
Inside The LC: The Strange but Mostly True Story of Laurel Canyon and
the Birth of the Hippie Generation
Part II
May 13, 2008
“He
was great, he was unreal – really, really good.”
“He
had this kind of music that nobody else was doing. I thought he really
had
something crazy, something great. He was like a living poet.”
[Today’s
first trivia question: both of the above statements were made, on
separate
occasions, by a famous Laurel Canyon musician of the 1960s era.
Both quotes were offered up in praise of another Laurel Canyon musician. Award yourself
five points for correctly identifying the person who made the remarks,
and five
for identifying who the statements refer to. The answers are at the end
of this
post.]
In
the first chapter of this saga, we met a sampling of some of the most
successful and influential rock music superstars who emerged from Laurel Canyon during its glory days. But
these were, alas, more than just musicians and singers and songwriters
who had
come together in the canyon; they were destined to become the spokesmen
and de
facto leaders of a generation of disaffected youth (as Carl
Gottlieb noted
in David Crosby’s co-written autobiography, “the unprecedented mass
appeal of
the new rock ‘n’ roll gave the singers a voice in public affairs.”)
That, of
course, makes it all the more curious that these icons were, to an
overwhelming
degree, the sons and daughters of the military/intelligence complex and
the
scions of families that have wielded vast wealth and power in this
country for
a very long time.
When
I recently presented to a friend a truncated summary of the information
contained in the first installment of this series, said friend opted to
play
the devil’s advocate by suggesting that there was nothing necessarily
nefarious
in the fact that so many of these icons of a past generation hailed
from
military/intelligence families. Perhaps, he suggested, they had
embarked on
their chosen careers as a form of rebellion against the values of their
parents. And that, I suppose, might be true in a couple of cases. But
what are
we to conclude from the fact that such an astonishing number of these
folks
(along with their girlfriends, wives, managers, etc.) hail from a
similar
background? Are we to believe that the only kids from that era who had
musical
talent were the sons and daughters of Navy Admirals, chemical warfare
engineers
and Air Force intelligence officers? Or are they just the only ones who
were
signed to lucrative contracts and relentlessly promoted by their labels
and the
media?
If
these artists were rebelling against, rather than subtly promoting, the
values
of their parents, then why didn’t they ever speak out against the folks
they
were allegedly rebelling against? Why did Jim Morrison never denounce,
or even
mention, his father’s key role in escalating one of America’s bloodiest illegal wars?
And why did Frank Zappa never pen a song exploring the horrors of
chemical
warfare (though he did pen a charming little ditty entitled “The Ritual
Dance
of the Child-Killer”)? And which Mamas and Papas song was it that laid
waste to
the values and actions of John Phillip’s parents and in-laws? And in
which
interview, exactly, did David Crosby and Stephen Stills disown the
family
values that they were raised with?
In
the coming weeks, we will take a much closer look at these folks, as
well as at
many of their contemporaries, as we endeavor to determine how and why
the youth
‘counterculture’ of the 1960s was given birth. According to virtually
all the
accounts that I have read, this was essentially a spontaneous, organic
response
to the war in Southeast
Asia and to the
prevailing social conditions of the
time. ‘Conspiracy theorists,’ of course, have frequently opined that
what began
as a legitimate movement was at some point co-opted and undermined by
intelligence operations such as CoIntelPro. Entire books, for example,
have
been written examining how presumably virtuous musical artists were
subjected
to FBI harassment and/or whacked by the CIA.
Here we will, as you have no doubt already
ascertained, take a decidedly different approach. The question that we
will be
tackling is a more deeply troubling one: “what if the musicians
themselves
(and various other leaders and founders of the ‘movement’) were every
bit as
much a part of the intelligence community as the people who were
supposedly
harassing them?” What if, in other words, the entire youth culture of
the 1960s
was created not as a grass-roots challenge to the status quo, but as a
cynical
exercise in discrediting and marginalizing the budding anti-war
movement and
creating a fake opposition that could be easily controlled and led
astray? And
what if the harassment these folks were subjected to was largely a
stage-managed show designed to give the leaders of the counterculture
some
much-needed ‘street cred’? What if, in reality, they were pretty much
all
playing on the same team?
I should probably mention here that, contrary
to
popular opinion, the ‘hippie’/’flower child’ movement was not
synonymous with
the anti-war movement. As time passed, there was, to be sure, a fair
amount of
overlap between the two ‘movements.’ And the mass media outlets, as is
their
wont, did their very best to portray the flower-power generation as the
torch-bearers of the anti-war movement – because, after all, a ragtag
band of
unwashed, drug-fueled long-hairs sporting flowers and peace symbols was
far
easier to marginalize than, say, a bunch of respected college
professors and
their concerned students. The reality, however, is that the anti-war
movement
was already well underway before the first aspiring ‘hippie’ arrived in
Laurel Canyon. The first Vietnam War
‘teach-in’ was held on the campus of the University of Michigan in March of 1965. The first
organized walk on Washington occurred just a few weeks
later. Needless to say, there were no ‘hippies’ in attendance at either
event.
That ‘problem’ would soon be rectified. And the anti-war crowd – those
who were
serious about ending the bloodshed in Vietnam, anyway – would be none too
appreciative.
As Barry Miles has written in his
coffee-table book,
Hippie, there were some hippies involved in anti-war
protests,
“particularly after
the police riot in Chicago in 1968 when so many people
got injured, but on the whole the movement activists looked on hippies
with
disdain.” Peter Coyote, narrating the documentary “Hippies” on The
History
Channel, added that “Some on the
left even theorized that the hippies were the end result
of a plot by the CIA to neutralize the anti-war movement with
LSD, turning potential protestors into self-absorbed naval-gazers.” An
exasperated Abbie Hoffman once described the scene as he remembered it
thusly:
“There were all these activists, you know, Berkeley radicals, White
Panthers …
all trying to stop the war and change things for the better. Then we
got
flooded with all these ‘flower children’ who were into drugs and sex. Where
the hell did the hippies come from?!”
As it turns out, they came, initially at
least, from
a rather private, isolated, largely self-contained neighborhood in Los
Angeles
known as Laurel Canyon (in contrast to the other canyons slicing
through the
Hollywood Hills, Laurel Canyon has its own market, the semi-famous
Laurel
Canyon Country Store; its own deli and cleaners; its own elementary
school, the
Wonderland School; its own boutique shops and salons; and, in more
recent
years, its own celebrity reprogramming rehab facility named, as
you may
have guessed, the Wonderland Center. During its heyday, the canyon even
had its
own management company, Lookout Management, to handle the talent. At
one time,
it even had its own newspaper.)
One other thing that I should add here,
before
getting too far along with this series, is that this has not been an
easy line
of research for me to conduct, primarily because I have been, for as
long as I
can remember, a huge fan of 1960s music and culture. Though I was born
in 1960
and therefore didn’t come of age, so to speak, until the 1970s, I have
always
felt as though I was ripped off by being denied the opportunity to
experience
firsthand the era that I was so obviously meant to inhabit. During my
high
school and college years, while my peers were mostly into faceless
corporate
rock (think Journey, Foreigner, Kansas, Boston, etc.) and, perhaps
worse yet,
the twin horrors of New Wave and Disco music, I was faithfully spinning
my
Hendrix, Joplin and Doors albums (which I still have, or rather my
eldest
daughter still has, in the original vinyl versions) while my color
organ
(remember those?) competed with my black light and strobe light. I grew
my hair
long until well past the age when it should have been sheared off. I
may have
even strung beads across the doorway to my room, but it is possible
that I am
confusing my life with that of Greg Brady, who, as we all remember,
once converted his dad’s home office into a groovy bachelor pad.
Anyway … as I have probably mentioned
previously on
more than one occasion, one of the most difficult aspects of this
journey that
I have been on for the last decade or so has been watching so many of
my former
idols and mentors fall by the wayside as it became increasingly clear
to me
that people who I once thought were the good guys were, in reality,
something
entirely different than what they appear to be. The first to fall,
naturally
enough, were the establishment figures – the politicians who I once,
quite
foolishly, looked up to as people who were fighting the good fight,
within the
confines of the system, to bring about real change. Though it now pains
me to
admit this, there was a time when I admired the likes of (egads!)
George
McGovern and Jimmy Carter, as well as (oops, excuse me for a moment; I
seem to
have just thrown up in my mouth a little bit) California pols Tom Hayden and Jerry
Brown. I even had high hopes, oh-so-many-years-ago, for (am I really
admitting
this in print?) aspiring First Man Bill Clinton.
Since I mentioned
Jerry “Governor
Moonbeam” Brown, by the way, I must now digress just a bit – and we all
know
how I hate it when that happens. But as luck would have it, Jerry Brown
was,
curiously enough, a longtime resident of a little place called Laurel
Canyon. As readers of Programmed
to Kill may recall, Brown lived on Wonderland Avenue, not too many
doors
down from 8763 Wonderland Avenue, the site of the infamous “Four on the
Floor”
murders, regarded by grizzled LA homicide detectives as the most bloody
and
brutal multiple murder in the city’s very bloody history (if you get a
chance,
by the way, check out “Wonderland” with Val Kilmer the next time it
shows up on
your cable listings; it is, by Hollywood standards, a reasonably
accurate
retelling of the crime, and a pretty decent film as well).
As it turns out, you
see, the most
bloody mass murder in LA’s history took place in one of the city’s most
serene,
pastoral and exclusive neighborhoods. And strangely enough, the case
usually
cited as the runner-up for the title of bloodiest crime scene – the
murders of
Stephen Parent, Sharon Tate, Jay Sebring, Voytek Frykowski and Abigail
Folger
at 10050 Cielo Drive
in Benedict Canyon,
just a couple miles to the
west of Laurel Canyon
– had deep ties to the Laurel
Canyon
scene as well.
As previously mentioned, victims Folger and
Frykowski lived in Laurel Canyon, at 2774 Woodstock Road, in a rented home right
across the road from a favored gathering spot for Laurel Canyon royalty. Many of the
regular visitors to Cass Elliot’s home, including a number of shady
drug
dealers, were also regular visitors to the Folger/Frykowski home
(Frykowski’s
son, by the way, was stabbed to death on June 6, 1999, thirty years
after his
father met the same fate.) Victim Jay Sebring’s acclaimed hair salon
sat right
at the mouth of Laurel Canyon, just below the Sunset
Strip, and it was Sebring, alas, who was credited with sculpting Jim
Morrison’s
famous mane. One of the investors in his Sebring International business
venture
was a Laurel Canyon luminary who I may have
mentioned previously, Mr. John Phillips.
Sharon Tate was also well known in Laurel Canyon, where she was a frequent
visitor to the homes of friends like John Phillips, Cass Elliott, and
Abby
Folger. And when she wasn’t in Laurel Canyon, many of the canyon
regulars, both famous and infamous, made themselves at home in her
place on Cielo
Drive.
Canyonite Van Dyke Parks,
for example, dropped by for a visit on the very day of the murders. And
Denny
Doherty, the other “Papa” in The Mamas and the Papas, has claimed that
he and
John Phillips were invited to the Cielo Drive home on the night of the
murders,
but, as luck would have it, they never made it over. (Similarly, Chuck
Negron
of Three Dog Night, a regular visitor to the Wonderland death house,
had set up
a drug buy on the night of that mass murder, but he fell asleep and
never made
it over.)
Along with the victims, the alleged killers
also
lived in and/or were very much a part of the Laurel Canyon scene. Bobby “Cupid”
Beausoleil, for example, lived in a Laurel Canyon apartment during the early
months of 1969. Charles “Tex” Watson, who allegedly led
the death squad responsible for the carnage at Cielo Drive, lived for a time in a home
on – guess where? – Wonderland Avenue. During that time, curiously
enough,
Watson co-owned and worked in a wig shop in Beverly Hills, Crown Wig Creations, Ltd.,
that was located near the mouth of Benedict Canyon. Meanwhile, one of Jay
Sebring’s primary claims-to-fame was his expertise in crafting men’s
hairpieces, which he did in his shop near the mouth of Laurel Canyon. A typical day then in the
late 1960s would find Watson crafting hairpieces for an upscale Hollywood clientele near Benedict Canyon, and then returning home to
Laurel Canyon, while Sebring crafted
hairpieces for an upscale Hollywood clientele near Laurel Canyon, and then returned home to Benedict Canyon. And then one crazy day, as
we all know, one of them became a killer and the other his victim. But
there’s
nothing odd about that, I suppose, so let’s move on.
Oh, wait a minute … we can’t quite move on
just yet,
as I forgot to mention that Sebring’s Benedict Canyon home, at 9820 Easton Drive, was a rather infamous Hollywood death house that had once
belonged to Jean Harlow and Paul Bern. The mismatched pair were wed on July 2,
1932, when Harlow, already a huge star of the
silver screen, was just twenty-one years old. Just two months later, on
September 5, Bern caught a bullet to the head
in his wife’s bedroom. He was found sprawled naked in a pool of his own
blood,
his corpse drenched with his wife’s perfume. Upon discovering the body,
Bern’s butler promptly contacted
MGM’s head of security, Whitey
Hendry, who in turn contacted Louis B. Mayer and Irving Thalberg. All
three men
descended upon the Benedict Canyon home to, you know, tidy up
a bit. A couple hours later, they decided to contact the LAPD. This
scene would
be repeated years later when Sebring’s friends would rush to the home
to clean
up before officers investigating the Tate murders arrived.
Bern’s death was, needless to
say, written off as a suicide. His newlywed wife, strangely enough, was
never
called as a witness at the inquest. Bern’s other wife – which
is to say, his common-law wife, Dorothy Millette – reportedly boarded a
Sacramento riverboat on September 6, 1932, the day after Paul’s death. She was next
seen
floating belly-up in the Sacramento River. Her death, as would be
expected, was also ruled a suicide. Less than five years later, Harlow
herself
dropped dead at the ripe old age of 26. At the time, authorities opted
not to
divulge the cause of death, though it was later claimed that bad
kidneys had
done her in. During her brief stay on this planet, Harlow had cycled through three
turbulent marriages and yet still found time to serve as Godmother to
Bugsy
Siegel’s daughter, Millicent.
Though Bern’s was the most famous body
to be hauled out of the Easton Drive house in a coroner’s bag,
it certainly wasn’t the only one. Another man had reportedly committed
suicide
there as well, in some unspecified fashion. Yet another unfortunate
soul
drowned in the home’s pool. And a maid was once found swinging from the
end of
a rope. Her death, needless to say, was ruled a suicide as well. That’s
a lot
of blood for one home to absorb, but the house’s morbid history, though
a
turn-off to many prospective residents, was reportedly exactly what
attracted
Jay Sebring to the property. His murder would further darken the black
cloud
hanging over the home.
As Laurel Canyon chronicler Michael Walker
has
noted, LA’s two most notorious mass murders, one in August of 1969 and
the
other in July of 1981 (both involving five victims, though at
Wonderland one of
the five miraculously survived), provided rather morbid bookends for
Laurel
Canyon’s glory years. Walker though, like others who
have chronicled that time and place, treats these brutal crimes as
though they
were unfortunate aberrations. The reality, however, is that the nine
bodies
recovered from Cielo Drive and Wonderland Avenue constitute just the tip of
a very large, and very bloody, iceberg. To partially illustrate that
point,
here is today’s second trivia question: what do Diane Linkletter
(daughter of
famed entertainer Art Linkletter), legendary comedian Lenny Bruce,
screen idol
Sal Mineo, starlet Inger Stevens, and silent film star Ramon Novarro,
all have
in common?
If you answered that all were found dead in
their
homes, either in or at the mouth of Laurel Canyon, in the decade between 1966
and 1976, then award yourself five points. If you added that all five
were, in
all likelihood, murdered in their Laurel Canyon homes, then add five bonus
points.
Only two of them, of course, are officially
listed
as murder victims (Mineo, who was stabbed to death outside his home at
8563
Holloway Drive on February 12, 1976, and Novarro, who was killed near
the
Country Store in a decidedly ritualistic fashion on the eve of
Halloween,
1968). Inger Steven’s death in her home at 8000 Woodrow Wilson Drive, on April 30, 1970 (Walpurgisnacht on the occult
calendar), was
officially a suicide, though why she opted to propel herself through a
decorative glass screen as part of that suicide remains a mystery.
Perhaps she
just wanted to leave behind a gruesome crime scene, and simple
overdoses can be
so, you know, bloodless and boring.
Diane Linkletter, as we all know, sailed out
the window
of her Shoreham Towers apartment because, in her LSD-addled state, she
thought
she could fly, or some such thing. We know this because Art himself
told us
that it was so, and because the story was retold throughout the 1970s
as a
cautionary tale about the dangers of drugs. What we weren’t told,
however, is
that Diane (born, curiously enough, on Halloween day, 1948) wasn’t
alone when
she plunged six stories to her death on the morning of October
4, 1969. Au
contraire, she was with a gent by the
name of Edward Durston, who, in a completely unexpected turn of events,
accompanied actress Carol Wayne to Mexico some 15 years later. Carol,
alas, perhaps weighed down by her enormous breasts, managed to drown in
barely
a foot of water, while Mr. Durston promptly disappeared. As would be
expected,
he was never questioned by authorities about Wayne’s curious death. After all,
it is quite common for the same guy to be the sole witness to two
separate
‘accidental’ deaths.
Art also neglected to mention, by the way,
that just
weeks before Diane’s curious death, another member of the Linkletter
clan,
Art’s son-in-law, John Zwyer, caught a bullet to the head in the
backyard of
his Hollywood Hills home. But that, of course, was an unconnected,
uhmm,
suicide, so don’t go thinking otherwise.
I’m not even going to discuss here the
circumstances
of Bruce’s death from acute morphine poisoning on August 3,
1966, because, to be
perfectly honest, I don’t know too many people who
don’t already assume that Lenny was whacked. I’ll just note here that
his
funeral was well-attended by the Laurel Canyon rock icons, and control
over his
unreleased material fell into the hands of a guy by the name of Frank
Zappa.
And another rather unsavory character named Phil Spector, whose crack
team of
studio musicians, dubbed The Wrecking Crew, were the actual musicians
playing
on many studio recordings by such bands as The Monkees, The Byrds, The
Beach
Boys, and The Mamas and the Papas.
To Be Continued …
(As for the trivia question, the person being
praised, of course, was our old friend Chuck Manson. And the guy
singing his
praises was Mr. Neil Young.)
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