Anonymous wrote:Not exactly Hollywood Golden Age, but....
Brittany Murphy and her husband. That was a very strange turn of events.
Anonymous wrote:If these things intrigue you, look into...
George Reeves' death:
https://www.amazon.com/Speeding-Bullet-Bizarre-George-Reeves/dp/0961959673
Bob Crane's seedy life and death:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2017/03/13/new-book-actor-bob-cranes-bloody-murder/99145724/
And death on a yacht involving William Randolph Hearst:
https://www.thevintagenews.com/2017/11/28/thomas-inces-death/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't have specific book suggestions.
Hedy Lamarr was interesting. In addition to being an actress, she was also a brilliant inventor.
For dramatic deaths, you might check out Natalie Wood, James Dean, Carole Lombard, Jayne Mansfield, and musician Glenn Miller.
Oh yes, I've wasted hours down the rabbit hole of Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner.
--OP
+1
NP here. It seems she was so beautiful and innocent, and he must hav been a tyrant. Both he and Walken refuse to talk about it now. Go figure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't have specific book suggestions.
Hedy Lamarr was interesting. In addition to being an actress, she was also a brilliant inventor.
For dramatic deaths, you might check out Natalie Wood, James Dean, Carole Lombard, Jayne Mansfield, and musician Glenn Miller.
Oh yes, I've wasted hours down the rabbit hole of Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner.
--OP
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone else go through periods of getting sucked into this stuff?
Halloween just passed and I've been thinking and reading a lot about River Phoenix lately, how young he was when he died, wondering if he'd be an acclaimed actor today or end up crazy a la Johnny Depp, or just totally unemployable like Corey Feldman. And Samantha Mathis (GF at the time he died and was there when he OD'd) just last month gave an interview saying she knew something was wrong that night and didn’t see anyone doing drugs (sure), but she knew he was high and "was in over her head."
I've recently become really interested in the MGM Golden Age, but it's all so damn sad. Anyone have any good book suggestions about that era?
So this post doesn't have much direction, I guess, but it's Friday afternoon and my mind is wandering...
Anonymous wrote:Don't have specific book suggestions.
Hedy Lamarr was interesting. In addition to being an actress, she was also a brilliant inventor.
For dramatic deaths, you might check out Natalie Wood, James Dean, Carole Lombard, Jayne Mansfield, and musician Glenn Miller.
Anonymous wrote:Karina Longworth has a new book coming out on Tuesday called Seduction: Sex, Lies, and Stardom in Howard Hughes's Hollywood. You'd also probably like her podcast You Must Remember This.
I believe Samantha Mathis about not seeing drug use the night that River died. I don't think heroin users are usually doing it to "party," they are doing it because they are addicted and have to use to function. He could have easily been using alone. Philip Seymour Hoffman and Cory Monteith both died alone.