RIP Kim Peek

sowstochd

Active member


http://http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article6964730.ece



BEGIN: Module - Main Article

Check the Article Type and display accordingly

Print Author image associated with the Author

Print the body of the article

div#related-article-links p a, div#related-article-links p a:visited {

color:#06c;

}



Pagination

Display article with page breaks

Kim Peek, the autistic savant who inspired the Oscar-winning film Rain Man,

has died, aged 58.

Mr Peek's father Fran said that his son had suffered a major heart attack on

Saturday and was pronounced dead at a hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah, the

town where he had spent his life.

Mr Peek was probably the world's most famous savant. Described as a

confounding mixture of disability and genius, his astonishing ability to

retain knowledge inspired the writer Barry Morrow to write Rain Man,

the 1988 movie starring Dustin Hoffman that won four Academy Awards.

Born in 1951 in Salt Lake city, Mr Peek was diagnosed as severely mentally

retarded and his parents were advised to place him in an institution and

forget about him. Thirty years later, he was classified as a "mega-savant,"

a genius in about 15 different subjects, from history and literature and

geography to numbers, sports, music and dates.

#include file="m63-article-related-attachements.html"

BEGIN: Module - M63 - Article Related Attachements

function slideshowPopUp(url)

{

pictureGalleryPopupPic(url);

return false;

}

BEGIN: Comment Teaser Module

END: Comment Teaser Module

BEGIN: Module - M63 - Article Related Package

END: Module - M63 - Article Related Package

[*]

[/list]

BEGIN: POLL

This block will execute if an article of type Poll is attached

END : POLL

BEGIN: DEBATE

END: DEBATE

END: Module - M63 - Article Related Attachements

Call Wide Article Attachment Module

TEMPLATE:call file="wideArticleAttachment.jsp" /

By the time of his death he had committed more than 9,000 books to memory and

Nasa made him the subject of MRI-based research, hoping that technology used

to study the effects of space travel on the brain would help explain his

mental capabilities.

He would read eight books a day, taking just ten seconds to read a page. He

could read two pages simultaneously, his left eye reading the left page and

his right eye reading the right page.

But throughout his life he still needed 24-hour care. Despite his great mental

agility, his motor skills remained limited; he could not perform simple

tasks such as dressing himself or combing his hair.

His father Fran became his sole carer after Mr Peek's parent divorced in 1975.

Fran Peek said that care of his son was a 30-hour-day, 10-day-a-week job but

he did it devotedly, encouraging Kim to make the most of his abilities. But

Mr Peek remained deeply introverted. It was not until he met Dustin Hoffman,

when the Hollywood star was researching his role in Rain Man, that he

could look into another person's face. He was 37 at the time.

Dustin Hoffman advised Fran Peek not to hide his son away. Mr Peek said of

that meeting: "Dustin Hoffman said to me, you have to promise me one

thing about this guy, share him with the world. And pretty soon it got so

that nobody was a stranger to him, they were people, and so was he".

He took Hoffman's advice, putting

his son on stage in front of thousands of people for whom he answered,

almost always correctly, the most obscure questions they could test him

with.

He thrived on his new found fame. Mr Morrow said of him: "I love the way

he's flowered, it belies the myth that people don't change, especially

people with developmental disabilities."

Four years before his death, Mr Peek said: "I wasn't supposed to make it

past about 14, and yet here I am at 54, a celebrity!

 
flash_video_placeholder.png
its ridiculous
 
Back
Top