A Myth Makerâs Clarification
Do you not know how famous your mother became when she was young?â
This was the second mysterious communication that Marcy Worthington had received from Paul Dickman, an aspiring writer from Chicago. Dickman had been puzzled when he couldnât find a death certificate for Eunice Pringle, a figure in a book project he was researching. Worthington, a 48-year-old Southern California commercial photographer and instructor at the San Diego Police Department academy, had been skeptical of Dickmanâs earlier note. But this letter, dated Nov. 26, 2000, blew open a family secret that Worthington had never known:
When her good-humored, nearsighted mother--Eunice Pringle--was a teenager, she had been at the center of a great American sex scandal.
âI knew sheâd danced in Los Angeles,â Worthington says of her late mother. âWhen I asked why sheâd stopped, she always said, âDancing was too corrupt.â â
Worthington recalled that when she was 12 years old, her father, a psychologist, told her in confidence that her mother had once been raped by a producer, but he offered no details. Worthington decided then that her father was only trying to discourage her own ambition to become a singer.
Dickmanâs second letter, however, explained more about Pringle, who had been the most publicity-shy of their La Jolla and Point Loma social set when Marcy Worthington was growing up. And then, in a phone call to Dickman, Worthington learned her mother had been front-page news in 1929 for millions of Americans, a pretty young dancer whose rape charge would bring down one of the most flamboyant impresarios in Hollywood, Alexander Pantages. Dickman also told Pringleâs stunned daughter that nearly all accounts of her motherâs experience got the most intriguing aspect of the story wrong. One of those accounts, it turns out, was my own.
In 1929, Alexander Pantages--who got his start entertaining Alaskan gold miners--was running a chain of vaudeville and movie palaces from offices above his ornate theater at 7th and Hill streets in downtown Los Angeles. On Aug. 9, Eunice Pringle, a 17-year-old performer from Garden Grove, had her fourth appointment with Pantages. Pringle, a former USC student, had been lobbying Pantages since May to book her one-act musical sketch.
The meeting didnât go well, and it ended with Pringle, her clothing in disarray, running out of Pantagesâ office screaming, âThe beast!â Pringle told police that Pantages had raped her. Pantages denied it and said he was being framed. He was arrested and bound over for trial.
Public sentiment, and the press, strongly sided with Pringle, not the wealthy Greek immigrant entrepreneur. Pringle was described in one newspaper as âthe sweetest 17 since Clara Bow.â Pantages was a less-attractive figure, growling out his denials in broken English at a time when the public equated the entertainment industry with debauchery.
The Pantages trial was daily front-page news. For her first round of testimony, Pringle appeared in court in a conservative outfit, flat âMary Janeâ shoes and with her hair tied back in a bow and ponytail. Jerry Giesler, a member of Pantagesâ defense team, had the judge order Pringle to appear for her second day as she had in Pantagesâ office--in makeup, a red sleeveless dress and high heels. Giesler also tried to argue that Pringle and the author of her sketch, an older man whom Giesler termed a Russian playboy, were lovers and that Pringle wasnât the innocent she pretended to be.
The judge disallowed that argument, ruling that Pringleâs character didnât matter since Pantages could still be guilty of statutory rape based solely on her age. Pantages was convicted and sentenced to 50 years in prison.
Two years later, the California Supreme Court granted Gieslerâs appeal for a new trial based on his argument that the alleged rape victimâs moral and personal history was pertinent, even if she was underage. Giesler also had disputed the prosecutionâs claim that the elderly, slight Pantages could have forcibly held down and raped a young woman who was so athletic that she could perform splits and back flips. Chief Justice William Waste declared Pringleâs testimony âimprobable.â
At the second trial, Giesler was able to focus on Pringleâs past, portraying her as worldly and certainly no virgin. He told jurors that she and her manager, the Russian, had threatened Pantages if he wouldnât sign her act. Giesler also alluded to a larger conspiracy involving âhigher powers.â
Pantages was acquitted.
In most later stories about the case, those mysterious âhigher powersâ were identified as former Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Buron Fitts and Joseph P. Kennedy--father of the future U.S. president and a Pantages rival in the theater business. In those reports, Eunice Pringle died of a suspicious illness shortly after the trial, in 1933; some suspected poison. And in an alleged deathbed confession, Pringle was said to have revealed that, with the connivance of Fitts, Kennedy had bribed her with money and promised her a movie career if she would stage the rape.
The deathbed confession seems to first appear in avant-garde filmmaker Kenneth Angerâs âHollywood Babylon IIâ (Dutton, 1984). âKennedy had hoped to destroy Pantages,â Anger wrote, âand in the process gobble up the Pantages theater circuit.â Anger described Pringle as a âshopworn angel.â
A convincingly detailed report along the same lines, âShowstopper,â written by early-Hollywood film historian Andy Edmonds, appeared in Los Angeles magazine in 1989. These accounts became important sources for other writers.
In âThe Sins of the Father: Joseph P. Kennedy and the Dynasty He Foundedâ (Warner, 1996), based in large part on the Anger and Edmonds accounts, Ronald Kessler describes how Pringle âdied of unknown causes. The night she died, she was violently ill and red in color, a sign of cyanide poisoning.â
In their book âFallen Angels: Chronicles of L.A. Crime and Mysteryâ (Facts on File, 1986), writers Marvin J. Wolf and Katherine Mader summed up Pringleâs supposed deathbed declaration with, âIt had all been Joe Kennedyâs idea. He wanted to destroy Pantages . . . promising that when he controlled the Pantages theaters, she would be his star performer.â
My own version, alas, in âFor the People: Inside the Los Angeles County District Attorneyâs Office 1850-2000â (Angel City Press, 2001), depended largely upon all of the above sources, particularly the in-depth Los Angeles magazine account. From that, in my retelling, Pringle âreportedlyâ told her mother and a friend on her deathbed that she set up Pantages for the promise of $10,000 and a movie part.
I did have the good sense,
or luck, to leave out the rumors of poisoning, since speculation based on a suspiciously flushed face seemed a particularly thin reed.
But we were all wrong.
Marcy Worthington knew this as soon as she talked with Dickman, the inquiring Chicago writer. As proof, she dug up her motherâs 1996 death certificate--in the name of Eunice Irene Worthington, nee Pringle. It described how she died of natural causes in a San Diego County hospital at age 84. For Worthington, this turned the case on its head.
As for us ink-stained wretches, weâre willing to admit that no deathbed confession took place. Still, itâs possible that many other elements of the story are true. Even if the âconfessionâ story was a fabricated incident--a counterattack by Pantages, for example-- the Kennedy conspiracy story could still be true. And Pringle? She could have just slipped away. In an era before information technology, it was easier for even the notorious to disappear.
âI researched it carefully,â Anger maintains, though the story âneeds to be corrected if [the death certificate] could be verified.â Anger says heâs collected Hollywood tales since his student days at Beverly Hills High School, where he compared notes with friends, many of whom were from entertainment-world families. âWe were all passionate about these old stories,â he recalls. âWe were sort of a Hollywood scandal club.â
Anger says he doesnât remember where he heard of Pringleâs deathbed scene. In any case, he notes, âshe may have confessed, but it wasnât on the deathbed. It seemed more like a Joe Kennedy setup.â
Could the âdeathbed confessionâ have been spun from the Pantages camp? âThere are a lot of myths and legends about shenanigans in this town,â says Marvin Wolf. âIâm not terribly surprised to find out that this might have happened. Itâs the sort of thing that a guy like Pantages would have known to do. I mean, letâs face it. He was no sweetheart.â
âI relied on previous material that I footnoted in my book,â says Kessler. âThat far back, what else are you going to do?â He adds: âIâm not terribly shocked when it comes to these old stories. Itâs easy for them to get out of hand.â
Meanwhile, Marcy Worthington--on a mission to clear her motherâs name--has been sifting through boxes of her motherâs letters, photographs and documents and searching through newspaper archives. Her mother, says Worthington, simply regained her private life by returning to school in Garden Grove to learn to type, take shorthand and become an executive secretary. She married, changed her first name to Toni and quietly kept her old name out of the newspapers after moving to San Diego. But she also had friends and went to the ballet and theater.
âIâm convinced she was raped,â says Worthington. And far from being a âshopworn angel,â as Anger phrased it, her mother was valedictorian of her high school class and a practicing Christian Scientist. The Russian manager was never her lover. The tone of his numerous letters to Pringle and other family members for many years afterward, says Worthington, showed him to be no more than a friend and mentor. As to the famous red dress, Worthington says, âit wasnât short, low-cut or tight, but it was sleeveless.â
Worthington is attempting an even more difficult feat--to clear Joseph Kennedyâs reputation in the saga. Sheâs convinced her mother was not involved in a conspiracy with Kennedy and Fitts to attack Pantages even though, after the scandal subsided, Kennedy bought several Pantages properties at fire-sale prices. And, of course, Marcy Worthington is currently writing a book and contemplating a screenplay to correct her motherâs story.
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Michael Parrish is a Los Angeles writer and author of the book âFor the People: Inside the Los Angeles County District Attorneyâs Office 1850-2000â (Angel City Press, 2001).