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#hollywood

2 articles

A color portrait photograph of Marilyn Monroe.
MYSTERY

The Death of Marilyn Monroe: The Star, the Overdose, and the Theories

In the early hours of 5 August 1962, Marilyn Monroe — the most photographed and adored star of her age, an icon of Hollywood glamour recognised the world over — was found dead in the bedroom of her modest home in the Brentwood district of Los Angeles. She was thirty-six years old. The Los Angeles County coroner determined that she had died of acute barbiturate poisoning, a lethal quantity of sleeping pills in her system, and classified the death as a 'probable suicide,' consistent with her long and painful history of depression, insomnia, and dependency on the drugs that both sustained and endangered her. It should have been, and in its essentials was, the tragic end of a brilliant, fragile woman whom fame had exploited more than it had protected. But the investigation that night was careless and confused, the timeline muddled, the accounts of those present contradictory; and Monroe's rumoured connections to President John F. Kennedy and his brother, Attorney General Robert Kennedy, gave rise almost immediately to whispers, and then to an enduring industry, of conspiracy — that she had been murdered, or silenced, to protect powerful men. Sixty years on, those theories persist, unproven and unpersuasive, while the documented evidence points, as it did from the start, toward a lonelier and more ordinary tragedy. This is the story of the death of Marilyn Monroe — what is known, what is not, and why the difference matters.

Assassinations & Disappearances
1962
A sunset over the water at Santa Catalina Island, California.
MYSTERY

The Death of Natalie Wood: Drowning Off Catalina

On the morning of 29 November 1981, the body of Natalie Wood — one of the most cherished actresses of her generation, a star since childhood — was found floating in the Pacific Ocean about a mile from her yacht, the Splendour, off the coast of Santa Catalina Island in California. She was forty-three, and she had drowned. The night before, she had been aboard the yacht with three other people: her husband, the actor Robert Wagner; her Brainstorm co-star, Christopher Walken; and the boat's captain, Dennis Davern. The Los Angeles coroner initially ruled the death an accidental drowning, theorising that she had slipped while trying to secure or board the yacht's dinghy and had been unable to climb back out of the cold water. But the account of that night was troubled from the start — there had reportedly been drinking and an argument aboard, the stories of those present shifted over the years, and Wood, it was widely known, had a lifelong fear of water. Three decades later, in 2011, the case was reopened; the cause of death was formally amended to 'drowning and other undetermined factors'; and in 2018 her husband was named a 'person of interest' — though he has always denied any wrongdoing, was never arrested or charged, and no evidence of foul play has ever been established. This is the story of the death of Natalie Wood — a genuine mystery in which the official record itself declines to say for certain what happened.

Assassinations & Disappearances
1981

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