Dark History - 27: The Dark Side to the Golden Age of Hollywood
Episode Date: January 12, 2022Hollywood, the place where dreams come true. But in reality, Hollywood, and especially during the “Golden Age” was a place of nightmares. Horrible treatment of actors and actresses, drug addicti...on, cover ups, forced abortions, eating disorders, death. You name it, and it was happening behind the scenes. Today we dive into the dark side of the glitz and glam of the movie industry and talk about it’s dark and seedy past. Episode Advertisers Include: Best Fiends, Liquid IV, Stitch Fix US, and Zip Recruiter. Learn more during the podcast about special offers!
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Hi friends, how are you? I hope you're having a wonderful day today. My name is Bailey
Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to the Library of Dark History. We're in like books
of this house as a library, I don't know, but this is a safe space for all of the curious
cats out there who wonder like, hey, is history really as boring as it seemed in school? Oh, nay nay.
This is where we can learn together and talk about all the dark, mysterious, dramatic stories
our teachers never told us about.
So growing up, I don't know if you know this, but I was Judy Garland.
Like I was Judy Garland.
I don't know if you know that, but like I was Judy Garland.
And I was just Judy Judy Garland and Hi. I loved all the glitz
and glamour of that Hollywood golden era and then I want to look a little bit deeper of course
surprise surprise it has a dark and seedy past. Well there's a lot of nonsense going on. A lot of shenanigans were going down. Okay?
Unfortunately, it's still that way today.
Am I right?
Hollywood!
I know.
I know.
How many stereotypes come to mind?
There are the parties, there are the beautiful people,
all the glitter, the glam, and then there's the other stuff.
Super dark stuff, like studios covering up violent crimes.
Feeding kids' drugs to keep them awake longer.
Sexual assault, forced abortions, and secret murders that happened on set.
And of course, cover ups.
Basically, there's a lot more drama behind the scenes and all the scenes.
I know, they just turn the cameras around and...what a great show.
So let me open up my little dark history
book here to the Hollywood chapter.
Hmm.
I found it.
Okay friends, so how did we get here?
Well, we're gonna go all the way back to 1883
when a guy named Harvey Henry Wilcox
bought 150 acres of wide open, undeveloped land near Los Angeles.
And this happens to be the exact area we know today as Hollywood.
But Harvey wasn't interested in making movies, maybe because they also just didn't exist
yet.
But also, Harvey was a very religious man and thought this area would be perfect, well,
a perfect
little place to make a religious community.
Sounds like a cult leader if you ask me.
Oh my god, Holly what's the quote?
Oh, I just solved the mysteries.
Oh god.
Anyways, Harvey and his wife would farm apricots and figs and set up churches and help build
houses.
Now remember, these were like the prohibition times.
And Harvey and his wife, they really leaned into that.
I mean, this was just going to be a good little Christian community, you know?
Well, the farming thing didn't really work out for them, but people did start moving to
the area as the population of Los Angeles started to grow.
And in 1887, Harvey would officially register the town as Hollywood, California. A name his wife picked because she overheard someone say it on a train, and she was like,
hey, that's a great word.
I like how it sounds.
I'm taking it.
And over the next few years, the town would keep developing electricity, telephone service,
gas lines, and it started to look like a real city.
Meanwhile on the East Coast, that's where movies were being made.
And these pioneers of the movie industry
were looking for new ways to push themselves.
They wanted to make movies better,
developing new technology quicker and quicker.
But they ran into some problems.
For starters, the weather was really bad.
Plus, this movie's got bigger,
so did the size of the productions.
It was no longer just one guy filming one actor.
You needed a whole crew and a studio, and space to go along with it.
The other problem on the East Coast was our friend, remember him?
Shout out Tommy Edison, a.
Remember, he was all about like being the pioneer of the filmmaking industry, and was quick
to sue anyone who made any progress in his fields, his specialty.
Well these guys didn't want to get sued, so what's a filmmaker to do?
Well these guys used their knock-ins and they headed to Southern California.
Added bonus, if Tommy did find out you were making a movie and tried to slap you with
a lawsuit, you would be close enough to Mexico that you can make a run for the border.
So, Hollywood had the weather, the space, no Edison, and it was a largely undeveloped area
right next to both a beautiful beach and a desert that was perfect for filming westerns.
Yeah, which just so happened to be like the most popular genre of the time.
So now by 1910, the film industry had arrived in California in a very big way.
And with this brand new industry came a lot of workers, carpenters, electricians, cost
tumors, and other highly skilled workers were moving to Hollywood to help make movies.
You know?
So there was problems with the film industry from the very start. There
were a lot of people willing to sacrifice and do whatever it took to be a part of it.
And to make things worse, California was very undeveloped, and in a lot of ways it was
still like lawless, you know? It was literally the Wild West, and the industry moved out
there specifically to take advantage of those loose labor laws and create a society
that would feed the moving machine.
By the 1920s, most of the major studios that we know today, MGM, Warner Bros, Universal,
Paramount, they exploded onto the scene and they were all competing with one another
for that box office money.
So they came up with what they thought would be an effective method of getting people
to see their movies and not their competitors work.
They would cast recurring actors and actresses that everyone could recognize and phone
love within their films.
Almost as if it didn't matter what the movie was actually about, the performers would
keep audiences coming back.
They called these actors and actresses movie stars.
And now we're gonna pause for now. Along with movie stars came a rise in attention
and with attention comes publicity stunts. One of the first movie star publicity stunts
happened around 1910 and involved an actress named Florence Lawrence.
Yeah, that's a name. Florence Lawrence. Florence Lawrence.
Gah. Who was said to be the greatest moving picture actress in the world?
Oh yeah. But then out of nowhere, newspaper started reporting that she had died tragically in a street car accident.
But then the studio said before she died, Florence filmed one final movie.
So of course, everyone wanted to see this thing.
You know, like she died, we have to go support her and see her last movie.
Then, the head of the studio started taking out ads in the papers, claiming Florence was
actually still alive, and she was going to go to the premiere of the movie.
Wait, what? It didn't matter what was true and she was going to go to the premiere of the movie.
Wait, what?
It didn't matter what was true and what was false.
The public was freaking eating it up, okay?
And it worked.
I mean, they needed their Florence Lawrence fix.
So the studio head tells reporters to show up to the train station at a specific time and
have their cameras ready for the story of the century.
While reporters and hundreds of fans gathered
at the train station clamoring to get the best view
of who may be arriving.
Now the train pulls in, the break screech to a halt.
The door is open and out walks, Florence, Lawrence.
Oh, she's alive, well and in the flesh.
You know what I'm saying?
People are basically just feinting and dying
and like they are pouncing on this poor woman.
She's back from the dead.
She's like, Jesus.
But not really because she wasn't down the first place.
They're like ripping buttons off her jacket.
They're just losing their goddamn minds.
Okay.
This is really one of the first times
we saw people treat an actress like a superstar.
So when the studio saw this reaction, they realized
they had the power to create a public figure who had major influence, and with major influence
comes box office draw. Which is like a fancy Hollywood way of saying they could get people to the
theaters and watch the movies and they can make money. Yay, money, it's always about money,
right? So talent didn't matter as
long as the public was eating up the stories, the studio created and we're giving them
all their money, okay? All the studios jumped on board and started creating stars of their
own because they saw how well this was working for them. So this works out well for the
studios because the movie going public just wants to know everything about their favorite
stars and the press is more than happy to feed them because they're using movie stars as cellular
products too, right? And in order to sell more and more papers, they start publishing some pretty
wild stories of their own. Juicy affairs, mariner cover-ups, wild drug parties, but the studios
didn't love these stories because they worked really hard to create and keep
squeaky clean images of their movie stars. You know something that people would want to be.
So when nasty rumors started to spread about these golden geese, they took it upon themselves to cover it up.
And then it all comes to a head in 1921 when a popular comedian and movie star named Roscoe Arbuckle is
arrested for rape and murder.
So Roscoe Arbuckle was born March 24th 1887 in Smith Center, Kansas.
Now Roscoe was a big baby when he was born literally like he weighed 13 pounds
when he was born so a big baby.
That's a big boy.
And this is important for two reasons.
Number one, it gave his mother chronic health problems that would kill her just 11 years
later.
And number two, it led to the creation of his nickname, Fadi Arbunkel, which was a nickname
he was most well known by.
Now Fadi over here was a singer and a dancer
who was discovered by a Hollywood bidwig
in the early 1900s.
He started appearing in silent comedies,
which is weird like silent comedies.
What do you think about it?
Like how?
I don't know.
Anyways, but the joke was usually about his weight,
and soon he became one of the most famous comedians
in America. In early
September of 1921 at the height of his fame, Fatti went to San Francisco to party
with a few buddies. So they're they're drinking, they're hanging out in some
like hotel when some girls came knocking on their door. Knock knock knock who's
there. We don't really know exactly what happened at this party but what we do
know is someone
named Virginia Rapese started feeling very sick.
Some sources say that she started screaming at the party, and when her friends asked her
like, what's wrong?
What's wrong?
She started yelling, he did it.
Others say that once she started feeling sick, she just went home and immediately hopped
into bed, and she just never got out.
Whatever the case was, a few days later she died.
And it was later determined she had been,
she had a ruptured bladder.
So a friend of hers went public and said that the reason
her bladder was ruptured was because she had been raped
to death by fatty arbuncle.
The press caught wind of what happened
and it quickly became the biggest story in the country.
Soon, rumors started circulating about how Fattie had been abusive to this woman,
slapping her around and forcing her to have sex with him.
Other stories said the reason she died was because Fattie was well fat and crushed her to death.
He went to trial a total of three times on three different sets of charges,
but he was never convicted. But the trial took so long that it didn't matter.
Fattie's image was completely destroyed. His films were banned and his career never recovered.
So the studios weren't so worried about Virginia. From their perspective, they had invested lots of time and money into making Fattie a star, and all of that was now lost.
The other studios took notice as well, so they realized how destructive and expensive a scandal like that would be for them too.
The studios decided to make sure that something like this would never happen again.
So enter to the scene, the Fixer. Now, Fixers came in two flavors.
They were either bodyguard types
or public relations hacks.
The studio hired them to investigate
any problems popping up with their stars
or even things that looks like they could be a problem.
Then they would fix them.
Yeah, fun fact, the word Fixer actually comes
from the word used to describe someone
who gets rid of bodies or cleans up evidence at crime scenes.
But first we're going to pause for an ad break. There are stars as people, but as little
money-making machines who have to present a perfect image to the public at all costs.
Now this would become especially bad when we see the suyos use their fixers and their
power to create and control their stars from a very young age.
Forced feeding them drugs to stay awake and drugs to fall asleep and working 18 hour
days before they're even 17 years old, basically if you wanted to be a star, your life was
no longer your own. You
see, actresses had it pretty much the worst. Okay, look, their hair was usually
dyed and cut instantly after they signed their contract. Then they were forced
to stay under a certain weight, and if they couldn't do it on their own, the
fixers would step in to keep food away from them. Slippin' it out, swiping
it out of their hand. Slappin' it, slappin' the food away, and instead they fed them things
like coffee and diet pills. So, that's nice. The actresses even had appearance reviews
with the studio heads, and even their names would be changed. You were just a blank slate,
baby. MGM once held a contest to have
the public vote on the stage name for a young actress named Lucille. And that's how Lucille
became Joan Crawford. Girl, yeah, we're talking about you. Fun fact, Joan always hated her
new name because it reminded her of crayfish.
Can I just say side note?
I just finished mommy Dearest not that long ago.
Ah, Joan, Joan, Joan, Joan.
Joan, not you girl.
Joan Crawford, she was something, wow.
Maybe another day.
Okay, but anyways, you should read that if you haven't.
And okay, look, it wasn't just superficial stuff.
The studios didn't let you have relationships with like your kids without their permission.
They called this a morality clause, which they could kind of use to apply to just about
anything.
The big problem with these morality clauses was that they gave studio heads the legal power
to basically say anything was in violation of it.
For example, let's say a female star got pregnant.
The studio could make her get an abortion
because it was a violation of her morality clause,
which many times was just a reflection
of the religious and social idea of the studio head
and the public at the time.
So the morality clause would end up feeling
like a prison sentence in a way. So the studios didn't care about what kind of effect this would have on the actor as a person,
and if they didn't cooperate with the studio, the studio would straight up ruin their lives.
One of the most disturbing examples of an actress who was wildly abused by the studio system
and never got any justice was Patricia Douglas. Okay, so Patricia, Patricia Patricia Douglas, she was born in 1917 in Kansas City,
and like many girls of the era, she was drawn to the glamour of Hollywood.
So she headed out west and she became a dancer and a background actor in movies.
Now she was only 16 years old in 1933
when she got her big break
and started appearing on screen in movies for MGM.
Now part of the whole deal that stars had in their contracts
with studios was that they were required
to go to parties to promote their brand.
So Patricia was contractually required to show up,
make nice, take some photos,
schmooge about, you know, normal Hollywood BS, no big deal.
Except MGM never told Patricia that this one party they sent her to
was a bachelor party for one of the studio employees.
And the female attendees were expected to have sexual relations with them in there.
This might be a good time to point out that Patricia was still a teenager at
the time, and so were many of the other girls at this party. Patricia wasn't a big enough star
that the studio wanted to protect her, but she was just famous enough that she would be enticing
to party goers. At the party, Patricia was raped. So, the fixers step in to do their thing,
cover up the incident and make it go away, including trying to force Patricia to keep quiet.
However, Patricia had been in Hollywood for a few years by this point and knew all about
these slight types of shenanigans that went down.
So she immediately went to the press and told them what happened.
Now unfortunately, for Patricia, the press reported on the event, but
instead of saying what really happened, they downplayed everything. The media once again,
uh-huh, am I right? Yeah, come on. Everything bad, everything bad. Yeah. Now, despite the
press hanging Patricia out to dry, behind the scenes the studio was in a huge panic. Louis Mayor, who was the head of MGM, needed to deal with this quote, unquote, problem.
And he needed to deal with it now.
So Louis hired his personal fixer to start convincing people to say this never happened.
And on top of that, they were going to start poking holes in Patricia's entire life story.
One young actress who was at the party denied that it was a rape in any way, and she actually
described the party as a jolly affair with lots of good, clean fun.
Other partygoers started saying Patricia was a huge drunk and was making everything up
to get attention.
And the final nail in the coffin?
Oh, well that came when Patricia tried to sue the studio.
Now it turns out the studio's fixer paid off Patricia's lawyer, and on the day of the
trial he never showed up.
Patricia didn't know.
She ended up losing the case, and just like that, her time in Hollywood was done and over
with.
Could you imagine?
And worse, the studio has realized that once again, they could solve any problem by just throwing
money at it instead of changing their behavior, because that's too much work.
But there's a story that's probably the best example of what would happen if anyone spoke
up about the studios.
Hers was perhaps a cautionary tale.
People were afraid of the studios and the studios liked it that way, and the studios'
bully reputation really gets highlighted with the next character in our story. Somebody who tried to cooperate with all the madness
instead of fighting back. A woman named Margarita Carmen Kensino. Oh, let's pause for an ad break first.
Garita was born on October 17th, 1918. Hey, isn't that when the Spanish flu started?
17th 1918. Hey, isn't that when the Spanish flu started?
It might be shout out to you Spanish flu. Hey! Now from the start she was a smart and committed girl who wanted to make everyone around her happy.
Her father Eduardo was born in Spain and was a pretty successful dancer.
But in early 1931, he hit some hard times and he stopped getting jobs.
Cash was drying up and he needed to solve this problem fast.
That's when Eduardo got the idea
to have his daughter join the act.
And he decides to like really play up
how exotic the name Cancino is.
So he takes his daughter to a beauty salon.
He has her hair dyed black.
And from that day forward,
the two of them would perform in casinos all over the West Coast
The cancinos would make a decent living as a father daughter
Dance duo called the dancing cancinos down in Tijuana
But Margarita didn't know about any of the money they made
You see Eduardo would send her out to the river to catch fish for dinner
Saying that they couldn't afford any food and if Margarita couldn't catch any fish, he would beat her, just making it like a point
only to hit her in places the audience wouldn't see the next night. All while screaming at her
about how stupid she was. Neighbors who lived near them at the time would later say that Margarita
never said a word and just promised she'd get everything right the next day. Now you might
think it doesn't make much sense that Eduardo couldn't afford to feed either
of them and you'd be right.
I mean, it turns out Eduardo would get paid for the performances and then immediately
spend all the cash on alcohol or gambling.
But the two big reasons Eduardo took Margarita out to Tijuana were that Margarita was a minor
and wasn't allowed to perform in local LA nightclubs.
And two, at the time it was a popular place for Hollywood moguls to just go hang out, have
a drink, and enjoy the local sex workers.
He was really hoping to make Margarita a star, and he wanted to make sure she would do
anything he said to make that happen.
So Margarita was 16 years old.
She had her first big break, a Fox executive happened
to catch one of her performances and immediately signed her to a six-month contract.
The only condition that executive had was Margarita had to change her name, so she did, to Rita
Kincino.
Rita appeared in 16 films between 1934 and 1937.
Eventually, she met two men who would change the course of her life forever.
The first guy Eddie Judson was like her father and he was obsessed with Rita becoming a
star.
The two of them got married in 1937, the year they met, and Eddie immediately got to work
setting up publicity events for his wife all around town, telling
her he would leave her if she didn't cooperate.
Because of this, she earned the nickname the most cooperative girl in town.
Like what a great nickname, thanks.
Thanks!
He also forced her to dye her naturally brown hair a deep red because he thought she looked
too latina.
He even made her go through painful electrolysis
treatments to move her hairline back and attempt to look more white. With her brand new look,
Rita was attracting all the big power players in town. Rita's husband, Eddie, arranged a meeting
with a second man who would change the course of her life. His name was Harry Cone. How come everyone's name is Henry or Harry or
those are like the two? Everyone's name was that. Harry was the head of the 20th Century Fox
studio. Yeah, so money, great. Harry told Eddie that he loved what he saw, like a cash cow,
that could be sold to the public as both the wholesome girl next door and the exotic sex pot at the same time.
But he tells Eddie he has two conditions for signing a deal with her.
First she has to change her name. Again, Harry wants Rita to go for something more all-American.
So she agrees to take her mother's maiden name and becomes Rita Hayworth. Yes, that Rita Hayworth.
Now, the second condition Harry had was more controversial. Harry told Eddie he needed to have sex with Rita.
When Rita hears this, she finally snaps. Snaps, because by the way, Rita has been in this meeting the entire time
these two men were having a meeting about her career, just no one's talking to her, right?
Rita tells the men there's no chance in hell that something like that is ever going to
happen.
Harry gives in and agrees to sign Rita to a seven-year contract, but from this point on
he makes sure to make Rita's life a living hell.
Well remember, the fixers from earlier, whenever Rita was on shoots, Harry would have a fixer
place a bug in her dressing room to make sure she wasn't saying anything bad about him, you know, to listen in.
Harry also gave himself a final say regarding anything having to do with Rita. So Harry was right about one thing. The public loved Rita Hayworth.
I mean, she started a bunch of films over the next few years, including her most iconic
role, Gilda, where Rita played the femme fatal in a detective thriller.
And Rita owned that role so much.
It became synonymous with her public image.
Fun fact, when the United States government was testing Adam Boms in World War II, there
was actually a picture of Rita Hayworth painted on the side of one of them, and the name of that bomb, Guilda. Eventually Rita became so famous that she was able to leave
Eddie and move on to a string of other famous affairs. She had five husbands in total. We're
not judging. A little. One of the most prominent of those husbands was a man named Orson Wells.
In 1942, he was known for being a 25-year-old boy wonder who made a film called Citizen Kane.
Rita was completely smitten with Orson, who she thought was charming, handsome, and just
like so indelent.
And the two got married in 1943, during one of Rita's lunch breaks on her film shoot.
After they took their vows, a friend asked
Rita, what's next for the happy couple? What do you guys up to? And Rita was like, I gotta get
back to this studio! So that was their honeymoon, I guess. The funny thing is, is that Orson Wells
would later say that Rita never actually liked being a star, but she didn't want to let anyone
down. You know, she's already there. Her friends would say she seemed happiest whenever she was with Orson, which would be cute
if Orson Wells hadn't cheated on her with countless other women like Judy Garland,
but more on that later.
It was around this time that Orson began outright ignoring his wife for months at a time.
The cheating didn't bother Rita but the neglect did.
She filed for divorce in 1948.
Apparently during the divorce Rita told Orson, the only happiness I've ever had in my life
has been with you. And Orson responded with, well if this was happiness imagine what the
rest of your life has been. So, he seemed like a really nice guy. Rita Hayworth would spend the rest of her life chasing love,
garnering the affection of many powerful men
who either expected her to be guilted at a sex pot
or wanted to control her.
At one point she even married a prince, yeah.
And she was like straight up a princess, like good for her.
By the 60s Rita began to suffer from early onset Alzheimer's
but she wasn't diagnosed until 1980.
That's a long time.
Yeah.
The studio blamed her inability to remember lines on alcoholism.
Super nice.
Then came Dorothy herself, none other than the iconic Judy Garland.
Oh yes.
If Patricia was an example of somebody
trying to speak out against the studio system,
and Rita was an example of somebody
just trying to go with the toxic flow,
the Judy is the best example of somebody who tried both
to disastrous results.
Sadly, now we're gonna pause for an ad break.
Poor poor Judy, she's still one of the most iconic movie stars in the world.
She made quite a few movies to say the least, but her most famous role was in the Wizard
of Oz.
But what you may not know is that she was abused for most of her life by the studios that wanted nothing except for her to
be their lap dog, their cash cow, their money maker. She was brini spears before
Britney Spears was Britney Spears. You know what I'm saying? Like Judy poor poor
Judy bless her soul. Judy over here was born Francis gum in Minnesota on June 10th
1922. She always preferred the name Judy because of a popular song,
but nobody really knows where she got Garland from, like what was that about, but it's okay, you know.
She was a daughter of two old-time stage performers, and because of that she started training
and dancing and singing at a very young age. Now she appeared on stage for the first time when she was
just 12 years old, and from that point on she pretty much never left. At age 13 years old, MGM signed her to be their next big star.
Just a few years later, she started acting in major films, and by the time she was just 17,
she starred in the Wizard of Oz. Well, her experience, as a 17-year-old
onset, wasn't like, frickinin what you would expect. It was terrible
upsetting and frickin dangerous. For starters, they wanted her to work 18 hours a day for six days a week.
And in order to stay awake, the studio would give her speed. Yeah. And when it was time to sleep for the three or four hours
She was allowed. They would give her a sleeping pill. To keep her weight where they wanted it,
she was given a daily diet of black coffee, chicken soup, and diet pills, and phenomines, and 80
cigarettes. A four pack a day. How old? She's 17. She's 17 years old. Where are they doing? They
didn't give a shit. They didn't give a fuck. The crazier thing about it is that like all this was legal because she'd signed a contract
and they had a fixer to protect the details from getting to the press.
To make it even more fucked up, they would only give her things like food and sleep when they thought she did good work,
like as a reward system. If she said she was tired and she liked didn't want to do something,
they would say that she didn't care about her friends at the studio, or that she would make everyone lose their jobs, just playing some serious mind games and putting
a lot of pressure on her. So Judy learned at a very young age how to give people what they wanted
in order to get what she needed, needed as in what she needed to just survive.
So when the Wizard of Oz took off, things actually got even worse for her because the
studio wanted to make more and more movies to keep making more and more money, right?
So eventually, Judy realized the studio needed her and she would fight back like in her
own way.
For example, Judy decided she wanted a family, but she knew the studio would never allow it.
So she decided to get pregnant and hide her pregnancy until she started showing.
Once her pregnancy was that far along, there was nothing the studio could do about it,
you know?
Unfortunately, before Judy's pregnancy could get to the safe window, Judy's own mother
would expose the secret to the MGM studio.
And they did exactly what Judy feared.
They forced her to get an abortion.
They're reasoning.
The public wasn't ready to see her as a mother.
As time went on, Judy sank into a deep depression.
I wonder why we just don't know,
we just don't know. They had her working these long hours in sane expectations on and off screens.
This had major psychological effects on her as well as physical, which is not surprising.
Judy once said the studio became a haunted house for her. Every day when she went to work she had tears in her eyes and
resistance in her heart and mind
Judy once missed 17 straight days of filming because she wasn't feeling well
So in a director of one of her films asked about it. She said like it's a struggle to get through the day
I use these pills. They carry me through. Instead of adjusting their expectations,
the studio charged her $100,000
for the cost of her psychiatric care
and their lost time.
Like her drug problem was a burden to them
as if they didn't force feed it to her for years.
As years go on,
Judy has a harder and harder time performing
due to her struggles with eating disorders,
sleeping, suicide attempts, and drug use. She would go in and out of treatment centers,
through marriages and divorces, and her health to start to decline, and money became even harder
to come by. The narrative portrayed to the public by the studios and their fixers was that she was a tormented
artist who was difficult to work with and couldn't control herself.
So of course, she's putting the blame all on Miss Judy.
No matter what Judy said to try and draw attention to the fact that she was abused throughout
her time with MGM, no one at MGM was ever held accountable.
Sally Judy Garland died from an accidental drug overdose in 1969,
after consuming the very same sleeping pills MGM gave her in the first place when she was just a child.
So the golden age of Hollywood was not at all that glamorous, now was it.
I mean, this was just a little tiny little snippet of a pu-jazz problem that still goes on today.
Thank you so much.
From the Smokefield Studio Parties, where young women were raped through the erasing
of all identities as a way to like, full and controlling the sleep and diet of their
biggest stars, accountability was nowhere to be found.
So if you want to end on some kind of bittersweet note after Rita Hayworth died in 1987.
Her agent reflected on a trip they took to Brazil.
You see, one day Rita disappeared from the group, like panic.
Everyone was like searching for her everywhere.
She was nowhere to be found.
But then the phone rang and a voice says, hey, I heard you're looking for Rita Hayworth.
She's a mile up the road on the beach.
So her agent and her family, they all head to the beach to like,
where they see a group of kids flying beautiful,
colorful kites, and sitting in the middle
of all the kids was Rita Hayworth
with a huge smile on her face.
Her agent says he had never seen her so happy.
Well, everyone, thank you so much
for learning with me today a little bit of,
um, you know, how dark Hollywood's past really was. You know, there's also something else
like, did you know Hollywood used to be called Hollywood Land? We should do an episode on that.
Anyways, remember, don't be afraid to ask questions to get the whole story because we deserve
that, don't we? Yeah, we do. Now, I'd love to hear your reactions to the story so make sure to use the hashtag dark history so I can
follow along over on social media and don't forget to join me all over on my
YouTube where you can watch these episodes on Thursday after the podcast
airs and also catch murder mystery makeup which drops every Monday thank you so
much for hanging out with me today I hope you have a wonderful day and you
make a choice Bye
Dark history is an audio boom original a very special thank you to one of our historical consultants
Movic karma who can be found on Instagram at
Movi
K-A-R-M-A
This podcast is executive produced by Bailey Sarian, Kim Jacobs,
Dunia McNeely from Three Arts, Ed Simpson, and Claire Turner from Wheelhouse DNA.
Produced by Lexi Kiven, research provided by Ramona Kiven.
Writers, Jed Bookout, Michael O. Burst, Joey Scavuzzo, and Kim Yagid, and me, Bailey Sarian.
And a big thank you to our historical consultants,
Movacarma and David Lazar.
And I'm your host, Bailey Sarian.
Bye.