Alice Brock, Restaurant Owner Made Famous by a Song, Dies at 83

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Music|Alice Brock, Restaurant Owner Made Famous by a Song, Dies at 83

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/22/arts/music/alice-brock-dead.html

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Arlo Guthrie’s antiwar staple “Alice’s Restaurant” was inspired by a Thanksgiving Day visit to her diner in western Massachusetts.

Alice Brock, a woman with long reddish-brown hair, stands in a room in front of a couch with colorful pillows on it and glances out a window.
Alice Brock in 2012. Arlo Guthrie’s song “Alice’s Restaurant” made her famous, even though by the time it appeared she had shut down her restaurant. Credit...Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe, via Getty Images

Clay Risen

Published Nov. 22, 2024Updated Nov. 23, 2024, 9:05 a.m. ET

Alice Brock, whose eatery in western Massachusetts was immortalized as the place where “you can get anything you want” in Arlo Guthrie’s 1967 antiwar song “Alice’s Restaurant,” died on Thursday in Wellfleet, Mass. — just a week before Thanksgiving, the holiday during which the rambling story at the center of the song takes place. She was 83.

Viki Merrick, her caregiver, said she died in a hospice from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Ever since Mr. Guthrie released the song, officially called “Alice’s Restaurant Massacree,” in 1967, it has been a staple of classic-rock stations every late November, not to mention car trip singalongs on the way to visit family for Thanksgiving dinner.

Ms. Brock’s restaurant, the Back Room, does not feature much in the song itself. Over the course of a little more than 18 minutes, Mr. Guthrie — doing more talking than singing — recounts a visit that he and a friend, Rick Robbins, paid to Ms. Brock and her husband, Ray Brock, for Thanksgiving dinner.

Image

Ms. Brock with Mr. Guthrie in 1977. They met when she was a school librarian and he was a student.Credit...Peter Simon Collection, Robert S. Cox Special Collections and University Archives Research Center, UMass Amherst Libraries

A shaggy-dog story ensues: Mr. Guthrie and Mr. Robbins take some trash to the city dump, but, finding it closed, leave it in a ravine instead. The next morning the police arrest them for littering, and Ms. Brock has to bail them out.

That night she cooks them all a big meal, and the following day they appear in court, where the judge fines them $50. Later, Mr. Guthrie is ordered to an Army induction center, where he is able to avoid the draft because of his criminal record.


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