Brush With Fame Double Whammy: Johnny Depp and Hunter S. Thompson

07/14/10  Print This Post Print This Post    9 Comments      Written by Kate Sedgwick
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Mashup photo with images courtesy of wellohorld and izarbeltza

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December 1996, Louisville, KY. USA

I was a chubby just 21 year old art student with a mohawk and a love for gin the night of the The Hunter S. Thompson Tribute in Memorial Auditorium. I went with my mom. Behind us sat my psychiatrist who I secretly despised, cuddling with his wife in a way that disgusted me. I was surprised to see him there. On stage were Hunter Thompson and a strange group of people there to honor him including, if memory serves, his wheelchair-bound mother, Warren Zevon, and Johnny Depp.

Thomspson wore a hat with ear flaps. Ron Whitehead, the poet and MC was playing up their connection in front of a packed house, his skinny body bending and swerving as he speed-read his poems with an enthusiasm normally reserved for 16 year olds losing their virginity. Thompson drunkenly hollered, “Slow down! Slow down!” It was obvious he was blitzed from the moment he walked on stage and by the end of the night he was barely able to make himself understood. My shrink and his wife clutched at each other, stroking, comforting, terrorized. This satisfied and repelled me.

Thompson was accompanied by Johnny Depp. It was the period before the release of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (the movie) during which Depp was observing Thompson for maximum fidelity.

After the show, I buckled myself into a mauve sedan with some other photography students and we sped through the streets on our way to the Bristol. “Everybody’s going there!” said Cathy.

At a table in the Bristol sat a very old Raoul Duke, packed in by fans and more than one gorgeous woman he seemed to be ignoring in his stupor. I ordered a gin and tonic and hung back a minute before approaching the table to get the program from the show signed for my mother. He seemed small and frail and his glasses magnified his large, watery eyes in the wobbly candle light. Something about him reminded me of a frightened rabbit.

“My mom just loves you. She got me to read Fear and Loathing when I was twelve.”

“You look like a victim of domestic violence,” Thompson growled at me.

“Why do you say that?”

“Oh, lighten up, honey. It’s a joke.” He scrawled something on the program that covered the entire page and was completely illegible.

“Thanks,” I said. Dismissed.

My friends were sticking around, but I could walk home from there. Another drink might have been nice, but I didn’t have the cash. I sucked the rest of my cocktail up through its tiny straw, and once on the sidewalk in front, alone, I let a monster belch reverberate into the cold night air on the empty street. To my left I heard someone say, “Nice one.” I looked. Johnny Depp was standing in the shadows, smiling.

“One too many gin and tonics,” I said.

“I know the feeling.”

Holy shit, I thought. Then I walked home by myself thinking of domestic violence.

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About the Author

Matador ID: K_Crimini

Kate Sedgwick co-edits Matador Nights from Buenos Aires where she teaches English, learns Spanish and thoroughly enjoys herself. Her art and writing have appeared in print and on-line publications and her novel in progress will be received with prurient glee by critics of American culture if it ever gets into their grubby little hands. Find out more about her than you ever wanted to know here. (Author photo by Sebastian Santana).

9 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Lydia replied on July 14, 2010

    Awesome story! I loved your description of Hunter S Thompson. I think it is pretty insighful. And Im happy to hear the Johnny Depp digs a chick who can belch,….Depp always seems like such a nice guy.

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  • Alouise replied on July 15, 2010

    Wow what an encounter, sure you won’t forget that. I’m reading The Proud Highway right now and I’ve always wondered what it would’ve been like to meet Hunter S. Thompson, I have a feeling it would’ve been quite interesting.

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  • david miller replied on July 16, 2010

    i enjoyed reading this kate.

    not trying to sneak into HST’s funeral in CO (or at least the surrounding mountains) is one of my biggest regrets.

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    • Kate Sedgwick replied to david miller on July 16, 2010

      Thanks, David. I bet there were all kinds of strange people hiding behind Colorado trees that day.

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  • Jake replied on August 30, 2010

    Urrrggg…soooooooooooo jealous. If I could meet anybody from any time, Hunter would be right behind the Buddha, and Depp would be pretty high on that list, too.

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