Wednesday, June 19, 2024

SUICIDE SIGN

  




The Hollywood sign. The ultimate Hollywood landmark. A potent symbol of the Hollywood dream.....and a grim reminder of the underlying nightmares......

The Hollywood sign graces the 1,680 summit of Mount Lee, located in Griffith Park, a part of the Santa Monica Mountains. A rugged remote wilderness, ironically close to Tinsel Town glitz.

The original Hollywoodland sign was erected in 1923, as a real estate promotion. It was funded by L.A.Times publisher Harry Chandler and cost a whopping (at that time) $21,000. The sign remained on the hillside long after the real estate venture and became an essential part of Hollywood lure. In the late 1940's the "land" part was removed, but "Hollywood" remained. Twenty-five years later the neglected sign was crumbling and in a pitiful state of disrepair. In 1978 it was finally rescued and repaired, courtesy of the Hollywood Sign Trust and generous donors.




I lived in Southern California during the crumbling era and the rescue era. I witnessed the sign's death and resurrection. My main interest in the sign was its connection with suicide and ghosts. At that time very few people knew about the tragic tale of the young actress Peg Entwistle, who leaped to her death from the top of the sign at age twenty-four. Even fewer people knew about the ghost of a lady in white who reportedly haunts the sign on moonless nights.





Peg Entwistle (1908-1932)



 When I was young and living in Hollywood details about the Entwistle suicide were very scarce. Only a few old-timers remembered the incident. Nowadays information (and misinformation) abounds. The story has inspired articles, books, documentaries, and even (heaven help us) a potential musical. Amateur and rank amateur ghost hunters have latched on to the legend.

Millicent Lilian ("Peg") Entwistle was born in Wales, raised in London, and came to New York with her father after her parents divorced. Peg's father was killed in a truck accident when she was fourteen. Afterwards, she and her two step-brothers were raised by their Uncle Harold. Peg eventually became a fairly successful stage actress in New York, but her career (along with Broadway) floundered after the 1929 stockmarket crash. Her marriage to actor Robert Keith also ended when she discovered that he had a previous wife and child. Ironically, that child was Brian Keith, who later became a well-known actor. (even more ironic is the fact that Brian Keith committed suicide in 1997).

Peg moved to Hollywood in 1932. where her uncle and two brothers were living on fashionable Beachwood Drive. She landed a role in the RKO film Thirteen Women, but unfortunately most of her footage ended up on the cutting room floor. Her desperate attempts to keep her career alive were futile.
By September, 1932, she was out of work and deeply depressed.

The Hollywoodland sign in the 1920's



Beachwood Drive in the early 1930's
(the white building in the distance is a private residence)

 
On the evening of September 16, 1932, she told her uncle that she was going out to meet friends at a local drug store. Instead, she walked north on Beachwood Drive, scoured the hills to the Hollywoodland sign, and prepared to extinguish the agony forever. She climbed a workman's ladder to the top of the fifty-foot  letter "H" and leaped to her death. A suicide note was found in her purse which said:

 "I am afraid I am a coward. I am sorry for everything. If I had done this a long time ago, it would have saved a lot of pain. P.E."

From what I heard, she didn't die instantly but suffered for nearly two days before her body was found. 

The story is very tragic but sounds simple enough. A trek to the sign and a leap. Only those who have actually climbed up to the Hollywood sign and experienced the remote, desolate area at night, can understand the true horror.

When I was in my early twenties, a friend and I (he knew the area very well) climbed up to the Hollywood sign at night. It was a momentous undertaking (no pun intended) and a memorable endeavor.

Today the Hollywood sign is heavily guarded and largely inaccessible to tourists, vandals, and potential leapers from letters. It's surrounded by a chain link fence with razor wire, motion sensors, electronic surveillance, security guards, and helicopters. You can still walk up a long, winding trail and view the rear of the sign, but getting anywhere close enough to touch it is an impossibility.






The sign in disrepair

My friend and I visited the sign when it was still in a state of major disrepair and wasn't heavily guarded. Those were the glorious days when remnants of old Hollywood were still around and accessible. Getting there was much more treacherous, dangerous, and tedious than I had ever imagined. It was early autumn. We started out in late afternoon, walking north on Beachwood, the same route that Peg Entwistle took. It was nearly two miles just to get to the hills. We were armed only with a six-pack, a couple of flashlights, and youthful audacity.


Hollyridge, the trail to the sign


I don't know how we made it to Hollyridge Trail, but that's where the real hike begins. The isolated dirt trail winds aimlessly through the hills and eventually leads to the back of the Hollywood sign. I think we wound up on Mt. Lee Drive (it's been a long time). At any rate, the trek took seemingly forever.

It is nearly sunset when we finally get to the sign. It clings haphazardly to the hillside like a gigantic, tattered remnant of a haunted dream. The looming, crumbling letters are fifty feet high.

I'm wondering how Peg Entwistle was ever able to accomplish her formidable, suicidal feat. She was much more courageous than she is given credit for. If she was brave enough to conquer the sign, she certainly would have been brave enough to conquer life......




Back of the sign and view of Hollywood


The distant, sprawling view of Hollywood is  spectacular and the fiery, melting colors of the setting sun cast a surrealistic spell over the entire scene. It's a once in a lifetime moment. We sit in the shadows of the sign, savoring the view and drinking beer. We smoke a joint or two.

As twilight dissolves into darkness the chilly mists and absolute isolation cast a haunted spell. A strong spiritual presence seems to linger by the sign but we didn't see any apparitions. We joke and laugh and make feeble half-hearted attempts at climbing the tattered "H" letter. The very real prospect of danger fails to penetrate our foolishness. In time, the dreamlike aura of our surroundings becomes unnerving and almost sinister. In absolute blackness, guided only by the pale light of our flashlights, we retrace the trail and eventually make it back down the hill. Exhausted, cold, and aching.

I was delighted to see Beachwood Drive and vowed that I'd never go back to the sign again. I never did.


One afterthought:
It is widely rumored that the day after Peg Entwistle died, a letter arrived offering her the leading role in a play. This isn't true. According to her two surviving stepbrothers, it never happened.
                              Jon V. 




This post is a rerun, but it's worth a second look 
                                                              Jon

21 comments:

  1. Very interesting story, Jon. I'd not read it before. I've heard about Peg and the 'ghosts'. My fear would be rattle snakes! They're in the hills, right? Yikes! That would be so cool to experience that (minus any snakes, of course). I'm glad you were able to see the old Hollywood (or remnants). Now I associate LA with countless homeless people lining the streets with cardboard box homes. Just saw a few YouTube videos of the homeless population in LA and its mind blowing. Sad. Didn't you do a story on the Manson ranch. I think it was once a Hollywood set for cowboy movies. Can't think of the name of it right now. I really enjoy all your southern cal and Hollywood stories. Write that book!
    Paranormal John

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  2. I knew you'd like this post, John. Yes, there are rattlesnakes in the Hollywood Hills. At the time I made the trek to the sign I (foolishly) didn't think about snakes.
    I visited the Spahn Ranch once, long after Manson and his crew were gone.
    When I was at the ranch a film crew was filming a gay porn flick. I wrote a blog post about it looong ago - - and I don't think my readers were exactly thrilled with it (lol).
    Southern Calif. is nothing like it used to be. The magic and allure is gone forever. Now it's all trash.

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  3. Jon, yes the story of Peg Entwistle is one of your best and one that I had read and heard about before. Did you see the Netflix mini series, Hollywood, which also had her in its storyline as well as a lot of other Hollywood tales. I had not read about her marriage to Robert Keith and the similar way his son died.

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    1. Unfortunately, I didn't see the Netflix Hollywood series. Entwistle was forgotten for such a long time - - I'm glad that her memory is currently being revived. I was surprised to learn about her marriage to Robert Keith.

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  4. I remember you posting this story. Had to be a sad and a bit spooky place to visit.

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    1. I'm glad that I made that memorable trek to the sign. It was an incredible experience, but also potentially dangerous. I wouldn't have the guts to do it now (lol).

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  5. One of your best, for sure. Peg's anguish saddens me, and I wonder how many other souls are wrestling in private. Once more, your words have provoked goosebumps.

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    1. Hollywood history is filled with anguished souls - - many of which are completely forgotten. There is a powerful aura of desolation and negativity around the Hlywd sign. It's really chilling and sad.

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  6. Thank you, Donna. This is one of my favorite posts.

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  7. I often wondered what "feel" one would get there - most especially around Samhain (one of the two times a year that the veil between the physical world and the world of spirit is the thinnest).

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    1. My visit to the Hlywd sign gave me a very uneasy feeling, with a foeboding sense of doom. An unforgetable experience. I didn't see any spirits, but I felt a presence....

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  8. I've seen the sign many times, mostly from in to lax. But I knew a special effects editor who lived in West Hollywood, and could see the sign from their back yard. I'd not given it much thought before your post. A sad ending for that girl, and I suppose many in Hollywood did at that time.
    Your adventures at that time must have given you some insight to what motivated people, young and old then, searching for fame and fortune. If you'd post about that, I'm sure others like me would be interested.
    You're a good writer, Jon.
    Mike

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    1. Despite the glamour and glitz, Hollywood has harbored many untold tragedies. Stardom was rare, sometimes unwarranted, and often like Russian roulette. The quest for fame would be an interesting subject.
      Thanks, Mike.

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  9. I remember seeing the Hollywood sign from the street in the 1970s, it looked big as life and glamour came to mind.
    When I got up close it was not as sparkling or glamorous as it appeared to be, just like Hollywood itself.
    Had friends that lived in Hollywood in the mid 80s and early 90s when it was fun and still affordable. Now there is no fun and Hollywood is strictly for the inherited and moneyed set.:( -Rj

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    1. The golden era of genuine glamour is gone, along with a disinterest in history. Many of the iconical structures have been torn down and replaced with parking lots and tawdry businesses. The brutal rape of Hollywood is too much for me to tolerate and I'll never go back.

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  10. A sad story of Peg. She was not the first or last person to be devoured by the sinister glitter and glamour or the lure of fame. I think I would have been afraid to be up there after dark, but as you say, the audacity of youth....it knows no limits!

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    1. It's so good to hear from you, Jenny. I'm doing fairly well but still struggling with health problems.
      In retrospect, I'm glad that I made that trek to the Hollywood sign - - but I wouldn't have the courage to do it now.

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  11. Maybe Peg was led up there by someone else and pushed. Not sure why I suspect that. Was it ever thought to be a murder?

    "The story has inspired articles, books, documentaries, and even (heaven help us) a potential musical."

    A musicial. God help us.


    P.S. hilarious that you took a six-pack!

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    1. I never heard that it could have been a murder. Peg had only been in California for a short time and I don't think she had any enemies - - unless some stranger murdered her up there by the sign....

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    2. A stranger with a six-pack...😳

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    3. Just joshing of course. It would add an element of shock to the tale. And make you like 200 years old.

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