Rick Cluchey

Douglas Charles Cluchey (December 5, 1933 – December 28, 2015) was an American actor. He was friends with Samuel Beckett.

Life

Douglas Charles "Rick" Cluchey was born in Chicago in 1930. He served in the Army. In 1954 Cluchey was convicted for carjacking and armed robbery of a hotel courier for which he was sentenced to life in prison without parole.[1] In 1957, after a touring theatre company performed Waiting for Godot for the prisoners at San Quentin, he formed his own theatre company within the prison, the Drama Workshop, and began writing and acting in plays.[1][2] For his good behavior and service to the prison community, Cluchey's sentence was commuted by Pat Brown and he was released in December 1966.[2] Following his release, he received several offers of work from theatre and film companies.[2] In a Berlin production, he was assistant director to Samuel Beckett.[1] He was featured in the premiere of “Krapp’s Last Tape.” He died in Santa Monica.[3]

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References

  1. "Rick Cluchey, ex-con, playwright and Samuel Beckett collaborator, dies at 82". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2016-01-11.
  2. Bladen, Barbara (13 December 1966). "'The Last Mile' from San Quentin". The San Mateo Times.
  3. Bruce Weberjan (January 9, 2016). "Rick Cluchey Dies at 82; Prison Theater Was His Redemption". The New York Times.

ABSURB REDEMPTION published by James McNiff on September 1 as KDP Select and sold on Amazon. "Some condemned men have entered San Quentin with a sentence of life imprisonment without parole. Some of these same men were freed before their due date because of their exceptional behavior while incarcerated. One such person was Rick Cluchey. The prison system needed stories of redemption to promote and support their rehabilitation programs and Rick was their poster child. His life during and after San Quentin was revealed in the movie "Weeds" which had actor Nick Nolte portraying Rick. However some of these same men never had a chance to achieve redemption. This story is about one such man and his relationship with Rick Cluchey. It is told by weaving newspaper articles, ancestry research and the memoirs of some well known celebrities in a way that each persons history becomes observable."



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