HISTORY’S RICH WITH MYSTERIES
When I look at the past, I find stories
about people which fascinate me, particularly those in which there is a curious
mixture of fact, legend, and mysterious uncertainty. In this series of
articles, I want to explore some of those stories. I think of them as mysteries
swaddled in legend. While truth is always desired in most things, truth easily
becomes staid and boring. Legend, on the other hand, forever holds a hint of
romanticism and an aura of excitement borne of adventure, imagination and, of
course, mystery.
WHO KILLED SUPERMAN?
By Earl Staggs
"Faster than a speeding
bullet! More powerful than a locomotive! Able to leap tall buildings at a
single bound!" That's how we were introduced to the greatest superhero of
them all -- Superman, the Man of Steel, who "fights a never-ending battle
for truth, justice, and the American way!"
Actor George Reeves became famous for portraying Superman
in a 1950's television show. Unfortunately, the part about outrunning a bullet was not true for him. On June
16, 1959, the forty-five-year-old actor died from a gunshot to the head. The official ruling was suicide, but there
were many who believed it was a homicide.
Born George Keefer Brewer in 1914 in Woolstock, Iowa,
young George grew up in Ashland, Kentucky, and Pasadena, California. In
California, he took up boxing and compiled a record of 31-0 by the age of
20. His headstrong mother, however,
insisted he preserve his good looks and try acting. George did and soon began
landing movie roles.
His first movie role was in the great classic Gone
With the Wind. He was one of two brothers wooing Scarlett O'Hara in the
opening scene. By then, his name had been changed to George Reeves. Other small
parts followed, but his burgeoning career was detoured when he was drafted into
the Army in 1943.
At the end of the war, George returned to Hollywood but
found his acting career had faded, and he had trouble getting parts. In
desperation, he signed on to make a low-budget movie called Superman and
the Mole People, which was to be a pilot for a TV series. The series became a
huge hit, and he became famous as the caped superhero from Krypton.
Offscreen,
he became involved in an affair with Toni Mannix, wife of MGM executive Eddie
Mannix, allegedly a former crime boss who worked for the studio. In 1958, George broke off that relationship
and began dating Lenore Lemmon, a former New York showgirl with a reputation as
a hotheaded troublemaker. After dating for a year, George and Lenore announced
their plans to get married.
On June 15,
1959, three days before they were to be married and leave for a honeymoon in
Spain, the engaged couple went to dinner with friends, then returned home to
party some more. George grew tired and went upstairs to bed early. Hours later,
the revelers heard a gunshot and ran upstairs to check. They found George lying
across the bed naked with his feet on the floor, a bullet hole in his temple,
and .30 Luger on the floor between his feet.
The
official ruling was suicide, but some people felt they had good reasons to
believe someone murdered him:
. . .There
were no fingerprints found on the gun, leaving some to wonder if it had been
wiped clean. If George had shot himself, he certainly could not have wiped the
gun.
. . .The
spent shell casing was found under his body. While it is conceivable the
ejected casing landed on the mattress before the body fell on it, it is not
likely.
. . .Fresh
bruises were found on his body but were never explained.
. . .The
bullet passed through his body and lodged in a wall, but the bullet's path did
not line up with the entry and exits wounds on his body.
His
fiancee, Lenore Lemmon, said George felt “typecast” as Superman and committed
suicide because he could not get any other kind of roles. She denied
suggestions that she and George had a fierce argument, possibly because he had
decided not to marry her, and she shot him.
Reeves' mother
never accepted the conclusion that her son killed himself. She hired a private
investigator who concluded the gunshot was not self-inflicted. In spite of
this, the official ruling remained suicide.
Noel Neill,
an actress who played Lois Lane in the TV show, said. "All I know is that
George always seemed happy to me, and I saw him two days before he died and he
was still happy then.”
Jack Larson, who played Superman's sidekick
Jimmy Olsen on the show, originally doubted the suicide ruling but later accepted
it.
In 1999, Los Angeles publicist Edward Lozzi
claimed Toni Mannix confessed to a Catholic priest in his presence that she was
responsible for having Reeves killed because he broke off their affair. She
allegedly used her husband's conection to find a hit man to do the job. Others
believe her husband Eddie Mannix, the former mobster, had George killed because
of the affair.
So we're left with strong arguments on on
all sides, leaving us the option to decide for ourselves. Did the Man of Steel
take his own life, or did someone else do it?
If I had to
make a guess, it would be that Toni Mannix hired a professionl hit man to kill
George. She had given him money, cars, and even bought the house he lived in
for him. When he dumped her for another woman, she couldn't take it. It would
have been tricky for a killer to enter the house, go upstairs, shoot George,
then get away without being seen by the others in the house at the time, but
professionals are clever at that sort of thing.
That's only
a guess, of course. We'll never know for sure and must file it away as another
unsolved mystery in the pages of history.
Earl Staggs ©2016
Earl
Staggs earned all Five Star reviews for his novels MEMORY OF A MURDER and JUSTIFIED
ACTION and has twice received a Derringer Award for Best Short Story of
the Year. He served as Managing Editor
of Futures Mystery Magazine, as President of the Short Mystery Fiction Society,
and is a frequent speaker at conferences and
seminars.
He invites any comments via email at earlstaggs@sbcglobal.net
He also invites you to visit his blog site at http://earlwstaggs.wordpress.com to learn more about his novels and stories.
14 comments:
As usual, Earl, a good article.
Thanks, Barry. I'm enjoying doing these.
Great article, Earl. Strange how after almost 60 years Reeves' death still fascinates us. He truly reached a lot of us in our youth, didn't he? Personally, my vote is for one of the Maddixes - or both!
Earl, Superman was one of my favorites, so found your post very interesting! My vote is murder. Not a hard call, given the evidence presented.
Really good article Earl! I never believed George Reeves committed suicide. And the way you describe the scene of his death makes no sense as a suicide. I mean, come on. If you were going to kill yourself, would you strip down to your birthday suit?
You've done it again, Earl. I don't believe it was suicide either, and the items you brought up convince me of it. Excellent post!
Marja McGraw
I'm with you, Earl. Definitely not suicide, with that evidence. (What is wrong with the justice system sometimes???) The mob hit is the most likely. Poor guy, to get mixed up with such awful people. I LOVED Superman and he's the Original Man of Steel.
I don't think he committed suicide. I suspect a lot of "suicides" are murder.
Susan, I agree with you about whodunnit. Too bad they were never charged.
Madeline, how strange that the police did not pursue the case as a homicide, but that's Hollywood for you.
Thanks, Marja. I appreciate you taking time to leave a comment. Especially since you agree with me. ;-)
Patricia, you're right. Very rare for a suicide to die in his birthday suit. I didn't mention this, but he also did not leave a suicide note, which is also common in a suicide.
Kaye, I think many of us loved the original Superman and felt a great loss when he died. You don't want to get me started on what's wrong with the justice system. I could go on for days.
Hi, Caroline! Thanks for dropping in. You could be right about many suicides being murder. If a killer makes it look like the victim took his own life, it's the perfect crime.
Post a Comment