.
In 2020, Alice fell on financial hard times due to her failing health. So Lamot and Davis organized a GoFundMe campaign that rapidly raised $180,000-dollars. Friends and strangers contributed, and Alice was humbled by the outpouring of kind words and donations. At the time she wrote:
"To all the very dear kind and generous folks who chipped in to my GoFunMe page. It went over the top and I am overwhelmed by the response. The comments that people wrote are heartwarming and I hope I don't get a swelled head. Everyone has a story and I appreciate you sharing yours with me. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Peace and Love to All, Alice”
Back in 2020, Alice said she didn’t expect to live longer than two more years. But she managed to last four — and was able to stay near the water — as she always wanted.
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DuckHairback
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Man, I had that record when I was a kid. Must have come from my dad's collection. I listened to it repeatedly and can still quote long passages. Completely inappropriate for an 8 year old but I liked it. I never listened to the other side of that record.
I remember watching the movie too a few times at some point.
RIP Alice
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It's dark. Is it always this dark?
It's really nice, isn't it?
Always leaves me feeling nostalgic for some reason, and then I remembered this.
There's a tenuous link to the topic I guess - but this is so nice I couldn't let it pass.
So, to the memory of Alice -
Feel like the sun
Coming up on daytime
Shine on every one
Coming up on darkness
Warm me in your arms
Let me know another lonely night
Has come and gone
Oh, happy river flowing
Gently unto me
Softly bring me music
Listen to you sing
Swiftly running river flowing
We'll at last be free
Oh, happy waterwheel
Roll gently over me
Oh in the evening
Feel alone at last
All of the things that the daytime brings
Roll gently in the past
There is nothing left to see
Except the stars and moon
To let me know another lonely day
Is coming soon
Oh, in the morning
Feel like the sun
Coming up on daytime
Shine on everyone
Coming up on darkness
Warm me in your arms
Let me know another lonely night
Has come and gone
--Arlo Guthrie
Album: Running Down the Road
Released: 1969
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Giraffe: a ruminant with a view.
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