The documentary was made quite awhile ago, and what was special about it was before the docu, like NO research had been done on Olive. Via their research they found out a lot, and also found instead of only one surviving film (Love's Prisoner) she had something like 12:
http://www.forgetthetalkies.com/2009/05 ... homas.html
Grapevine released Love's Prisoner on VHS in I think 1999. If you watch it they note its her 'only' surviving film...until this documentary was done. I think twos films were found in 2009 and the Nederlands Film Institute was in the process of restoring them.
Vogel's book is...meh. Bless her, she is probably a very sweet lady, but her books...meh. Its almost like a copy and paste job out of the Taylorology newsletter, because its just constant newspaper clippings quoted at length, etc.
I think no one has done enough work on Olive so far. Her death seems pretty straight up to me, and if I remember right that's the two Ollie historians I know concluded as well. The 'scandal' is much like Mabel Normand and William Desmond Taylor: highly improbable the star (Mabel/Jack) did anything, but they were there or nearby, and thus...'maybe'.
Olive lived for a few days after she drank the poison. Her vocal chords were burned clean through but investigators did talk to her (I assume using some means to write or communicate 'yes' vs 'no') and found no foul play, she was stroking Jack's hand and such.
Since Vogel's book and the documentary some really interesting things have been found. Such as there were a lot of people who knew her in her hometown and they spoke of her well till the 70s, she and Jack didn't really marry until 1918 (someone found the certificate), and she tried to adopt her nephew and succeeded about a year before she died.
Murder strikes me as unlikely, Jack was whatever but everyone who knew him said in his later years he really missed Ollie (even calling his next two wives her name...'accidentally'.) Suicide strikes me as unlikely because whether you believe Jack or not she had just adopted her young nephew and was doting on him in interviews, and she sounded happy. Even if she was coked out of her mind or about to divorce Jack, she loved her new ''son'' and was close to her niece (Lottie's daughter). Seems there wasn't much motivation to off herself there.
Accident seems to be. I think she was drunk/high and mistook the bottle. They did use mercury bichloride for syphilis treatment, but as a paste usually. They used the powder to clean bathrooms...which makes a hell of a lot of sense as to why it was in there. Also it was an exceedingly painful way to go...even ant paste strikes me as kinder. Whatever, people will always 'guess'.
The link up there has 'where to buy' and right now Flapper is really the only commercially available film of hers. I hope this changes, she's very cute in film! I also wish the documentary could be updated, though given the economy that's a hell of a pipe dream.
Have you ever seen Elaina Archer's Jack Pickford documentary (even harder to locate, you can contact her and watch a clip here:
http://www.aandfproductions.com/jackpickford.html). It too could use some updating, but I enjoyed it.
One day I was wearing my Olive Thomas necklace, which bumped my ipod while a Marilyn Miller song was playing. It was a little awkward. Jack's wives were interesting, talented, and stunning...I'll give him that.