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Grateful Dead Roadie: “I Took My Job as a Sacred Task”

11/4/08, 2:32 pm EST

The Grateful Dead biopic adapted from Home Before Daylight already has a shortlist of hot directors including Oliver Stone, Sean Penn, Jonathan Demme and Larry Charles. “Those are the guys that would really knock it out of the park,” producer Stephen Emery tells Rock Daily.

But like any business these days, the film industry is taking a kick in the groin. “Hollywood is in a freeze like the rest of us in this country,” says the book’s author and longtime Dead roadie Steve Parish. “It ebbs and it flows. But the wheels are in motion. It could happen any day.”

Several musicians, including Jefferson Airplane, Neil Young and Bob Dylan, have already signed on for the soundtrack, with guitarist Bob Weir as the music director. “I’m very proud to have Bob on board,” says Emery. “He wants to write new stuff for the film, too.”

Out of all the books on the Grateful Dead, few cut close to the bone like Parish’s book — it goes deep and gets personal. He not only knows where the skeletons are, but where the bodies are buried. That happens after 35 years hauling gear for Jerry Garcia and the band. He’s seen a lot — maybe too much. So, it’s a miracle that he remembers enough to get it down in ink, let alone bring it to the screen. “Jerry was just such an amazing guy,” Parish says. “We hung out together, played together and partied together.”

“I thought it was a great story crewing for the grateful Dead,” Parish says. “I realize now we broke all all the rules. There were no PAs. We went all around around the country dealing with the unions. All they knew was Broadway. We were long hairs and different from them. But Jerry had a huge respect for the working man.” But Parish held his own. “Fuck, I’m a pretty big fella.”

As pitched, the film concentrates on the band’s early years and arcs over a decade.”It was a great time for the band and the country,” Emery says. “It goes from 1967, when Steve signed on with the band, and runs through the next ten years. It has all the pain, love, and the brotherhood. I don’t want to get into the heroin problems and darker responsibilities that happened later.”

As Parish puts it, life with the Dead was tender and heart-felt. “Garcia was a brother to me,” he says. “And I took my job as a sacred task.” One evening, Parish got word his wife and daughter died in a car wreck. “I was out of control, It was just an incredible world. We always had a connection with death, and it made you tougher. The band literally moved in with me. They took care of me. But it was dangerous.”

Humor, no doubt, will play a part. “I can tell you without reading it that it might make a funny movie,” says Grateful Dead lyricist John Perry Barlow.

Garcia, Parish says, would likely approve of the flick. “Jerry always talked about movie making,” he says. “We always talked about doing projects. Jerry was really into movies. He loved films, old ones, strange ones.”

“Bob and I are waiting,” Parish says about studio negotiations. “It’s like standing on ice blocks.”

Related Stories:

Still Truckin’: Behind the Grateful Dead’s Reunion For Obama

The Dead Reunite For Obama at Scorching Penn State Gig

The Dead Rock the Pyramids

Fortieth Anniversary: How the Grateful Dead Came to Life


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Comments

greg | 11/5/2008, 8:34 am EST

Too bad Dustin Hoffman is too old to play the young Jerry, could have been one of the all-time great performances

Elvis knows best... | 11/5/2008, 5:09 pm EST

What did one hippy say to the other hippie, at the Dead show, when the drugs wore off?

THIS BAND SUCKS!

chris | 11/5/2008, 9:35 pm EST

elvis is an abba fan obviously

davidscott | 11/6/2008, 2:27 am EST

“What’s the difference between a duck?

Both legs just the same”

~joke as told by Grateful Dead at one of a series of Hypnocratic Conferences

As for Parish, I shall remember 12/28

Townes | 11/6/2008, 3:34 am EST

dancing queen!

Dude | 11/6/2008, 2:00 pm EST

Elvis…wow. Those 40 years don’t speak for themselves? Have you even listened to them or are you too busy busting out ABBA??

Elvis sucks | 11/6/2008, 2:01 pm EST

Elvis would have dug the Dead alomst as much as you dig ball gags.

troutisdead | 11/6/2008, 2:24 pm EST

please not oliver stone!!!

ryan | 11/6/2008, 8:01 pm EST

the dead are awesome, fuck you all

see you next tuesday | 11/6/2008, 8:05 pm EST

i remember the band skull f-ing elvis

Straw | 11/6/2008, 11:46 pm EST

Jack Black would be perfect for Jerry. Topher Grace, the guy who played Eric Forman on the 70’s Show, for Bob Weir.

neal | 11/7/2008, 4:19 am EST

Ashton Kutcher looks kinda Bob Weir ish

Ryan Adams as Phil Lesh

Jeneanne Garafalo as Mountain Girl

Phillip Seymour Hoffman as Kesey

Jack White as Jerry (early period)

Benecio Del Torro as Jerry
(Jerry 82-95 when at times
quite banged up and grumpy)

My Morning Jacket singer
Jim James as David Crosby
who was big in thier scene early on

Jack Nicholson as Bill Kreutzman (late period)

Wynona Ryder as Grace Slick

Benecio Del Torro as Bill Graham also possible

Benecio Del Torrio as Steve Parrish too

haaaa!!!
this is fun

McCauley Caulkin as young Phil

Harrison Ford as CURRENT WEIR.
babahhhaaaaaa!! just add teeeerrrrrrrrible mustache

haaaaaaa

Jules | 11/7/2008, 12:49 pm EST

There has to be a way to figure Crispin Glover into this film…

Joe bag o donuts | 11/7/2008, 2:23 pm EST

El put the pot on

see you next tuesday | 11/7/2008, 3:23 pm EST

Elvis found the dead, at the base of a toilets sit………….

Freddy Krueger | 11/8/2008, 4:55 pm EST

I think Tobey Maguire can pull off a young Jerry…..

deadie freddi | 11/8/2008, 7:49 pm EST

How about Paul Giamatti (in good makeup and wig) as Jerry in his mid to late 30’s to mid to late 40’s??

sam duchamp | 11/8/2008, 8:33 pm EST

the grateful dead were “fun” up to 1968, then they became a better business bureaucracy, though an exemplary one. i love ‘em as great souls, but can’t stand the music. the first hank harrison book about them is a counterculture masterpiece. love to all!

Gabi Hoopasteak | 11/10/2008, 2:49 am EST

I think folks who enjoy the Dead are brain-dead from eating too much acid and rolling in their own poop at the shows. At their best, they were an uncoherent bar-band.

sal | 11/14/2008, 5:31 pm EST

the dead are awesome

joe | 11/15/2008, 12:16 am EST

I would love to meet the DODO that put down the comment below:

Gabi Hoopasteak | 11/10/2008, 2:49 am EST

I think folks who enjoy the Dead are brain-dead from eating too much acid and rolling in their own poop at the shows. At their best, they were an uncoherent bar-band.

It is amazing how an ignorant idiot can send in comments like this one. Obviously has no idea about music.

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