Read The Mammoth Book of Hollywood Scandals Online
Authors: Michelle Morgan
Panicking, Ginger called for Presley’s road manager, Joe Esposito, to come to the room, which he did with several other staff members. From there an ambulance was called and the singer was taken to Baptist Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 3.30 p.m. An autopsy was performed and the official cause of death was given as “cardiac arrhythmia” – a severely irregular heartbeat – as well as a constriction in one of his arteries.
But what about the prescription drugs? Were they a contributing factor as to why the King of Rock and Roll’s life slipped away that day? Some people seem to think so, though initial post-mortem examinations supposedly did not show any signs of drug abuse. This in itself is extremely odd, considering Elvis had been a long-term user of prescription medications and had been known to throw terrific tantrums if his staff tried to persuade him not to take them.
Elvis Presley’s death continues to be a mystery and, as doctors said at the time, “the precise cause of death may never be discovered”, though this has not stopped people discussing the matter from 1977 to the present day. Some people – including Elvis’s stepbrother David Stanley – have put forward the idea that the star took his own life through a giant drug overdose, which was kept quiet from the media in favour of pushing forward the idea that he had died of a heart attack. The story behind the deliberate overdose is that Elvis had no intention of going on tour and had saved up his nightly drug dose until the morning he was supposed to leave, took the medication and passed away on the bathroom floor.
Other people dismiss this idea and claim that, as reported, Elvis’s heart simply gave up when he was trying to gain some relief on the toilet. Of course, there are also those who believe that he did not die at all; that the whole thing was an elaborate hoax designed to put to rest Elvis the performer, and allow Elvis the man to live out the rest of his life in peace. This seems an elaborate story but a quick look on the internet gives an often entertaining insight into stories involving a wax body in the casket; supposed photographs of the King sitting in Graceland months after his death; and even a clip of an extra in the movie
Home Alone
who has been humorously labelled as an incognito Elvis enjoying a walk-on part.
The stories of whether or not the singer died of a heart attack, drug overdose or indeed if he is dead at all are countless, but in 1977 that was all irrelevant as fans from around the world wept and newspapers were full of headlines relating to his demise. The fans that lived in Memphis crowded round the gates of Graceland, and when Elvis Presley’s body was returned from the hospital to his cherished home, the sound of crying could be heard all around. That evening cars came past the home with Elvis’s music blaring from the speakers, while outside around 300 fans – old and young – spoke to each other about their love for the King of Rock and Roll, sharing their memories and stories of times gone by. But while they were upset, the real mourners were obviously Elvis’s family, and in particular his young daughter Lisa Marie and ex-wife Priscilla, who had stayed friends with the singer until the end. Both took the death extremely hard, while Elvis’s father Vernon was so upset he had to be placed under sedation.
Then devastation came just hours before the funeral, when a car seemed to lose control and headed towards a group of fans waiting outside Graceland. Most of the crowd managed to get away, but when the car swerved again it hit three teenagers, killing Juanita Joanne Johnson and Alice Marie Hovatar instantly and critically injuring seventeen-year-old Tammy Baiter. Unbelievably, the car then careered off down the road, while a quick-thinking policeman managed to jump into his car and give chase, catching up and detaining the young man shortly afterwards.
Still, this awful incident did not stop thousands of spectators from lining the route to the church where the funeral was to take place, and by the time it was in full swing, women of all ages were seen fainting and shouting for the King. “God took my Elvis,” cried one fan, while many more pulled at their hair, rocked back and forth, and threw flowers on to the hearse as it passed slowly by.
Elvis’s copper coffin was taken to the family crypt, where his mother had been entombed some years before. However, while his family now hoped he could rest in peace with his loved ones, it was not to be, as shortly afterwards four men tried to break into the mausoleum in order – it is believed – to steal Presley’s body. Thankfully the police had received a mysterious tip-off days before the event and immediately assigned several officers to the crypt, where they were able to give chase to the men the moment they were spotted. The incident was thwarted but it was more than enough to persuade the family that Elvis’s body would not be safe lying in the public cemetery.
Arrangements were made and the bodies of both Presley and his mother were moved to Graceland, where they now lie in the Meditation Garden, a quiet spot favoured by Elvis during his lifetime as a place of reflection and peaceful retreat. It seems an appropriate place to be buried for the man who was once King of Rock and Roll and yet had a beautiful, quiet soul – who craved spirituality and encouraged others to do the same. His life may have been full of drama and personal upheaval, but in death it would seem that Elvis Presley has finally found the peace that he so desperately wanted, but perhaps was never able to find.
Much has been said about the rivalry between movie superstars Joan Crawford and Bette Davis during the making of their film
Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?
Such is the extent of the public’s interest in their relationship that whole books have been written about their problems, and a successful play based on the feud toured the United Kingdom in 2012. For their part, neither Bette nor Joan made any secret of their dislike for one another and made more than the odd snide comment over the years that followed the making of the film.
In the early 1970s, Bette was interviewed by Dick Cavett and told a story of being stung by a wasp during a trip to Scotland. Davis had suffered an allergic reaction after finding the insect in the sleeve of her dressing gown and jokingly Cavett asked if she thought Joan Crawford could have put it there. “No, that wouldn’t be something she would do,” replied Bette, and then a twinkle appeared in her eye. “Not a wasp,” she continued. “A gun maybe, but not a wasp!” The audience laughed wildly, but jokes aside, both Joan and Bette most certainly did not appreciate each other and felt they had nothing whatsoever in common.
Unfortunately, it would later become apparent that they had at least one thing in common – daughters who felt the need to air their grievances with their mothers in the shape of a kiss-and-tell book. The first, a scathing account entitled
Mommie Dearest
, was published in 1978 and written by Crawford’s daughter, Christina, who had been adopted by the divorced, single woman in 1940. The book was a biting – and often frightening – account of her life with Joan, and included stories of violent rages, abuse, humiliation and despair raged against not only Christina, but her adopted brother Christopher, too. The book told how the child was chastised for using wire hangers instead of padded ones; was spanked with a hairbrush so violently that it broke in half; and witnessed her brother being strapped to the bed in an effort to prevent him from sleepwalking.
Even Christmas – a time centred on loving and giving – was just another excuse for cruelty, according to the book, when Christina would be photographed surrounded by Christmas presents, only to find all but one of them promptly rewrapped and given away the moment the cameras were turned off. As if that wasn’t enough, Christina says she was then forced to write thank you cards for all the presents she had been unable to keep, which could take days due to her mother’s need for complete perfection in tone and grammar.
The childhood described by Christina was terrifying in every sense of the word and included being forced to eat portions of raw meat for dinner, which the child understandably hated. However, if she refused to swallow it, the meat would be wrapped up by her mother and kept for breakfast the next day. If that was pushed away also, out it would come for lunch until finally the child gave in and ate the putrid meal.
In the book, Christina also talked about the boyfriends her mother took over the years – all called “Uncle” by the child. From the age of nine she was mixing the gentlemen drinks, while her mother remained upstairs, readying herself for the evening ahead. Unfortunately, if the book is to be believed, while Crawford’s look, style and appearance meant a lot to her, she didn’t seem to care much about her daughter’s clothes, as demonstrated by one particular episode.
The story went that during a childish adventure, a young Christina stripped some wallpaper from her bedroom wall, but on realizing the severity of what she had done, tried to paste it back on, which just caused even more destruction. Unfortunately, the patch was discovered by a furious Crawford, who took her revenge by heading straight to Christina’s wardrobe, cutting her favourite yellow dress to shreds and forcing her to wear it for a week. If anyone asked why, she would have to tell them that it was because “I don’t like pretty things.”
After the abusive childhood described by Christina, she was shocked to discover that Crawford’s last swipe was to write both her and her brother Christopher out of her will, “for reasons which are well known to them”. Although they later successfully contested it, perhaps it was this final act that prompted Christina to write the book. However, while it may have brought her a sense of relief to get the story off her chest, with it came a great deal of letters and criticism from Joan’s fans, who refused to believe that the star could have been such an abusive person. Christina was perhaps prepared for such a backlash, but thankfully for her, along with the hate mail came dozens of other letters from people who had suffered similar childhoods, and for those people at least, the book seemed to have helped them deal with their own abusive past.
Such a subject was always going to elicit discussion and outrage, and it is interesting to note that Christina’s younger sisters, twins Cathy and Cindy, are both said to deny the claims against their mother, saying that she was firm, yes, but also loving and never abusive towards either of them. Her grandchildren (the twins’ children) agree, describing her as a normal grandmother who would babysit and make lunch for them. However, as Christina has publicly stated, there was an eight-year age gap between the twins and herself, which made it impossible for them to have seen anything of her own younger years before she went to boarding school at the age of ten. “[Cathy] couldn’t have known about my or Chris’s experience. She wasn’t there – she wasn’t even born when I was adopted,” she told the
Guardian
in 2008.
As well as the twins’ denials, several friends of Joan Crawford (including first husband Douglas Fairbanks Jr) also came forward to say that they had been unaware of any abuse, but on the flip-side came claims by former staff members, who said that they themselves had witnessed wrongdoings in the Crawford household, though no one was apparently brave enough to say anything about it at the time. Along with those accounts came several similar ones from unnamed “friends” who claimed to have witnessed the cruelty at first hand, though once again they did not raise the subject with Crawford, claiming it would have been futile and could have resulted in the abuse becoming even more intense.
Crawford’s son Christopher gave his own take on the situation in October 1978, during an interview with the
Los Angeles Times
. In the short feature he described how his adopted mother had once held his hand in the fireplace when she discovered he had been playing with matches, and revealed that he had been so unhappy that he had even run away from home on more than one occasion.
As if that was not bad enough, Christopher is reported to have said that he was sure Joan had never actually loved him, and that when he became a father, she held her granddaughter for just a few seconds before harshly handing her back. Then later, when his youngest daughter was born, the little girl needed urgent medical treatment for which he could not afford to pay. Apparently, Christopher phoned his mother for help, and during the call she told him that his daughter was not her granddaughter because “You were adopted.” If this was indeed a true story, it is no wonder then that this was the end of any “relationship” Christopher ever had with Joan Crawford.
While some would argue that the validity of Christina Crawford’s book cannot be 100 per cent confirmed, it also cannot be denied that Joan Crawford was a volatile woman who seemed to enjoy confrontation. Her public spats with Bette Davis were legendary, of course, but it did not stop there and she would often take swipes at other younger actresses such as Marilyn Monroe, for whom she seemed to have a particular distaste. But while there is every chance that the stories about Christina’s childhood really could have happened, it is interesting to note that Crawford’s many fans are still as adamant as ever that the woman they continue to adore was not the one portrayed in the book.
Of course by the time
Mommy Dearest
was published, the subject of the book was no longer living, which at least meant that Joan Crawford would not be personally affected by it. However, the next tell-all book came as a deep shock, particularly as the parent in question was Bette Davis, and she was still very much alive.
In 1985, while the star of
Dark Victory
and
All About Eve
was battling numerous health problems including recovering from a stroke, she was shocked to discover that her daughter, B. D. Hyman, had published a book about their fraught relationship. Many people assumed straight away that it would be written in the same tone as
Mommie Dearest
, but they were mistaken. While Christina Crawford’s book was full of tales of childhood physical abuse, Hyman’s volume,
My Mother’s Keeper
, did not accuse Bette of being in any way an abuser. Instead, it blamed her for trying to control her adult daughter’s life to such a degree that it was almost unbearable.