Karyn Kupcinet

Karyn Kupcinet

Kupcinet in 1962
Born Roberta Lynn Kupcinet
(1941-03-06)March 6, 1941
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died November 28, 1963(1963-11-28) (aged 22)
West Hollywood, California, U.S.
Cause of death Homicide
Resting place Memorial Park Cemetery and Crematorium
Nationality American
Alma mater Pine Manor College
Occupation Actress
Years active 19591963
Parent(s) Irv Kupcinet
Esther Solomon Kupcinet

Karyn Kupcinet (March 6, 1941 November 28, 1963) was an American stage, film, and television actress. She was the only daughter of Chicago columnist and television personality Irv Kupcinet.

Kupcinet had a brief acting career during the early 1960s. Six days after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, her body was found at her West Hollywood, California, home. It has been theorized that Kupcinet's death, officially ruled a homicide, was connected to the assassination or was the result of an accidental fall. In the 1960s, Irv Kupcinet publicly dismissed the theories linking his daughter to the president's death. In 1992, The Today Show referred briefly to her alleged connection to the assassination, which prompted Kupcinet to describe the television broadcast as "an atrocious outrage" and "calumny". Her homicide remains officially unsolved.

Early life

Kupcinet was born Roberta Lynn Kupcinet in Chicago, Illinois to Irv Kupcinet, a sportswriter for the Chicago Daily Times, and his wife, Esther "Essee" Solomon Kupcinet. She acquired the nickname "Cookie" during her childhood. She made her acting debut at age 13 in the Chicago production of Anniversary Waltz and went on to attend Pine Manor College for a semester, eventually studying at the Actors Studio in New York.[1]

Career

Kupcinet with Skip Ward in Mrs. G. Goes to College, 1961

Kupcinet was encouraged into acting by her mother,[1] and was given access to producers through the reputation of her father and his Kup's Column in the Chicago Sun-Times.[1] In 1961, Jerry Lewis offered Kupcinet a role in the film The Ladies Man, where she appeared in a bit part as one of dozens of young ladies in a Hollywood boardinghouse. In 1962, she appeared in the role of Annie Sullivan in a Laguna Beach summer theater production of The Miracle Worker.[1] She appeared in guest roles on television including The Donna Reed Show, The Wide Country, G.E. True, and Going My Way. In addition to guest spots, Kupcinet had a regular role in the prime time series Mrs. G. Goes to College (retitled The Gertrude Berg Show during its short run).[2]

Kupcinet's last onscreen appearance was on Perry Mason in the role of Penny Ames in the episode entitled "The Case of the Capering Camera." The episode aired on CBS on January 16, 1964, nearly two months after her death.[2] Coincidentally, it was the final on-screen appearance of Ray Collins as Lt. Tragg.

Personal life

By 1961, Kupcinet was living in Hollywood and was getting positive reviews for her acting.[3] In March 1962, a Los Angeles Times interviewer, assigned to help Kupcinet promote The Gertrude Berg Show, noted her talking exclusively about food and her weight.[4]

In December 1962, Kupcinet filmed a guest-star appearance on The Wide Country and had her first meeting with one of the series' stars, Andrew Prine,[5] and began a relationship with him.[1][5] However, the relationship was problematic, Kupcinet was abusing diet pills along with other prescription drugs,[1] and she had been arrested for shoplifting.[6]

The problems in Kupcinet's relationship with Prine were mainly due to Prine's objections to making the relationship exclusive. After Kupcinet underwent an illegal abortion in July 1963, the relationship cooled and Prine began dating other women. In turn, Kupcinet began spying on Prine and his new girlfriend.[1] It was later determined by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department that Kupcinet had sent threatening and profane messages, consisting of words and letters she had cut out of magazines, to Prine and herself.[1] When Prine told her by telephone about the messages that had been left on his doorstep and posted on the door of his home, she said she had received them, too.[1] They met to show the messages to each other. She seemed puzzled.[1] Soon after her death, investigators for the sheriff's department found her fingerprints on the papers and the Scotch tape.[1]

The weight problems had started in high school when Kupcinet began taking diet pills. Her weight remained an issue while at Pine Manor College. The pressure to stay thin intensified after Kupcinet arrived in Hollywood, and she soon began abusing diet pills along with other prescription drugs.[1]

Death

On the last day of her life, Kupcinet had dinner with future Lost in Space cast member Mark Goddard and his wife, Marcia Rogers Goddard, at their house on Coldwater Canyon Drive in Beverly Hills (near Mulholland Drive).[7] She was due there at 6:30 pm, but arrived an hour late by taxicab. The couple said Kupcinet only toyed with her food during the meal. Marcia Goddard told two officers from the L.A. County Sheriff's Office that during dinner with Kupcinet "... her lips seemed numb. Her voice was funny. She moved her head at odd angles."[5] The Goddards also noticed that her pupils were constricted. Mark Goddard told authorities that he confronted Kupcinet about her altered state during the meal, and she began to cry, putting her arm around him.[8] At one point during the meal, Kupcinet told her friends an unsubstantiated story about a baby that had been abandoned on her doorstep earlier that day.[5] At 8:30 pm, a taxicab arrived to take her home, and she promised to telephone the Goddards soon.[9]

Kupcinet apparently went straight home after dining with her friends. She was visited by freelance writer Edward Stephen Rubin shortly afterward. The two were then joined by actor Robert Hathaway around 9:30 pm. They told detectives they watched TV, including The Danny Kaye Show, with Kupcinet. They all drank coffee until she fell asleep, sitting next to them on the couch. She awoke and went to her room. The men either turned the TV set off or simply lowered the volume (three days later it was still playing with a low volume), and made sure the door was locked behind them before departing at about 11:15 pm. Hathaway said Rubin and he returned to his place and were later joined by Kupcinet's boyfriend, Andrew Prine, who was also Hathaway's neighbor. The three young men watched television and talked until approximately 3:00 am.[5]

The Goddards went to Kupcinet's apartment on November 30, after she failed to telephone the couple as promised. Mark Goddard stated that he had a "funny feeling" that something was wrong.[1] Upon arriving at Kupcinet's apartment, the couple found her nude body lying on the couch. Mark Goddard initially assumed that she had died from a drug overdose.[1]

Upon searching Kupcinet's apartment, police found prescriptions for Desoxyn, Miltown, Amvicel, and other medications.[5] Authorities also found a note written by Kupcinet that reflected in some detail her emotions regarding issues in her life (i.e., parents, self-image, problems with boyfriend) and people she admired.[10]

Coroner Harold Kade concluded that due to a broken hyoid bone in her throat, Kupcinet had been strangled. Her death was officially ruled a homicide.[11]

Investigators from the L. A. County Sheriff's Office determined that Kupcinet had told Andrew Prine by telephone the same story about the abandoned baby that she had told the Goddards, and it was false.[5] Neither the sheriff's office nor the Los Angeles Police Department had received a report of a baby found abandoned anywhere in her apartment building on her last day alive or the previous day.[5]

Regarding the possibility that the murderer raped Kupcinet, her father wrote in his 1988 memoir, "Because semen lives only 18 hours, [investigators for the sheriff's office] could not determine whether she had been sexually assaulted."[12]

Theories

David Lange

In Irv Kupcinet's memoir, he said he and his wife Essee (Karyn's mother) believed that an unemployed young man named David Lange warranted further investigation by the L. A. County Sheriff's Office.[13] He lived in the apartment directly below Karyn's.[14] Irving and Essee "pressed" sheriff's investigators to pursue Lange further, "but their response was that they had tried with no success because Lange by this time had moved into the home of his sister, and she had retained attorneys who refused to let him answer any questions."[15]

Lover's quarrel

During the course of their investigation, the county sheriff's office considered Andrew Prine as one of their chief suspects, though their interest in him was not reported by newspapers. When questioned by investigators at the office, Prine said he had talked with Kupcinet twice by phone on Wednesday, the day before her murder, claiming he was trying to patch up a lover's quarrel between them.

Investigators considered it possible that Prine learned the anonymous threatening messages that Kupcinet and he had received were actually sent by Kupcinet, and his discovery plus their unresolved argument motivated him to confront her angrily. In addition, both Edward Rubin and Robert Hathaway, the two men who had possibly been the last to see her alive, were friends of Prine. They were also considered suspects and questioned occasionally throughout the 1960s, according to documents at the county sheriff's office that were unearthed in the 1990s,[5] but newspapers dropped the Kupcinet story after December 1963.[5][16][17][1]

Connection to JFK

Kupcinet's death was first mentioned in connection with the assassination of JFK in 1967 by researcher Penn Jones, Jr., in the self-published book Forgive My Grief II.[18] Jones claimed that an AP wire service story about an unidentified woman who placed a phone call on November 22, 1963, from the vicinity of Oxnard, California, approximately 50 miles northwest of Los Angeles, was Kupcinet. The woman, who dialed her local operator approximately 20 minutes before the shooting in Dallas, stated that the president of the United States was going to be shot without providing any details about where it would happen or who was involved, even though she continuously talked at the operator for 15 minutes. [19] Jones alleged that the female caller was Kupcinet, attempting to warn someone of the impending assassination. Jones claimed that Kupcinet was given advance notice of the assassination by her father Irving, who allegedly had learned of it from Jack Ruby, whom he had met in Chicago in the 1940s.[10]

Jones speculated that her death was a result of a mob hit to silence her and to send a message to Irving Kupcinet to remain silent about his knowledge of the assassination.[20]

Irv Kupcinet denied that his daughter or he had prior knowledge of the assassination. This was supported by Karyn Kupcinet's friends, actor Earl Holliman, Holliman's then-girlfriend, and Karyn's boyfriend Andrew Prine, all of whom traveled from Los Angeles to Palm Springs with Kupcinet on November 22 and remained there during and after the network television broadcasts of Ruby shooting Oswald on November 24. Kupcinet reportedly seemed shocked by and upset about round-the-clock news coverage of the shootings of JFK, Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit and Oswald, and she did not reveal foreknowledge of any of them.[10]

In 2013, the Ventura County Star commemorated the 50th anniversary of JFK's assassination by noting that the Associated Press indeed had circulated a short article about the Oxnard, California woman who had dialed her local telephone operator.[19] Newspapers published the report immediately after the assassination and before Jack Ruby shot Oswald.[19] According to the 2013 Ventura County Star piece, which quotes from an FBI report, two telephone operators listened to the unidentified woman talking for approximately 15 minutes and they believed, based on her voice, that she was middle-aged.[19] Because she provided no rational explanation of why anyone would want to kill the president, and because she rambled without identifying a possible assailant or group who could be involved or which Dallas location posed a danger to the president, the telephone operators believed she was "quite disturbed."[19] The woman's voice, which was a whisper to begin with, eventually became inaudible. That forced the operators, who were busy answering other incoming phone calls, to disconnect the "quite disturbed" female caller without the opportunity to trace the phone number she was using.[19] Regarding the possible geographic location of the woman, the Ventura County Star reported:

While the origin of the call wasn't clear, the switchboard served about 12,000 lines in the Oxnard area. News reports at the time said that included Camarillo, Oxnard and surrounding communities. Of those, 60 percent were party lines, and the telephone company was unable to identify the caller or the call's origin.[19]

JFK was shot approximately five minutes after the operators disconnected the call.[19] Penn Jones, Jr. was deceased when the Ventura County Star revealed all the pertinent facts from the FBI report of the November 22, 1963 incident in the vicinity of Oxnard, California, and why he identified the woman as Karyn Kupcinet, who lived in West Hollywood, cannot be determined.

Accidental death

Crime writer James Ellroy visited the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office in the 1990s to research Kupcinet's death. In his book Crime Wave, Ellroy states that sheriffs found a book, lying on a table in her apartment, that recommended naked dancing to free one's inhibitions.[5] It had been placed on the table as if someone had removed it from a shelf and bookmarked the pages that explained the dancing.[5] Ellroy has theorized that she followed the advice in the book, started dancing, and fell, clipping her hyoid bone on a chair.[5] He also theorized that Kupcinet may have accidentally or intentionally overdosed on pills.[1]

Ellroy also claimed that the coroner who performed Kupcinet's autopsy, Dr. Harold Kade, who had been called from his bed at approximately 2:00 a.m. to respond to the death, was a "juicehead" (alcoholic).[5] Ellroy added that Kade may have botched the autopsy in such a way that he could have been responsible for fracturing her hyoid bone instead of an intruder in her home doing it.[5]

Kupcinet's family has disputed Ellroy's theories. For many years before the deaths of her mother in 2001 and her father in 2003, both of them told people she had been murdered.[11] No one has ever been charged with Kupcinet's murder and it is now considered a cold case by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office.

Media attention

During the production and subsequent release of Oliver Stone's film JFK, Irv Kupcinet attacked the movie and the conspiracy theories surrounding it.[10] When the film's box office success led to a wave of media attention about the JFK conspiracy, NBC's Today Show broadcast a list of mysterious deaths, including that of Karyn Kupcinet. Irv Kupcinet responded to the Today broadcast in his column in the Chicago Sun-Times of February 9, 1992:

The NBC Today Show on Friday, [February 7] carried a list of people who died violently in 1963 shortly after the death of President John F. Kennedy and may have had some link to the assassination. The first name on the list was Karyn Kupcinet, my daughter. That is an atrocious outrage. She did die violently in a Hollywood murder case still unsolved. That same list was published in a book years ago with no justification or verification. The book left the impression that some on the list may have been killed to silence them because of knowledge of the assassination. Nothing could be further from the truth in my daughter's case. The list apparently has developed a life of its own and for Today to repeat the calumny is reprehensible. Karyn no longer can suffer pain by such an inexcusable mention, but her parents and her brother Jerry can.[10]

On September 30, 1999, an episode of E! True Hollywood Story, entitled "Death of a Dream: Karyn Kupcinet", detailed Kupcinet's life and theories regarding her death.[21]

Legacy

Irv and Essee Kupcinet established a playhouse at Shimer College in her honor.[22]

In 1971, Irv Kupcinet and his wife also founded the Karyn Kupcinet International School for Science, a summer research internships program at the Weizmann Institute of Science.[23]

In 2007, Kupcinet's niece, actress Kari Kupcinet-Kriser, and Washburn University professor Paul Fecteau, began work on a book about Kupcinet's unsolved murder.[24]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1960 to 1961 Hawaiian Eye Maila
Terry Crane
2 episodes
1961 The Donna Reed Show Jeannie Episode: "Mary's Little Lambs"
1961 The Ladies Man Working Girl
1961 to 1962 The Gertrude Berg Show Carol 3 episodes
1962 The Red Skelton Show Janet - Secretary Episode: "How to Fail..."
1962 G.E. True Marybelle Episode: "The Handmade Private"
1963 The Wide Country Barbara Rice Episode: "A Cry from the Mountain"
1963 Going My Way Amy Episode: "Has Anyone Seen Eddie?"
1964 Perry Mason Penny Ames Episode: "The Case of the Capering Camera"

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Felsenthal, Carol (June 2004). "The Lost World of Kup". Chicago Magazine.
  2. 1 2 Karyn Kupcinet at the Internet Movie Database
  3. Austin, John (1992). The Tales of Hollywood the Bizarre. SP Books. pp. 147–148. ISBN 1-56171-142-X.
  4. Lane, Lydia (1962-03-29). "No Starch, No Sweets". Los Angeles Times. p. C11.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Ellroy, James (1999). Crime Wave: Reportage and Fiction From the Underside of L.A. Random House, Inc. ISBN 0-375-70471-X.
  6. Austin, John (1992). The Tales of Hollywood the Bizarre. SP Books. p. 150. ISBN 1-56171-142-X.
  7. Korman, Seymour (December 2, 1963). "4 Face Quiz in Starlet's Slaying". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2009-11-05. Four male friends of Karyn Kupcinet, 22, Hollywood starlet, have been asked to take lie detector tests in the investigation of her murder, police said tonight. ... Two of her friends, Mark Goddard, 27, a television actor, and his wife, Marcia, 25, daughter of Henry Rogers, Hollywood publicist, went there last night. ...
  8. Ellroy, James (1999). Crime Wave: Reportage and Fiction From the Underside of L.A. Random House, Inc. ISBN 0-375-70471-X.
  9. Ellroy, James (1999). Crime Wave: Reportage and Fiction From the Underside of L.A. Random House, Inc. pp. 71–72. ISBN 0-375-70471-X.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 McAdams, John C. "Dead in the Wake of the Kennedy Assassination: Hollywood Homicide". Marquette University.
  11. 1 2 Felsenthal, Carol (June 2004). "The Lost World of Kup". Chicago Magazine. p. 7. Retrieved 2007-11-07.
  12. Kupcinet, Irv (1988). Kup: A Man, An Era, A City. Bonus Books. p. 191. ISBN 0-933893-70-1.
  13. Kupcinet, Irv (1988). Kup: A Man, An Era, A City. Bonus Books. pp. 186–188. ISBN 0-933893-70-1.
  14. Kupcinet, Irv (1988). Kup: A Man, An Era, A City. Bonus Books. p. 186. ISBN 0-933893-70-1.
  15. Kupcinet, Irv (1988). Kup: A Man, An Era, A City. Bonus Books. p. 187. ISBN 0-933893-70-1.
  16. By Stephan Benzkofer (November 24, 2013). "Karyn Kupcinet 1963 death still unsolved". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  17. Phil Potempa (November 29, 2013). "OFFBEAT: Chicago gossip columnist Kup never forgot beloved daughter". Northwest Indiana Times. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  18. Jones, Jr., Penn. "Papers of Penn Jones Jr. Kennedy Assassination Materials 1963-1998". Baylor Collections of Political Materials. Baylor University. Archived from the original on 2006-08-28.
  19. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Mystery Oxnard-area caller whispers about JFK's death minutes before shooting, Ventura County Star, November 21, 2013
  20. Fecteau, Paul (2005–2006). "Zapruder’s Stepchildren: The Most Fascinating People in J.F.K. Assassination Lore". Washburn University. Retrieved 2007-11-28.
  21. Death of a Dream: Karyn Kupcinet: The E! True Hollywood Story. Yahoo TV.com.
  22. Severo, Richard (2003-11-11). "Irv Kupcinet, 91, Dies; Chronicled Chicago for 60 Years". New York Times.
  23. Shur, Cindy (2006-11-07). "Remembering Irv Kupcinet". Jewish United Fund.
  24. Fecteau, Paul. "A Search for Karyn Kupcinet". Washburn University.

Further reading

External links

Karyn Kupcinet at Find a Grave


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