COVER STORY
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Neoenthe
Bill Fassett, far right, and visi-
tors folk dance on the chess-
board terrace at Nepenthe in
1964, during the filming of 'The 00000
Sandpiper' starring EUzabeth
Taylor and Richard Burton
Bill Fassett on Henry Miller, sex, wives and audiotape
Founder and owner of Big Sur's romantic Nepenthe restaurant,
Bill Fassett died in May at the age of 80. His death
prompted Carmel Valley writer Elayne Wareing Fitzpatrick
to compile a few of Fassett's memories based on an
interview taped in 1980 and excerpted from her recent
work, "Henry's Book: Intimate Remembrances of Henry
Miller's Big Sur Years."
Lolly and Bill Fassett bought a
Big Sur log cabin from Orson
Welles and Rita Hayworth and
built a restaurant, Nepenthe,
alongside it
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.
BY ELAYNE WAREING FITZPATRICK
elephant of American literature,
Big Sur in 1944, Bill Fassett was
HenryMiller,cametolivein
hen that insightful rogue
editing a magazine in Catmel
called What's Doing on The Monterey Peninsula.
. th.2.7
However, discovery of a unique log house for sale
in Big Sur - a house with a breathtaking view
perched high on a cliff some thousand feet above the
Pacific - changed his profession and his life.
This was the same log house - owned by actor
Orson Welles and his wife, actress Rita Hayworth -
that had been Miller's first lodging in the Sur
country. Now the Welleses were divorcing and
sought a quick sale.
The bre:,kup of their marriage, precipitated by
Miss Hayworth's interest in Prince Ali Khan, proved
to be a boon for Bill and his wife, Lolly. Desire for a
quick sale meant a bargain price.
Deal closed, the Fassetts and their five children
moved from Carmel to Big Sur in 1947. Although
World War II was still deterring travel, Fassett
believed Big Sur would become popular with tourists
when coastal blackouts ended.
He wanted to be ready. The family would live in
the house and, eventually, open up a stand so they
could make a living selling whatever the new tourism
might require.
The county planning commission said no to a
tourist stand. Too messy. But they would give
permission for a restaurant. Why not? After all,
hadn't the Fassetts' new home already taken on
characteristics of an inn?
When old friends from Carmel came down the
coast, weren't they always fed and, frequently, put
up overnight? Bill and Lolly reasoned that they
might as well capitalize on what they were already
doing.
With the help of a student of Frank Lloyd Wright,
they designed an addition to the house, opened a
restaurant in 1949 and called it Nepenthe, meaning
no sorrow. As the name implied, it would be a place
where visitors could forget their troubles.
Predictably, when the Fassetts began to charge for
the food they once gave away, they lost a few
friends. But they made new ones: Among them,
Henry Miller and a host of other notables of varying
degrees of sophistication, from artists and celebrities
to beats and hippies.
(Continued on page 15)
Henry Miller, Nepenthe's most frequent guest in the late 1940s and '5Os
12 Alta Vista Magazine, Sunday, Aug. 2, 1992 Alta Vista Magazine, Sunday, Aug. 2, 1992
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, OCR Text: COVER STORY
€t
t I
t
*t
41
IL
F
41
1 1-111
1IF'*11i
Ari
..1.1
-24'Lrtle
t
The
Soirits
Neoenthe
Bill Fassett, far right, and visi-
tors folk dance on the chess-
board terrace at Nepenthe in
1964, during the filming of 'The 00000
Sandpiper' starring EUzabeth
Taylor and Richard Burton
Bill Fassett on Henry Miller, sex, wives and audiotape
Founder and owner of Big Sur's romantic Nepenthe restaurant,
Bill Fassett died in May at the age of 80. His death
prompted Carmel Valley writer Elayne Wareing Fitzpatrick
to compile a few of Fassett's memories based on an
interview taped in 1980 and excerpted from her recent
work, "Henry's Book: Intimate Remembrances of Henry
Miller's Big Sur Years."
Lolly and Bill Fassett bought a
Big Sur log cabin from Orson
Welles and Rita Hayworth and
built a restaurant, Nepenthe,
alongside it
*-r. -
r
4t A
.
BY ELAYNE WAREING FITZPATRICK
elephant of American literature,
Big Sur in 1944, Bill Fassett was
HenryMiller,cametolivein
hen that insightful rogue
editing a magazine in Catmel
called What's Doing on The Monterey Peninsula.
. th.2.7
However, discovery of a unique log house for sale
in Big Sur - a house with a breathtaking view
perched high on a cliff some thousand feet above the
Pacific - changed his profession and his life.
This was the same log house - owned by actor
Orson Welles and his wife, actress Rita Hayworth -
that had been Miller's first lodging in the Sur
country. Now the Welleses were divorcing and
sought a quick sale.
The bre:,kup of their marriage, precipitated by
Miss Hayworth's interest in Prince Ali Khan, proved
to be a boon for Bill and his wife, Lolly. Desire for a
quick sale meant a bargain price.
Deal closed, the Fassetts and their five children
moved from Carmel to Big Sur in 1947. Although
World War II was still deterring travel, Fassett
believed Big Sur would become popular with tourists
when coastal blackouts ended.
He wanted to be ready. The family would live in
the house and, eventually, open up a stand so they
could make a living selling whatever the new tourism
might require.
The county planning commission said no to a
tourist stand. Too messy. But they would give
permission for a restaurant. Why not? After all,
hadn't the Fassetts' new home already taken on
characteristics of an inn?
When old friends from Carmel came down the
coast, weren't they always fed and, frequently, put
up overnight? Bill and Lolly reasoned that they
might as well capitalize on what they were already
doing.
With the help of a student of Frank Lloyd Wright,
they designed an addition to the house, opened a
restaurant in 1949 and called it Nepenthe, meaning
no sorrow. As the name implied, it would be a place
where visitors could forget their troubles.
Predictably, when the Fassetts began to charge for
the food they once gave away, they lost a few
friends. But they made new ones: Among them,
Henry Miller and a host of other notables of varying
degrees of sophistication, from artists and celebrities
to beats and hippies.
(Continued on page 15)
Henry Miller, Nepenthe's most frequent guest in the late 1940s and '5Os
12 Alta Vista Magazine, Sunday, Aug. 2, 1992 Alta Vista Magazine, Sunday, Aug. 2, 1992
-
-
of
.
der
f
./
r
, Heritage Society of Pacific Grove,Historical Collections,Names of People about town,E through F File names,L through M File Names,Miller,MILLER_006.pdf,MILLER_006.pdf 1 Page 1, Tags: MILLER_006.PDF, MILLER_006.pdf 1 Page 1