I don’t know why, but I’m fascinated when “real” people show up in post-apocalyptic fiction. The Postman was a terrible, terrible movie, but I thought it was fantastic when Tom Petty showed up basically playing himself.
I got a similar smile on my face when standins for Howard Dean and Colin Powell show up in World War Z and standins for Ann Coulter and Bill Maher decide to fuck each other’s brains out in the same book as the zombies get closer. World War Z was of course great.
I’ve thinking about it again recently as I wait for The Sunrise Lands to show up at my library. I was always disappointed that in the entire Dies the Fire series we never learn what happened to Bruce Campbell (who has a ranch in Oregon). Sure, Prince William shows up (as well Pope Ratzinger), but I wanted to see Campbell kick some ass as a member of the Bearkillers (even for just a page).
So what other real life people have faced off against zombies, demons, a superflu or some other world-changing disaster?
Mick Fleetwood plays himself in The Running Man, though that’s more dystopic than post-apocalyptic. Oh, and some other musician was in a Kevin Costner film of some kind.
I can check too, but my old roommate has my copy of The Postman, and I owe him $100. And I stole his girlfriend. So the meeting will be awkward at best. But I’ll do my best as a Doper to determine if Tom Bosley was in The Postman.
It’s Apocalyptic, rather than Post-Apocalyptic fiction, and it’s literally about the Apocalypse. I’ve written about it on the Board before
Robert Sheckley edited a collection of —I love this – “UPBEAT End-of-the-World Stories” entitled After the Fall. They’re all great, but my favorite of Philip Jose Farmer’s effort. I forget its name, but it’s FULL of celebrities.
Gid decides to Subcontract out the Apocalypse, rather than do it himself. He gets Cecil B. deMille to produce and direct. deMille gets a host of celebrities (I forget who he gets to play the Whore of Babylon, but he attends to the casting couch duties himself).
My favorite part is that he gets Harlan Ellison to do the screenplay, because he’s the only writer who’s not afraid to argue with God.
Eventually even God gets pissed off with Harlan, and has him replaced by “a hack from Peoria”.
It had to have been Postman since Water World was set several centuries after the apocalypse, any celebrities would’ve been long dead by then. “Old Saint Joe” was mentioned.
In the alien invasion novel Footfall, which may or may not qualify as post-apocalyptic, there’s a advisory Threat Team composed of thinly disguised actual science fiction writers. The names are changed, but the fans could tell who they were.