Yvette Vickers

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The Blackbird

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Yvette Vickers

PostTue May 03, 2011 5:13 am

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... -home.html

I corresponded with this wonderful lady over the years and I can't put into words how upset I am at this terrible news.
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westegg

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PostTue May 03, 2011 6:00 am

I know; hard to believe she went unattended for so long.
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LouieD

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PostTue May 03, 2011 6:23 am

Should move to El-Lay, it appears you don't have to pay any bills for a year at least!
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Brooksie

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PostTue May 03, 2011 5:03 pm

Holy cow ... I was just thinking of her the other day. I always remember her as the dame who won't let William Holden use the telephone in `Sunset Blvd'. :(
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salus

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PostTue May 03, 2011 5:54 pm

They said she had friends if she did they weren't good ones. Or did she became eccentric in her last years and turn them away, thats what it sounds like. In Hollywood when you run out of money which the condition of her house shows your forgotten, ask silent star Mary MacLaren. No town worships the Almighty buck like Hollywood. Her home was falling apart in Beverly Hills, she proably bought it in her heyday and she didn't have the money to repair it. She should have sold it and got lots of money and move into something affordable. If i remember they said that the mansion that Rosemary Clooney bought during her glory years (the 50s) was falling apart after her death. She proably wasnt making enough money to upkeep a big property and too proud to ask her rich nephew George Clooney to repair it. Another interesting thing about the Vickers story is that her mail had cobwebs on it, didn't the mailman have any inkling something was wrong, if she was laying there a year or so just the store ads would make quite a pile.
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westegg

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PostTue May 03, 2011 7:37 pm

Speaking of SUNSET BLVD, William Holden died alone under tragic circumstances, but at least he was found before long!
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moviepas

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Vickers Bills

PostWed May 04, 2011 2:24 am

Vickers. Don't need to go to LA to have forever to pay bills or so it seems. I knew closely two ladies who were found dead years after it happened. One had no one and lived in a flat and the other lived in the residence of her defunct dress shop and well-known around town and her late husband more so. And she had relatives who spoke to the press when the mummified body was found on her sofa. But this kind of thing does happen here and other countries and I am always puzzled. I have blown the whistle on possible deaths before but I have had to wait until a senior police officer using his ramming device opens the front door then I was called in to identify the body. Not a problem but gut turning for some when the undertakers turn the body over for transport. The cops couldn't take it!!!
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Scoundrel

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PostWed May 04, 2011 4:23 am

The report on Ms. Vickers is sad news.

But for really sad news, consider the occasional report when something like this happens and the deceased's next of kin is either unable to cope with the situation and there is a notification delay for authorities...or worse, someone is aware and is still cashing social security checks in the decedents name.

Sad but true.
" You can't take life too seriously...you'll never get out of it alive."


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The Blackbird

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PostThu May 05, 2011 5:31 am

Yeah, I hear you. Sadly this is not a unique phenomenon. I can remember a case in Detroit some years back where an elderly lady had passed away alone in her home and they didn't discover her for an estimated six years!

I find it bitterly ironic that so much fan mail was in Yvette's house. I guess the long delay in finding the body is what makes her death so much harder for me to accept. At least it tentatively appears that she died of natural causes. My disdain to the media, though, for sensationalizing the story and thereby probably guaranteeing this is what she'll be remembered for the most. Still, maybe publicizing this will help to prevent it from happening to some other people in the future. At least now she can be decently laid to rest. It's bizarre, really: in recent years she'd been doing conventions, recording audio commentaries, writing her memoirs, etc., and seemed thoroughly outgoing and humourous in interviews. It just defeats my imagination she could "disappear" for so long without anyone noticing, though apparently a lot of people simply assumed she was away at her other house. I'm confused by the listing of her age as 82. Every source I've ever read (including herself) claimed she was born in 1936, and she sure looks closer to 14 than 21 in SUNSET BOULEVARD.

Well, what I'll remember is not how she died but how she lived. She had a pretty interesting career, beginning with the aforementioned SUNSET BOULEVARD (I asked her if she happened to meet Buster Keaton, but apparently not). She did meet, and work with, many other notables, though: Roger Corman, Steve Cochran, Paul Newman, Lee Marvin and Jack Webb, to name a few. She was essentially "discovered" by James Cagney, who put her in his film SHORT CUT TO HELL. In the late 1950's she was seen in several B-pictures such as REFORM SCHOOL GIRL and I, MOBSTER, before cementing her cult status as the delicious white trash of ATTACK OF THE FIFTY-FOOT WOMAN and ATTACK OF THE GIANT LEECHES. She's also visible, all too briefly, in BEACH PARTY and HUD, a waste of her acting talents.. Her film career seems to have been torpedoed by her essentially fleeing Hollywood and an abusive husband (she married three times). Less well known is her stint on Broadway, where for one thing she took the lead in BUS STOP and worked with such notables as Melvyn Douglas, E. G. Marshall and Bert Wheeler. She can be seen in a multitude of television shows and was an accomplished singer. She dated many famous actors like Cary Grant, Ralph Meeker and Jim Hutton (the man she regretted not marrying), and counted Mort Sahl and Allison Hayes among her friends.

Of course, she was also Miss July 1959, photographed by one Russ Meyer (whom she remembered shooting the centrefold while wearing army fatigues). In those days, obviously, posing for Playboy was about forty times more daring than it is now, but they kept offering it to her. Hilariously, the magazine's own lawyers tried to 86 the centrefold on the grounds that it was "too hot" (how's that for backhanded flattery?), but "Hef" disagreed and Yvette went down in history as the "Beatnik Playmate," having been emboldened by the example set of Marilyn Monroe's own career not having been harmed by doing the same thing. For me, Yvette's centrefold is right up there with Marilyn's and Stella Stevens' as one of the greatest examples of pin-up phtotgraphy ever done. If you've never seen it, gents, look it up sometime: it's amazing.

Yvette always signed off with me using the phrase "Many Blessings to You Always." Back at you, Dear Lady. Heaven is now a lot more gorgeous...
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Frederica

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Re: Vickers Bills

PostThu May 05, 2011 7:43 am

moviepas wrote:Vickers. Don't need to go to LA to have forever to pay bills or so it seems.


Neither the phone service nor a utility will send bill collectors to your house. They'll just cut off the service.
Fred
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Kelly

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PostThu May 05, 2011 2:48 pm

Being from Los Angeles I hear about her on local news I wonder did neighbor get suspious why she hasn't been in her garden for while I be suspious I remember elderly lady living next door to my parent home she wasn't out there in her garden for few days my mom decided go over ot house and through the window

She found her Dead on her bedroom floor I think she try get the phone couldn't get to the phone apparently died of natural causes
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salus

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PostFri May 06, 2011 3:09 pm

I'm still wondering what the postal worker said when her mail hadn't been picked up in a year, apparently somebody was picking it up if there was just a stuff postal box with cobwebs.
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Frederica

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PostFri May 06, 2011 3:37 pm

salus wrote:I'm still wondering what the postal worker said when her mail hadn't been picked up in a year, apparently somebody was picking it up if there was just a stuff postal box with cobwebs.


He or she probably said "I can't believe this idiot didn't forward mail when they moved. But as long as it keeps getting sent, I'll keep delivering it."
Fred
"Did you just send the most powerful person in Westeros to bed without his supper?"
― Tyrion Lannister
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Kelly

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PostSat May 14, 2011 6:14 pm

There is update to the story on today Radar online so sad she died alone

http://www.radaronline.com/exclusives/2 ... rt-disease

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