Old Hollywood Ghosts: Haunted Hotels, Star-Studded Seances, and more

The ghost sightings of the Knickerbocker Hotel, a woman makes a final attempt to contact her husband on the other side, and an actress whose premonition proved fatal. Join me as we discuss the ghost stories of Old Hollywood.

TW: Suicide, and brief mention of sexual assault

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SOURCES

https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/style/1983/01/23/the-unraveling-of-frances-farmer/8b1160fd-9535-474b-84e7-8bc08be388a7/

https://www.newspapers.com/image/339151024/?terms=%22frances%20farmer%22%20knickerbocker&match=1 

https://www.newspapers.com/image/702761696/?terms=%22irene%20gibbons%22&match=1 

https://www.historylink.org/File/5058

https://www.seeing-stars.com/Landmarks/KnickerbockerHotel.shtml

https://www.pbssocal.org/history-society/off-the-boulevard-of-broken-dreams-the-knickerbocker-hotels-haunted-history 

https://www.sfgate.com/sfhistory/article/dorothy-millette-paul-bern-death-mgm-13570508.php

https://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2012/09/origin-of-the-phrase-blonde-bombshell/

https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Paul_Bern_suicide_note

https://www.housebeautiful.com/lifestyle/a37926396/jean-harlow-paul-bern-house-haunted/

https://www.mansonblog.com/2015/01/sharons-premonition-ii.html

https://weekinweird.com/2016/01/27/successful-seance-houdini-spoke-from-beyond-the-grave/

TRANSCRIPT

Welcome to Heart Starts Pounding, a podcast of Horrors, Hauntings, and Mysteries, as always I’m your host, Kaelyn Moore.

You’re maybe wondering where I am. Well A few weeks ago some of you suggested we buy the Cecil hotel to serve as the headquarters for our Rogue Detecting Society. I thought that was a great idea, but turns out real estate in Los Angeles is expensive, even when horrible, unspeakable things have happened on it. 

But… I really like the idea of us all coming together in one place to hear these stories every week, even if that space is just in our imaginations. So, picture this. An old three-story victorian mansion on a hill, the paint peeling, the wind chimes blowing on the porch, deep, scary woods behind it. It’s probably haunted, I mean It has to be since it’s our home, but anyway–that’s where I am, in the study, surrounded by books and candles dripping wax. it’s a strange, dark and weird place, but it’s our new home and I’m sure we’ll find lots of interesting things left behind by the previous owners.

this felt like the perfect place to take you on our next journey together. Through the dark, and occasionally haunted history of Hollywood. 

Youre cordially invired to Join me these next four weeks, for tales of Ghosts, Scandals, Curses, and Murder

To kick off this series, I’m going to tell you two stories today. One is the story about the Knickerbocker Hotel, which some have called The Cecil Hotel of the Golden age of Hollywood,  And not just because I can’t afford to buy it for us all either… It’s full of old hollywood tragedy, and the ghosts from that time are said to still walk the halls.

And then, I’m going to tell you about the mysterious death of a hollywood director, and the ghost sightings in his home there that changed the course of hollywood history.

But first, we’re going to take a quick break, and as always, listener discretion is advised. (Fire whooshing sound like I threw something into the fire) 

Every night when I would drive south on the freeway back to my apartment, I’d see a bright Red neon sign for the Knickerbocker Hotel just off the 101. It shines brighter and bigger than anything around it, even the red N of the netflix building nearby looks tiny and modest in comparison. 

The magnificence of the sign is a little bit misleading. The Knickerbocker today is  low income housing units for senior citizens. Many would say it’s not really something that suggests its signage should shine brighter in the Hollywood cityscape than Netflix. 

But let’s travel back in time for a moment. To the first few decades of its existence, just after the Knickerbocker first opened as a hotel in 1929. In the height of the golden age of hollywood. 

Then the knickerbocker was an opulent, 11 story building used to house the biggest stars in the world when they were in town. Elvis, Lucille Ball, Judy Garland would all walk in through the front door to see dripping chandeliers later owned by Liberace cascading from the high ceilings. 

Its cocktail bar was lit by lanterns, making the dim warm glow a perfect place to not be seen. Marylin Monroe used to sneak in through the kitchen to meet her boyfriend Joe Dimaggio here for a drink.  

But the hotel was also harboring dark secrets beyond the dates that celebrities were trying to hide from tabloids. 

In 1942 Hollywood Starlet Frances Farmer was dragged kicking and screaming through the lobby by police

Frances had come to hollywood in 1936 after graduating college. That same year, she starred in a western called Rythm on The Range with Bing Crosby and it turned her into a star overnight. Frances’s beauty and sensuous voice quickly cemented her as a rising star, she couldn’t get out of her own way. She was stubborn and evocative. She wouldn't change her hometown name, Frances Farmer, to something more glamorous, which annoyed her agents. She also hated makeup and loved unpopular political takes. It was hard to take her anywhere.

By the early 40’s, her stardome was already starting to fade, nearly as quickly as it had risen. To cope, she turned to alcohol and amphetamines and often was in trouble with the law. One time, she told a cop that pulled her over “you bore me”.

All that led her to the knickerbocker in January of 1943, intoxicated on everything she could get her hands on. Police came looking for her because there was a warrant out for her arrest. She hadn’t paid half of a drunk driving fine from the year before. And actually, the only reason police discovered she hadn’t paid was because earlier that day, Frances had slapped the hair and makeup woman on set of her new film so hard she dislocated her jaw. The police saw the warrant when the stylist reported Frances to them. 

So in the wee hours of the morning, police arrived at her door. They could hear her inside shouting and playing music, so they knocked loudly to get her attention. Frances heard them alright, and shouted that they should go have breakfast and come back. But these were LA cops in the 40’s, they just didn’t work like that, so they knocked down the door, only to find her wrapped in a shower curtain, screaming. She was at least able to get into a robe before they dragged her kicking and screaming through the lobby for all to see. And if you were to ask Frances about it, she’d probably tell you she got a few good punches in before they threw her in the back of the cruiser. 

It’s a moment that today probably would have been filmed and uploaded to the internet for everyone to laugh at. I see vidoes like this all the time on reddit, someone, no context having the worst day of their life. You never know their name, their mental health status, if they’re struggling to get clean and you just caught them at a bad time. And really, you don’t know how this moment would affect the rest of their lives.

But for Frances, that incident would kick off a new, horrible phase for her. She’d go on to be trapped in the confines of the 20th century mental health industry, and subjected to pharmaceutical, physical and sexual abuse while she was kept as a prisoner inside. Many have suggested she was lobotomized while inside, though there’s not enough evidence to definitively say.  Her life would forever be divided into a before and after her night at the Knickerbocker. Before, she was a movie star, and after, she was just another starlet who burned out and went mad. 

The incidents seemed to only get darker after Frances’s. A few years after her arrest, in 1948 director DW Griffith, known for his film Birth of A Nation, was walking through the lobby, under the million dollar Liberace chandelier, when he dropped dead from a cerebral hemorrhage. 

In 1966, William Frawley who played Fred on I Love Lucy dropped dead of a heart attack right outside the doors of the Knickerbocker. He was dragged inside so revival could be attempted, but he didn’t make it. 

Frances also wasn’t the only woman to suffer a psychological break while she was staying in the hotel. The night of November 15th, 1962, a costume designer named Irene Gibbons, so iconic in her day that she known just by her first name, booked a room on the top floor of the Knickerbocker. 

Irene was a costumer to the stars. She dressed Doris Day, Ingrid Bergman, and other leading ladies in the 30’s and 40s. But by the 60’s, work was drying up for her. 

Reports from the night of November 15th say that Irene was facing extreme emotional turmoil. Her business manager claimed that her husband had been sick for a few months, and the stress of that was weighing on her. Her friend, however,  said that her husband was hardly in the picture, and that she was in love with another man, actor Gary Cooper, who had died the year before. Others say it was a bad mix of money problems and alcoholism. We’ll maybe never know for sure.

But what we do know is that night, Irene wrote a note apologizing for what she was about to do and asked that her husband be taken care of. And with that, she leapt out of her 11th floor window. 

The room Irene had checked into, room 1129, has somewhat of a reputation now within the Knickerbocker. Guests have said there’s always a chill in the room. In 2013, a maintenance worker named Hector Garcia told the hollywood reporter that guests had complained about seeing a ghostly woman they believe is Irene. Some say they have seen the silhouette of a woman in an outlandish outfit with her hair in disarray sitting by a window, gazing out into the city.

Hector also claimed that when he worked in the basement of the Knickerbocker, doors would open and close on their own and he often saw shadows darting around 

 

People have also mentioned seeing who they believe is the ghost of DW Griffith in the lobby, a man in a suit, sitting under the chandelier and humming to himself. 

But the real ghost story of the knickerbocker isn’t about the celebrities who still linger in the lobby or sit by the windows in their rooms. It’s about the man who was summoned to the hotel during the most famous seance to ever take place in Hollywood.

On halloween night, 1936, a woman named Bess pushed through a crowd of people standing outside of the Knickerbocker to get to the hotels doors. Flash bulbs exploded on all sides of her head, trying to catch an image as she entered.

Bess paid them no mind, she was at the hotel for a reason, and no one was going to get in her way. She walked through the lobby, underneath the liberace chandelier, and got into an elevator. The roof, please, she told the operator. And they started climbing up.

The night was cloudless and cool. From the roof, she would have had a perfect view of the Hollywood sign on the hill, which still would have read “Hollywoodland” at that time. Bess was 60, even though she had traveled to hollywood many times with her late husband, she wouldn’t live to see the sign read anything other than Hollywoodland.

The rooftop scene was a sorrowful reminder of why she was here. On a big, wooden table sat a candle that had been burning for 10 years, it was brought to the roof for this very special occasion. All around it were the best Mediums in America. The candle had been lit shortly after her husband died, and on each anniversary of his death for the last 10 years she held a seance hoping to be reunited with her love. But each time they had called into the void, he had never answered. Tonight was going to be the last night she’d try to reach him. Her love, her husband of 32 years. Harry Houdini.

Houdini, of course, was a famed escape artist in the early 20th century, known for being able to effortlessly break out of the most complicated entrapments. Handcuffs, chains, straightjackets, none of them were enough to hold Houdini.

Of course, as we’ve come to know, Houdini did this with slight of hand tricks, sometimes hiding keys around his body. But audiences were never privy to his deception. He was a master at making the mundane look like a miracle. 

But as Houdini was making his name in the art of illusion, there was another form of illusion gaining popularity in America, spiritualism. Long term listeners are quite familiar with the spiritualism movement at this point, but as a reminder, spiritualism said there were ways for us to communicate with the spirit world, and it brought with it a slew of mediums and clairvoyants who claimed they could speak with the other side. 

Houdini knew their game, though. He had done fake spirit communication in his early days of Vaudeville. He knew it was all an illusion, and it bothered him to see mediums play tricks on grieving mothers and children. he publicly called these people frauds, fakes, and scam artists, and even made it a life goal to debunk as many of these mediums as he could.

So how did we get here? With Harry’s widow sitting on the roof of the knickerbocker, and a dozen mediums holding hands trying to channel his spirit. 

Well, in 1926, Houdini’s health had taken a turn. He was performing on stage in detroit when he collapsed, his fever hovering around 104 degrees fahrenheit, or 40 degrees celsius. A few days prior, he had been punched in the stomach by a man who had heard punches didn’t hurt Houdini. his doctors didn’t know if his current condition was from injuries stemming from that incident, or from appendicitis. Regardless, it only took a few days for Houdini to be on deaths door. He was only 52 years old.

But as he was lying on his death bed, he asked for Bess to come closer. Mustering up the little strength he had, he told her to not worry. No matter what, if there was a way to contact her from the afterlife, he’d figure it out. After a lifetime of debunking those who tried to contact the spirit world, he now privately hoped he was wrong. Then he told her a code that only the two of them would ever know. That’s how you’ll know it’s me he said. And shortly after, he died.

On the 10 year anniversary of that night, as Bess sat on the roof of the knickerbocker hotel, holding the hands of mediums around the candle that had burned since her husband's death, she repeated the code to herself over and over in her head. If a medium could channel Harry, she knew what he’d say. 

A medium started the ceremony with a prayer

(said like it’s coming through an old timey radio) “Oh thou mastermind of the universe Please let the spirit of understanding be sent upon us that are gathered here in the inner circle tonight.

We are each in his own way seekers after truth. Please let the spirit of understanding guide us and  bring the light of truth to the many friends who have formed psychic circles and gathering around the world

Aid us, guide us on this most important question for man kind. Spirit communication from across the grave.” 

He then asked Houdini to let himself be known. Everyone held their breath. The people down on the street 11 stories below remained perfectly still, hoping to hear a sign from Houdini that he was on the other side. (sfx just a light breeze from the night)

But no sign came through., so the man started begging a little louder. 

“Are you here? Are you here Houdini? Take anything you need to fulfil your promise from years ago. Speak through trumpet, Levitate the table, Ring the bell.”

If there was anything that could be done to let them know he was there, now was the time to do it. Please, Bess prayed silently to herself. She had been trying for 10 years to hear from her late husband. If he didn’t reach out to her tonight, she didn’t know how much longer she could do this for. 

Still, there was no sign, just the echoey voice of the medium booming off the rooftop. Getting more desperate the longer the silence lasted.

No one on the roof moved a muscle, afraid to make any noise. Beth stared at the bell. Come on, Harry. Ring the bell. Ring the bell harry, please. But still. Nothing. (Fade out wind and silence)

Eventually, enough time had passed that the medium called it. Houdini had, for the last time, not contacted Bess. He asked Bess if there was anything she’d like to say. 

The widow collected herself. She had lost her husband so long ago, but that night she felt the loss of losing him all over again. “My last hope is gone.” She said. “It is now my personal and positive belief that spirit communication in any form is impossible. I do not believe that ghosts or spirit exist. The Houdini shrine has burned for 10 years. I now resolutely turn out the light. It is finished. Good Night, Harry.” 

And with that, she blew out the candle, that was the last time Bess ever tried to contact Houdini. She passed away in 1943. (fade out music and wind)

Our last story takes place just a few miles away from the Knickerbocker hotel, where the streets get more narrow and winding in Beverly Hills. I don’t have to tell you what Beverly Hills is, it’s almost as much of a household name as Hollywood. But it serves a much different purpose. Beverly Hills, at least the hills part and not the touristy shopping area, serves as a respite from the chaos of hollywood. Houses are often nestled in between the hills, under shady trees and down large driveways. Hidden in plain sight.

And that’s where our next story takes place, in a quiet Bavarian-style home tucked away in the hills. There, Paul Bern, an MGM executive was living with his actress wife who was exactly one half of his age, Jean Harlow. 

Jean Harlow’s name has left the zeitgeist in the nearly 90 years since her death, but the term bombshell blonde was coined for her. She was a force to be reckoned with, and the toxic, undiluted bleach she used on her hair made her the blondest woman in hollywood.

Jean became a star after the 1930 film Hell’s Angels, in which her curvaceous body and platinum hair were put on display more than her acting chops. After that movie, everyone wanted to hire her, but no one wanted to take her seriously as an actress. That is until she met MGM exec Paul Bern, who saw her as more than arm candy, and promised her a serious career. The two married after a short courtship in 1932.

But within two months of their marriage, Paul would be found dead in their home. A gunshot wound to the head and a suspicious suicide note were all that were left behind. 

Jean wasn’t home the night of September 4th, 1932. She was staying at a relative's house that was closer to the filming location where she had to be the next morning. So she was shocked when she received a call telling her her new husband was dead. The caller then told Jean that there was a note found in a guestbook near his body. 

It read- Dearest Dear, unfortunately this is the only way to make good the frightful wrong I have done to you and wipe out my abject humiliation. I love you, Paul. You understand that last night was only a comedy 

Jean had no idea what that meant. Last night was only a comedy? Also, were they even sure if it was a suicide note if it was buried in a guest book, and not out by his body?

 Paul’s body was found the morning of September 5th by his house staff, but the first phone call they made was not to the police. No, it was to the head of MGM, the studio where Paul worked. MGM executives went to Paul’s house and dealt with the crime scene for 2 hours before police were called to clean up the scene and hide anything that may look incriminating to Paul. The full extent of what was done may never be known. 

But 60 years later, one of those executives friends, a man named Sam Marx who worked at MGM at the time, would confess what he was told had happened. He said that one of the executives had rearranged the evidence to look like a suicide. The truth of what happened would ruin Jean’s career if it ever got out, and she was currently the studios meal ticket.

What happened, Sam said, was that Paul was in fact, still married to a woman in New York. Dorothy Millette Bern. He had come out to LA to become a big wig studio exec and left his wife at home. When she found out two months prior that he had married Harlow, she came out to Beverly Hill and killed him in cold blood. Then she snuck up to San Francisco and took her own life.

And it’s true, Dorothy Millette Bern, Paul’s actual, legal wife, was found dead in San Francisco a few days after Paul’s death. 

Jean Harlow would go on to marry again the next year, but her life would be tragically cut short a few years later when she died under mysterious circumstances at the age of just 26.

Paul’s death is still ruled a suicide, and we may never know what happened. People have publicly wished that the walls of that house on Easton Drive could talk. What would they say? What clues could they give us about what really happened?

Well, according to one woman who frequented the house years later. The house was trying to tell us something.

The ghosts and terrifying premonition seen at Paul Bern’s house, after a short break. 

The house on Easton Drive was sold in 1963 to a celebrity hairstylist who had heard about what had happened to Paul Bern, but didn’t seem bothered by it. When he moved in, he was dating a young, aspiring actress who frequented the home. Eventually, the two broke up but remained extremely close friends.

One night, in 1967, the young woman was upstairs sleeping in the room that would have been Paul and Jean’s. It was the room where Paul’s body was found. At night, it was dark in the house. The trees and foliage that shrouded the home from sight also prevented any outside light from getting in, making it hard to see your own hand in front of your face.

The woman was staying there by herself, the hairstylist was in New York for business, so earlier that night she had made herself some tea, and read a few magazines before going off to bed. But she later said the whole time she had a funny feeling. She kept referring to it as that, a funny feeling. 

She was woken from her sleep in the dead of the night by that same feeling. The feeling that something was off. That’s when she heard a sound coming from just outside of the open door to the room. Through the dark, she could just barely make out what looked like the form of a man. Not moving. Just standing in the doorway. It was too dark to really see, but what little light made it into the house bounced off of the whites of his eyes which were looking right at her.

The figure then took a step forward, into the room, and started walking about with an abnormal amount of speed. He was no longer looking at the woman, his focus was on the floor as he shuffled about. That’s when the woman noticed his receding hairline, black hair and mustache. She had heard the stories about what had happened in this house, and she had looked at pictures of those involved. This was Paul Bern

Frightened, she jumped out of bed, threw on a robe, and RAN down the stairs, almost tripping over something on the way down. She turned to see what was blocking her path and nearly screamed in horror at the sight. There, a disheveled person was tied to the railing, a big slash across their neck. The scene was so grisly she couldn’t tell who it was, or even if it was a man or a woman, but she got the overwhelming sense that she was looking at herself. 

Upstairs, she could still hear the man rummaging around so she started pinching herself. This must be a bad dream, this must be a bad dream, wake up wake up wake up. Nothing worked though, so she did the next best thing. She ran over to the bar and slammed a shot of whisky to calm her nerves. 

That seemed to quiet the demons. When she looked back at the stairs there was no one tied to the railing, and the footsteps from upstairs had stopped.  she forced herself to go back upstairs and sleep. This must be a dream, she told herself. 

The next morning she awoke to a man’s voice booming from downstairs. Hello? Hey are you upstairs? Her friend had made it back from his trip, and the house was empty except for the two of them. She told him exactly what she had experienced the night before, the man, the blood. But he just laughed. You’re ok, he said. Nothings going to get you. 

Two years after this event, life would take these two friends to another house, just a mile away from Paul Bern’s old residence, to a house that the young actress was renting with her new husband on Cielo Drive in the hills. 

That night, as the two slept, their two other friends in another room, four drug fueled assailants would break into the house and brutally murder the friend group. They belonged to a psychedelic, paranoid, Hollywood Hippie cult known as the Manson family.

The woman, who had seen a premonition of someone tied to a railing with their throat slashed, was Sharon Tate, and she was found tied by the neck to her friend, hollywood hairstylist Jay Sebring. She, like Jean Harlow, was a bombshell blonde young hollywood starlet on the precipice of a long, successful career as an actress. And she, just like Jean Harlow, had her life tragically ripped away at just 26 years old.

Some have wondered if what Sharon saw in the house was a premonition of what was to come. Others wonder if there is some kind of curse to the house that follows its inhabitants. Today an elderly couple live in the home and say they haven’t experienced anything paranormal, but if another young, 26 year old starlet moved in, who knows what would happen. 

I think about the Houdini story frequently. And it breaks my heart to think that he wasn’t able to reach out to Bess. Of anyone who has ever existed, if there was a backdoor way to contact someone from the spirit world, Houdini would be able to do it. 

I cried when I read this old book here in the study about Bess’s story. But what if I told you there’s a chance that Houdini was able to contact bess? 

Word quickly spread around the world that Bess Houdini was doing seances to contact her late husbands, so Mediums everywhere tried to pitch in to help. Many contacted her with code words they received from the great illusionist, but Bess never confirmed any were right, that is, until a medium named arthur ford came forward.

Arthur travelled to Bess’s home so he could recite the following code to her: Rosabelle, answer, tell, pray-answer, look, tell, answer-answer, tell. 

It translated to Roseabelle, Believe. Roseabelle was the song that Bess sang the night she and harry met. It was their secret code. 

Bess still tried for years to contact Harry herself through the seances, but perhaps, like all great magicians, Harry wasn’t willing to perform the same trick twice. 

That’s all for this week. Time for me to take a flashlight and go check the crawlspaces in our new HQ. I was told no one had lived here for years but the mailbox had recent letters addressed to a name I didn’t recognize. Seems we might already have a guest.

If you’d like more on this episode, like some more information on the Houdini Seance, or even to hear about my own haunted hollywood ghost encounter, head over to our High Council on Patreon to listen to the footnotes episode that accompanies this episode. 

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