The Newly Announced Peg Entwistle Biopic
Still from "Peg Entwistle's Last Walk"/Copyright 2007 and 2014, Hope Anderson ProductionsI was in New York a couple of weeks ago when two friends emailed within an hour of each other to tell me that a feature film on the actress Peg Entwistle had been announced in the trades. Tony Kaye ("American History X") is slated to write and direct the film, and producer Arthur Sarkissian promises the result will be "in the vein of...Vertigo and...Seven." http://deadline.com/2014/09/actress-death-hollywood-sign-movie-jumped-off-h-peg-entwistle-836778/
When I started researching Peg Entwistle's life for my documentary Under the Hollywood Sign in 2006, the accurate public record of her life was tiny, consisting of three or four photos, her nationality at birth (English) and her suicide from the Hollywoodland Sign in 1932. The amount of erroneous information, however, was enormous. It included her career (she was not a wannabe starlet but a successful and accomplished Broadway actress); her background (she was brought up not in England but as a naturalized American in New York and Hollywood); her motivations for suicide (which were not as much professional as existential). Among the falsehoods was the assumption that Peg's choice of the Hollywoodland Sign was a message to the film industry. It's a great bit of symbolism, except that the Sign was nothing more than a billboard for the Hollywoodland tract at the time. Because I knew the history of the Sign and live along the route she took, it was obvious that Peg chose the Sign for two simple reasons: it was high enough to do the job and in 1932 so isolated that no one was likely to stop her. As I progressed in my research, the misinformation kept coming. Even the date on her death certificate was wrong--it appears as September 18th, the date her body was discovered. But because Peg went to the Sign on the evening of September 16th and could not have survived her fall for long, the date of her death was clearly September 16th.
Many of the lies about Peg came straight from Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon , whose chapter on her tragic end was accepted as fact until I set about correcting it. I identified the book's half-nude portrait of Peg as a fake, which should have been obvious since the only feature the model shared with Peg was her platinum blond bob, a ubiquitous hairstyle in Hollywood at the time. Yet everyone, including her family, had taken Anger's word for it.
As a way of telling Peg's story, I made a short feature film about her fateful climb to the Sign called Peg Entwistle's Last Walk, incorporating the footage into my documentary Under the Hollywood Sign. After I put the short on YouTube in 2007, it caught the attention of tens of thousands of viewers, including James Zeruk, Jr., who was researching her life for a book. James helped me to find Peg's family, who generously made available a trove of playbills, photographs and documents about her life. Most importantly, I was able to interview Peg's half-brother, Milt Entwistle, then 92 and the only living person with direct memory of her.
Under the Hollywood Signwas released in 2009. Peg Entwistle's Last Walk remained on YouTube until this year, when I pulled it off to release it on DVD and Vimeo, along with her biography, as Peg Entwistle: The Life and Death of An Actress. http://hopeandersonproductions.com/?page_id=3361 http://vimeo.com/ondemand/17445/100467934 Last year I published an ebook consisting of Entwistle family photos, the script of the biographical documentary and the production diary of Peg Entwistle's Last Walk. http://www.amazon.com/Peg-Entwistle-The-Hollywood-Sign-ebook/dp/B00FSOGCV4 Zeruk's book Peg Entwistle and the Hollywood Sign Suicide was also published last year.
Biopics can't be entirely invented, and I can't imagine whose work Tony Kaye will draw on for his script if not mine and James Zeruk's. Because alternative secondary sources don't exist and many of the primary sources can only be found in the Entwistle family's archive, I await Kaye's film, assuming it gets made, with considerable interest.