Knight and Day (Gloria and Doris) in Tea for Two. What Patrice was watching when she died.
— Tim
Knight and Day (Gloria and Doris) in Tea for Two. What Patrice was watching when she died.
— Tim
Dear Flynnmates,
here is another accurate account about Errol Flynn`s best man Suicide Freddie McEvoy.
When together, they could meow the birds from the trees.
But his panache got the playboy literally in deep waters.
The circumstances of his drowning a few meters off the coast of Morocco are as murky as his past.
He supposedly died trying to save his newly wed wife from going under.
The truth may not be as romantic as the legend.
Three crew members survived the shipwreck.
One was Manfred Lentner, a convicted murderer from Austria.
He gave three different versions of what happened that night.
Errol immediately wanted to salvage Freddie Mac`s yacht with his own money.
Why, you ask me!?
I believe the motif to be buried within the EF Enterprises script “Deep Waters”, which was supposed to be filmed in South France.
Barry Mahon was to produce and cute Corinne Calvet was to star.
Enjoy,
— shangheinz
Errol rather notably stayed at a home where two Hollywood megastars later lived, one fictionally, one in real life.
Where was that home?
…
Three photos below added Monday, March 29, 2021, ~2:30 am:
Below photo added ~ 11pm, Monday, March 29,,2021
— Tim
In 1950 a car pulls up to an historical marker in the desert on the California-Nevada border. The marker reads:
ROCKY MOUNTAIN, also known as Ghost Mountain
On March 26, 1865, a detachment of Confederate cavalry
crossed the state line into California under secret orders
from Gen. Robert E. Lee to rendezvous at Ghost Mountain
with one Cole Smith, with instructions to place the flag
atop the mountain, and though their mission failed, the
heroism displayed by these gallant men honored the cause
for which they fought so valiantly.
…
“In 1865, eight horsemen trek across the California desert, arriving at Ghost Mountain. Led by Captain Lafe Barstow (Errol Flynn) of the Mississippi Mountain Rifles. The eight soldiers encounter a man who calls himself California Beal (Howard Petrie). As a last desperate effort to turn the tide of the war, Barstow’s mission is to persuade Cole Smith and his 500 men to raid California on behalf of the Confederacy.”
— Tim