The Murder of Ann Woodward

  Рет қаралды 225,948

MythicMindScape

MythicMindScape

Күн бұрын

"Uncover the captivating and scandalous saga of Ann Woodward, whose life story reads like a gripping novel. From her early struggles in Kansas to becoming a fixture in New York's elite social circles, Ann's journey is one of dramatic highs and tragic lows. Dive deep into the night that changed everything - the alleged murder of her husband, Billy Woodward. What really happened that fateful night? Was it self-defense, an accident, or cold-blooded murder? From her meetings with Klaus Von Bulow, or imitating Joan Crawford, to the Swan's of Babe Paley and Slim Keith to her friendship with Wallis Simpson.
Explore the sensational trial that captivated a nation, swaying public opinion from one extreme to another. How did the media and high society react? Witness Truman Capote's fascination with Ann's story, which inspired parts of his unfinished work 'Answered Prayers,' revealing a tangled web of lies, secrets, and betrayals among the Swans of New York high society.
This video also delves into Capote's own tragic story, from his meteoric rise to fame with 'In Cold Blood' to his fall into despair, paralleling Ann's downfall. Trace the trajectory leading to Ann's own tragic end, and explore how fame, fortune, and scandal can weave a dangerous web leading to destruction.
Join us for a thorough exploration of these intertwined lives in the labyrinth of high society's darkest secrets. Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more deep dives into history's most enigmatic figures."
Timecodes:
0:00 - intro
00:54 Ann's Childhood
03:00 Moves to New York
04:48 Meets William Woodward
05:42 Billy Woodward Romance
07:00 Marital problems
10:21 Childhood of Capote and Mother's Suicide
11:29 The Murder of Billy Woodward
20:05 'In Cold Blood'
22:56 Capote's fame
23:08 Swans and black and white ball
24:50 Revenge on Ann Woodward
#feudcapotevstheswans #AnnWoodward #TrumanCapote #InColdBlood #Swans #SocietyScandal #HighSocietyFallout #AnsweredPrayers #BabePaley #SlimKeith #HistoricalMysteries #HighSocietyScandal
#LostFriendships
#AnsweredPrayersUnveiled
#HistoricalMystery
#GlamourAndBetrayal
#LiteraryLegacy
#NYCHighSociety

Пікірлер: 426
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching the video and commenting. Many viewers have commented on the background music being too loud. We have noted it for future videos.
@ileanamuntean7338
@ileanamuntean7338 2 ай бұрын
The music is actually quite nice but a little bit too loud.
@fastinbulvis2223
@fastinbulvis2223 2 ай бұрын
Great video! Thanks! The music was a bit loud. But aside from that it was really well done.
@mcmlxii4419
@mcmlxii4419 2 ай бұрын
@MythicMindEscape21 ~ The music is fine. It's not too loud at all. Some people just want something to complain about. Ignore their stupidity.
@fastinbulvis2223
@fastinbulvis2223 2 ай бұрын
@@mcmlxii4419 No one mentioning the music is complaining, nor are they stupid. We like the channel and want it to be better, and MMS21 has responded very well to the feedback.
@SwedeProof
@SwedeProof 2 ай бұрын
​​​@@fastinbulvis2223 You're absolutely right! The thoughtful comments here are generally referred to as "positive feedback" or "positive critiques." The negative, demeaning word "stupidity" has no business being here.
@1212matt
@1212matt 2 ай бұрын
The way she took care of her mother and took her home to be buried there's something to be said about that
@TSC-hr7ir
@TSC-hr7ir Ай бұрын
I agree
@user-qj6wj5kz3x
@user-qj6wj5kz3x 15 күн бұрын
Yes 👍
@GoldenAgeCelebrities-jb6hu
@GoldenAgeCelebrities-jb6hu 7 күн бұрын
totally agree
@joelex7966
@joelex7966 2 ай бұрын
I would not consider Truman Capote a reliable source under any circumstances.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
'Truman Capote made lying an art form. A minor art form' Gore Vidal.
@mtaylor7307
@mtaylor7307 2 ай бұрын
In Cold Blood took licensing that the people in the story had little ability to dispute.
@Bebecat477
@Bebecat477 Ай бұрын
I feel sympathy for her. She took care of her mom, dug her way out of poverty only to be chewed up and spit out by these materialistic snobs.
@karenkasulke2294
@karenkasulke2294 2 ай бұрын
Truman hated her because she saw through his bullshit.
@ecaldwell9
@ecaldwell9 2 ай бұрын
Exactly! That’s what I was coming to post.
@onitaijeoma1450
@onitaijeoma1450 2 ай бұрын
And he saw his real life depiction through her
@atis9061
@atis9061 2 ай бұрын
she was a hater/homophobe
@JS-ti8ny
@JS-ti8ny 2 ай бұрын
Atis Oh get off your virtue-signaling high horse. And for your information Anne didn’t call Capote a ‘maggot’ to his face, that’s not how it happened at all! Capote was lurking Anne Woodward as she a Von Bulow were drinking, Capote can hear them but he is intentionally sitting hidden behind a colonnade. A third party cones to Anne’s table and discreetly tells her that Capote is present and Anne tells that person her comment out of frustration that this degenerate is literally stalking her! When he over hears this and realises she now knows he’s out to spy on her and Bulow he then gets up and confronts her coming from behind the pillar he was seated behind and Anne apologised to him assuming he likely overheard her comment. That POS degenerate psychopath was literally STALKING Anne Woodward in St Moritz. And then proceeded to destroy her the way only Capote could do.
@Karl-dd4om
@Karl-dd4om 2 ай бұрын
@@atis9061 At that time almost everyone was a homophobe! Most people were religious and believed in the Bible, where homosexuality was definitely condemned!
@llamamama2910
@llamamama2910 2 ай бұрын
Dirt he found out on her? A hard start in life means she has dirt? What a snob.
@rocknroller77
@rocknroller77 2 ай бұрын
He was disgusting.
@jakestroll6518
@jakestroll6518 2 ай бұрын
Truman Capote was a textbook narcissist. I’m confused at how people didn’t recognise it then.
@atis9061
@atis9061 2 ай бұрын
it's called projection
@_HimToo
@_HimToo 2 ай бұрын
Right, her husband called it dirt as well. Most people started poor back then.
@MarvinaBigby
@MarvinaBigby Ай бұрын
Truman Capote was a mean discusting man
@carolchristiansen635
@carolchristiansen635 2 ай бұрын
Truman was a very selfish individual. He was painfully cruel. He really didn’t care what he did to others that was obvious.
@kimmccabe1422
@kimmccabe1422 2 ай бұрын
I'm a writer and tho my characters are from real life, never would I make their identities obvious, especially my friends. Or be so negative n cruel. Truman was def a vain n jealous man. Dude was full of deadly sins
@lashainereynolds1775
@lashainereynolds1775 2 ай бұрын
He murdered her.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
@@kimmccabe1422 The best writers draw from their experiences, Truman's best works were all based on his life or people he knew. However, Answered Prayers was not only poorly written, it was meant to hurt many people. I wish you continued success in your writing.
@user-hx1jf3ll8p
@user-hx1jf3ll8p 2 ай бұрын
Exactly! I understand his life's situation not good but treating others badly to make yourself feel important isn't good either.I wasn't familiar with him until I saw this video and didn't know the story behind him in the made for tv movie. He was obnoxious. I hate to be cruel but," I'm calling it like I see it."
@dreamsofturtles1828
@dreamsofturtles1828 2 ай бұрын
Never confuse having talent with having a good character.
@kayregulski6828
@kayregulski6828 2 ай бұрын
No, I do not think she was guilty. And yes, I think that Truman drove her to suicide. And I think that Anns mother-in-law ruined her grandchildrens lives by taking them away from their mother.
@j.oostdijk5898
@j.oostdijk5898 2 ай бұрын
She fled away from all the agony and pain, even if it meant she had to leave her children. She was too broken and devastated Sad really. Copote was a mean Homosexual little man big mouth
@bovnycccoperalover3579
@bovnycccoperalover3579 2 ай бұрын
Their two boys also committed suicide. A very tragic family.
@TM-10-py7ji
@TM-10-py7ji 23 күн бұрын
@@j.oostdijk5898and seemingly jealous, disgusting, social climbing toad. IMO
@GoldenAgeCelebrities-jb6hu
@GoldenAgeCelebrities-jb6hu 7 күн бұрын
It's all a tragedy
@maryt2196
@maryt2196 2 ай бұрын
He sounded like a cruel bastard...
@rosaleeharris1192
@rosaleeharris1192 2 ай бұрын
And he was and that's that.
@ratso4443
@ratso4443 2 ай бұрын
She took care of her mother, that’s all I know.
@MummyBrown
@MummyBrown 2 ай бұрын
I agree. Quiet as it’s kept, women married up or married for status in this era. That’s a sign of the times. It says a lot that she was a Crawford fan. Both Joan Crawford and Barbara Stanwyk were typecast as strong women that went from rags to riches. This was a popular theme of that era for a reason.
@milliemouse6525
@milliemouse6525 2 ай бұрын
Yup, she stuck by her mom. If she had been a truly horrible person she never would have done that!
@atis9061
@atis9061 2 ай бұрын
I thought of that of course. she gets a gold star for that one
@scallopohare9431
@scallopohare9431 2 ай бұрын
@@MummyBrownMany still do! 😂😂😂
@saddletramp5000
@saddletramp5000 2 ай бұрын
That shows the true character of a person. Not who their friends were or what they had in their bank account. That's the problem with this world. People aspire to be wealthy more than they aspire to be decent and kind.
@Leeza3370
@Leeza3370 2 ай бұрын
I'm more for Ann Woodward than Truman, he was a mean little gossipy man. I still can't believe that he thought they were stupid enough to not know it was them that he was writing about
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
He seemed to have a very low opinion of women in general.
@Leeza3370
@Leeza3370 2 ай бұрын
From everything I've read, it all stems from his mother. Who wanted to abort him, can you imagine the damage that would do to a kid or a grown man finding out that your mother didn't want you
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
@@Leeza3370 I think it must have been very hard, and she was never very loving of him. She hated the way he acted, sent him to military school hoping to cure him of his homosexual tendencies. When Joe began having affairs, she again blamed Truman, she would go from periods of raging at him to periods of indifference. She was a deeply unhappy woman. In Truman's younger years (Truman embellished his past, much like Ann so it is hard to know the truth) He says he would watch men engage in sex acts with his mother in front of him, even one incident where she was choked by a belt in front of him. At nights she would leave him locked in hotel rooms as she went out to meet men, and he would scream himself to sleep.
@Leeza3370
@Leeza3370 2 ай бұрын
Definitely not mother of the year lol
@herminepursch2470
@herminepursch2470 2 ай бұрын
He had a choice of how he was going to be
@mistiroberts1576
@mistiroberts1576 2 ай бұрын
Truman Capote was a little toad not a tragic figure; he betrayed his friends
@roadrunner381
@roadrunner381 2 ай бұрын
Bahaha, little toad! 🐸
@MadgeGreen
@MadgeGreen Ай бұрын
Yes, he even tried to take credit for writing 'To Kill a Mockingbird ' out of his jealousy of Harper Lee's success. She did a lot of the investigating for him for his book that became the movie 'In Cold Blood', yet he gave her no credit.
@golden8972
@golden8972 2 ай бұрын
There's absolutely NOTHING glamorous about "high society". And so terribly heartbreaking 💔 about her two sons.
@sourpatchkid394
@sourpatchkid394 2 ай бұрын
Anne Woodward worked hard to get out of a bad situation. The only way women could back then. Horrible… Anne’s poor sons..
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Yes. That is a great tragedy. I can't imagine how hard it was for them growing up.
@Andreatheists-yy1oj
@Andreatheists-yy1oj 20 күн бұрын
Anne did not have her children to destroy them.
@anastasiayatsenuk
@anastasiayatsenuk 2 ай бұрын
I feel very sorry for her kids😢 such a tragic story of the family
@linphillips8331
@linphillips8331 2 ай бұрын
I feel sorry for Ann Woodward's kids.
@anastasiayatsenuk
@anastasiayatsenuk 2 ай бұрын
Indeed. Probably they are the ones who suffered the most in this story😢
@terrymoore565
@terrymoore565 2 ай бұрын
Interesting...a time when secrets were over rated, when being poor was a sin, to overcome was a sin, to achieve was a sin, all put to rest when it was discovered that everyone had secrets.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Well phrased.
@anastasiayatsenuk
@anastasiayatsenuk 2 ай бұрын
It's more acceptable today because people post their own secrets all over tik tok and youtube. Not much for them to lose, their lives are there for everyone to see😂 back in the time when there was no social media people worried more about their information being shared as they couldn't predict what effect it would have
@TheFinalBoss316
@TheFinalBoss316 2 ай бұрын
Hard to say, she didn't know she was cut out of the will. Also everyone at the party was talking about the prowler. Ann may have seen it as an opportunity or she may have simply been afraid. Billy and her always argued; I suppose we can never know. But we can know that Capote was vengeful and spiteful and died miserable having squandered his talent. Thanks for the video, I really like that you go deep into the topic, and try and give a fair view.
@scallopohare9431
@scallopohare9431 2 ай бұрын
She definitely gets props for taking care of her mother. I did, too. Then again, my mother worked her way out of a dead end town by going to nursing school.
@The-Portland-Daily-Blink
@The-Portland-Daily-Blink Ай бұрын
I think what is so important and what so many people don't understand is that Truman was a high school dropout who had never taken even ONE college course. He dealt with a HUGE inferiority complex. This resulted in a great deal of resentment to people like the Swans. Beautiful women, mostly well educated, from good families. He would never have any of that. Betraying those women was a thrill for Capote. He never cared about any of them. Betraying them was something he could not resist. He was a hollow man, not very smart, not very well educated and not the best writer either. Truman told great stories, and he wrote great stories, but he was NOT a great writer. If you look at his prose, you'll see how common and simple it was. I could barely get through Breakfast at Tiffany's, is a great STORY, but not a well written BOOK. He was a hollow and vindictive man.
@milliemouse6525
@milliemouse6525 2 ай бұрын
If you liked the video you should check out The Two Mrs Greenvilles by another fly on the wall, Dominick Dunne. There was also a great mini series with Ann Margaret 😊
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you. I also recommend the book 'Deliberate Cruelty' by Roseanne Montillo. She gives such a detailed account of the murder and the days leading up to it.
@retha1875
@retha1875 2 ай бұрын
Dominick Dunne has written some great books and articles. His daughter was stabbed to death by a stalker ex BF.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
@@retha1875 💔💔
@Elizabeth-xn9rk
@Elizabeth-xn9rk 2 ай бұрын
@@retha1875 She was strangled and in a coma for days. I remember her in Poltergeist. Such a sad story.
@user-hx1jf3ll8p
@user-hx1jf3ll8p 2 ай бұрын
Very well narrated.I saw the movie the two Mrs.Grenvilles starring Ann Margaret as Ann Woodward and Claudette Colbert as Elsie Woodward based on the Family .It was a good movie but sad.Some of the contents in this video wasn't in the movie, this is VERY informative,thank you. This is a tragedy I couldn't figure out.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for the comment, you are right the maid's story is very interesting. As well as the witness who came to the door, and the children not waking up.
@user-hx1jf3ll8p
@user-hx1jf3ll8p 2 ай бұрын
@@MythicMindScape21 You are most welcome. It IS quite a Mystery.
@susilabello5371
@susilabello5371 2 ай бұрын
And Dominick Dunn's novel "The Two Mrs Grenvilles" was fabulous too! In fact, I actually love all his books
@thomasmcnerney9745
@thomasmcnerney9745 2 ай бұрын
​@@user-hx1jf3ll8pread the book, The Two Mrs Grenvilles" It's far better than the awful movie. You will enjoy it very much.
@user-hx1jf3ll8p
@user-hx1jf3ll8p 2 ай бұрын
@@susilabello5371 I've been meaning to read the book since I learned of this Family through the movie. I'm at least 7 books behind in my reading.I'll probably have to go ahead and read it.
@michelleschnars4722
@michelleschnars4722 2 ай бұрын
Could do without the background music
@MummyBrown
@MummyBrown 2 ай бұрын
Quiet as it’s kept, women married up or married for status in this era; that’s security in a time when women weren’t allowed many of the freedoms they are today. People forget that. That’s a sign of the times that can’t be sidestepped when building out a person’s character. It says a lot that she was a Crawford fan. Both Joan Crawford and Barbara Stanwyk were typecast as strong women that went from rags to riches. This was a them of that era for a reason.
@emanaeemanae4002
@emanaeemanae4002 2 ай бұрын
To be those ladies friends, and do what capote did. The evil, the betrayal, all of it just…Unfathomable.
@user-eh3zv1ex5o
@user-eh3zv1ex5o 2 ай бұрын
Well, he was a Fruity-Campy punchbowl of Iniquity and self-loathing. The mirror never lies, you see.
@glorialumbano3970
@glorialumbano3970 2 ай бұрын
You actually feel sorry for these entitled women?
@anastasiayatsenuk
@anastasiayatsenuk 2 ай бұрын
It's interesting how would a scenario like this develop in the modern world
@user-eh3zv1ex5o
@user-eh3zv1ex5o 2 ай бұрын
Watch American Psycho, with Christian Bale, circa 2000.....an excellent expose' of the mind-set of the Rich and Shameless. It knows NO bounds.
@thelinguist3683
@thelinguist3683 2 ай бұрын
She was offered 2 million dollars by Elsie and William in 1948, to divorce their son and refused. So there is that. Billy was also beating her, she was heavily medicated and clearly in a desperate situation. Personally I have no idea if it was intentional or not. One of the pieces of evidence against her, was that she used earplugs in bed, so wouldn't have heard anything. But if everyone was talking about a prowler, and the prowler had slept in their garage the night before; I am pretty sure she wouldn't wear ear plugs to bed.
@gloriamontgomery6900
@gloriamontgomery6900 2 ай бұрын
And both Anne and Billy were terrified of the prowler and had taken firearms into their separate bedrooms before going to sleep. I’m inclined to think , with her level of drug and alcohol use on top of things , that it was simply a tragic accident.
@JS-ti8ny
@JS-ti8ny 2 ай бұрын
Look at the picture of Anne and Billy dancing. It’s the happiest photograph of Anne Woodward you’ll ever see! Anne is the reason they stayed together as long as they did. Going over the details I’m convinced Anne was stoned on booze and pills and already alarmed by the fact the prowler had been in their house already. It was a horrible accident and then they caught the prowler who admitted to being in the house that night. Anne almost took her own life that night but didn’t because of her children and mother needed her. Her eldest son was clearly infected by Ethel and believe Anne shot him intentionally. So sad. Anne Woodwards Legacy is her loving tribute to her mother.
@thegoodthebadtheevil7691
@thegoodthebadtheevil7691 2 ай бұрын
The sin falls on old man Woodward. Instead of cheating on his faithful wife, he should have introduced his son to Anne. Perhaps they could have had a normal relationship. Where was the love for his family, for the woman who gave him a son? Where was the gratitude and humility to God for blessing him with wealth and family? Those things would have saved his son from a bad relationship, his children from drugs and most likely sealed a good future for the family for generations to come. God family country. In that order. For without God there is no family and without family there is no country.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
I always wonder if Elsie knew about the affair, or if it carried on while she was married to Billy. So many tragic things about this story, and lives ruined.
@WydeAWake-yc3tp
@WydeAWake-yc3tp 2 ай бұрын
I agree about the unnecessary background music. But do appreciate your calm demeanor.
@ileanamuntean7338
@ileanamuntean7338 2 ай бұрын
What dreadful people.
@lindydomanick8498
@lindydomanick8498 2 ай бұрын
❤😊New sub here🎉 This video was EXCELLENT perfectly written and narrated!!! I LOVE UR CHANNEL!😊❤
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, it means a lot to hear a comment like that. Glad you enjoyed it. We are a new channel and aim to continue to provide interesting videos on these topics every week. Thanks for joining us ❤❤
@anastasiayatsenuk
@anastasiayatsenuk 2 ай бұрын
I agree. The author does so much work studying the subject. I can tell the author takes her job seriously ❤
@ronlee2776
@ronlee2776 Ай бұрын
Wow Capote was a full blown monster! But then again most narcissists are.
@Joe-rv6jr
@Joe-rv6jr 2 ай бұрын
What a cesspool of characters displaying some of the lowest forms of human behaviour … Murder , suicides , fractured famillies , social climbing , malicious gossip ,prostitution ,corruption , alcoholism , child abandonment and staggering levels of narcissism…I think thats everything !! … The lesson to be learnt , if you missed it, is that the love of money is the root of all evil
@pbohearn
@pbohearn 2 ай бұрын
Truman Capote was very envious because he wanted to be one of those women, but could never be. He was enraged and thus sought to take his girlfriends down in a very humiliating way, just asa he had been humiliated many times in his life. he was the meanest of the mean girls. With a rapier wit.
@TraciRapin
@TraciRapin 2 ай бұрын
Nailed it right there. He wanted to be them and he was petty and jealous. These days he could've at least got a sex change. But even then he'd be a petty jealous little asshole.
@user-eh3zv1ex5o
@user-eh3zv1ex5o 2 ай бұрын
I'm sure his Buttikins had been severely mauled as a tenderloin...... His unforgiving Posterior churned relentlessly after that. Mincing uncontrollably, like an out-of-control Fruity Fly.
@deefreeman59
@deefreeman59 Ай бұрын
The music is distracting.
@lauriepearce
@lauriepearce 2 ай бұрын
Fabulous, simply fabulous.....you did great on this one!!! Please bring us more!!! Lastly, can anyone tell me the name of that movie with Demi Moore from this?!
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the comment. We will do a light video on Wednesdays and try to deep dives on Friday most weeks. Videos like this one are very time consuming so we will do our best to try and make it weekly:) The Demi Moore footage is from the show' Feud Capote Vs the Swans.' If there are any topics you would like to see covered please let me know. It's a great pleasure to make these videos.
@tricivenola8164
@tricivenola8164 Ай бұрын
Thanks for this excellent video. It's kinder to Ann than, say, Dominick Dunne's book "The Two Mrs Grenvilles," not to mention Season Two of Feud: Capote vs The Swans. I had no idea about Ann's rough upbringing. We all know she was a ruthless golddigger, but it's interesting to see where that came from. The feud with his Swans didn't kill Capote, it was alcoholism, he always had it, and that had everything to do with his hideous behavior toward the end.
@pollywells3603
@pollywells3603 2 ай бұрын
Very interesting story ! Great delivery , good pace, ( yeah background music needs to drop down a notch) but clear concise unbiased commentary . 👍
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you, we have noted it for future videos. :)
@lmc2375
@lmc2375 2 ай бұрын
Truman, it appears you indeed were a toad, after all. Your next life will put you on the receiving end of your once actions. We do create our own reality - Damn, there really is no one else to blame. RIP A.W. and her boys. 🙏❤💫
@JAGreen-lj9zi
@JAGreen-lj9zi 2 ай бұрын
😀5 years older?! You'd thought she robbed a craddle!! My mother was almost 4 years older than my dad yet they had everything in common. Trust you may she and him was just babies together, she a couple of years older but he will catch up with her when he hit 21! Because they remember the same things, music, arts, movies, food, politics That is not much of a age difference.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 27 күн бұрын
True.
@melindamelissa4784
@melindamelissa4784 2 ай бұрын
Truman Capote and Harper Lee were actually childhood friends. He was represented as the character “Dill” in To Kill a Mockingbird”
@MexicoDigDoctor
@MexicoDigDoctor 2 ай бұрын
Yep!
@sallyozuna3883
@sallyozuna3883 2 ай бұрын
everyone knows that
@melindamelissa4784
@melindamelissa4784 2 ай бұрын
Actually, everyone doesn't but do go off.@@sallyozuna3883
@melindamelissa4784
@melindamelissa4784 2 ай бұрын
Actually they don't. :) @@sallyozuna3883
@kymi3335
@kymi3335 2 ай бұрын
Oh my goodness. I didn't know that!!
@user-kc7mu4jp4p
@user-kc7mu4jp4p 2 ай бұрын
I am only @3:16, but it's depressing enough already. Her mother was at the receiving end of this vile, patriarchal misogynistic world that is so even today. She failed at everything she tried to do to raise herself and her children out of poverty, despite being saddled with so many pregnancies and losing babies, and yet she gave to her daughter, Ann, everything she had - $400 in $5 notes. What an icon of selfless motherhood! Billions like her have perished unknown and unhonoured for millennia. Here's my tribute to our mothers! 💐💐💐 And also to the capotes of the world - 💀💀💀
@llamamama2910
@llamamama2910 2 ай бұрын
Let’s see, what’s worse-gold digger who would actually stay, or wife beater who cheats on her
@priscamolotsi
@priscamolotsi 2 ай бұрын
Aah..so is this where the inspiration for the Two Mrs Grenvilles comes from? The part where the reporter meets the second Mrs Grenville at a party? I read the book in 1987 and this part really stood out to me!
@Jack-wr5wg
@Jack-wr5wg 2 ай бұрын
What an amazing story. Very well narration. Well done!
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you :)
@user-gu1jk4qn6b
@user-gu1jk4qn6b 2 ай бұрын
My mother and Truman shared a few years, as children, in a small SW Alabama town. She died, in 1976, before I knew who he was. He doesn't sound like he grew up into anyone she would have kept company with. He sounds a bit mean.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Very interesting, what was the town like or life like for your mother in those days if you don't mind telling.
@cattuslavandula
@cattuslavandula 2 ай бұрын
Ah, this was the basis for Dominick Dunne's novel The Two Mrs Grenvilles.
@reidx512
@reidx512 2 ай бұрын
HI, I know a lady in Kentucky, (horse country) that was very young but was around with Ann Woodward. She was a little girl, but remembered all of those that cam around her home. She would continue to discuss, Ann Woodward and how they felt oe knew she was out of place. An example she would say is that her concern with horses was funny. She did not know a Mare from a Gelding. Indeed she was in a place she knew not of, and even those that truly did not want her. Kinda sad...
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for the interesting story.
@carolyndavison6095
@carolyndavison6095 Ай бұрын
The music is lovely but I have hearing problems and the volume in this video is distracting. Loved this story. Please just turn the music volume down. Thank you. New subscriber!!!!!
@stellamal7088
@stellamal7088 2 ай бұрын
Stop juging people this woman, ann , had a hard life she loved billy and had two children by him and was abused by him and his mother she wad beautiful and intelligent but did not fit into societys 1 rules she is innocent let her rest in peace❤
@DuffyGuerreroBooks
@DuffyGuerreroBooks 2 ай бұрын
You are naive. She loved his money and social position.
@jenniferskoufalos7532
@jenniferskoufalos7532 2 ай бұрын
He was an abuser. He was a serial adulterer. She liked money. Huge difference in personality dysfunction.
@poetcomic1
@poetcomic1 2 ай бұрын
While the publishers were waiting for Answered Prayers, Capote did a book of short works called 'Music for Chameleons' There is one work that supposedly was to be part of Answered Prayers that is called Mojave. If the entire book had been as beautifully written and sensitive as Mojave it would have been a treasure. The little he DID publish of the book is unreadable trash unworthy of Truman's talent.
@reneedennis2011
@reneedennis2011 2 ай бұрын
This case was profiled on Infamous Murders. Thank you for this video.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching )
@reneedennis2011
@reneedennis2011 2 ай бұрын
@@MythicMindScape21 You're welcome.
@FigaroHey
@FigaroHey 5 күн бұрын
I commented that Anne was right in her characterization of Capote as a fog and a toad, and KZfaq removed the comment and threatened me with denial of my human right to express my opinion. Hatred of the truth is the real hate crime.
@Deepbluecat
@Deepbluecat Ай бұрын
Nice work !
@melindamelissa4784
@melindamelissa4784 2 ай бұрын
Enjoyed this but what about her connection to the notorious Klaus von Bulow ?
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Just a fling I believe, when she went to Europe after Elsie essentially forced her too, she had expected to escape the gossip and media. However, she found she was unable to do that, and was not welcomed into the social circles that she had been before. Claus was a welcome distraction, I include the story in the beginning as that was the moment where she supposedly called Truman the slur.
@jakestroll6518
@jakestroll6518 2 ай бұрын
@@MythicMindScape21 Ever notice how Truman gave no account of a man calling him the F slur? Does that make any sense in the 1960s let alone today? Me-thinks he would either make it up or pretend to take special offence when he needed an excuse to be vicious towards a woman. A veneer of righteousness. Truman Capote was basically Perez Hilton if Perez could write.
@patriciaoreilly8907
@patriciaoreilly8907 2 ай бұрын
Music to loud & unnecessary 😊
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the advice
@anitakephart3851
@anitakephart3851 2 ай бұрын
Too not to
@lewismusser7184
@lewismusser7184 2 ай бұрын
I don't think the music is too loud, but the shotgun blast is ringing in my ears! You have really outdone yourself 🎉! Unlike Capote, you managed to weave the monstrous narrative into a cogent and factual retelling. Oh, the compartmentalization!✍️ The forces at play among the characters in this decidedly unfunny tragicomedy are enough to make a simpleton extatic with his station in life! Yes, Anne and Lillie Mae rose from hardscrabble beginnings but their endings were worse.One of Capote's biographers said Truman had a metaphorical whip that he used on others (boy did he!), but eventually used on himself.For all the glitz and glamour it's one of the tawdriest stories imaginable And tragic. But it's like who cares?! Capote's literary genius up until 'In Cold Blood ' puts him in a writer's pantheon, without question. And his Swans were, for the most part, extrordinary women. But the only ones who came out smelling like roses 🌹 were CZ Guest and the great Babe Paley❤ ..... poor Anne Woodward.... PS Your work reminds me of former New York Times drama critic, Frank Rich. Forget the review, his writing was always compelling and captivating. And so is yours. As a narrator myself, I'm studying your technique.So keep up the stellar work.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your thoughtful and detailed comment! It's always a bit nerve-wracking to delve into such complex and nuanced stories, especially one as intricate and emotionally charged as the tale of Ann Woodward and Truman Capote. My original script was two hours 🤣🤣. I tried very hard to get it under 30, so much more I wanted to include. I'm particularly touched by your comparison to Frank Rich - that's quite a compliment! I am not sure , I deserve it, but I am trying to get better on these longer Friday videos. The Wednesday ones, are just shorter forays into topics. It's comments like yours that inspire me to keep striving for excellence in my work. Your perspective as a fellow narrator is invaluable, and I'm humbled that you find my technique worth studying. I look forward to continuing to share compelling stories and hope they resonate with you as much as your feedback has with me. Let's keep exploring these intricate narratives together. Thank you again for your support and encouragement! 🌹✍🎉And if you have any tips on how we can make the channel better, I'd happily welcome them. Have a nice Sunday ❤❤
@Lisa-je5bb
@Lisa-je5bb 2 ай бұрын
I love that these are not AI narrated
@lewismusser7184
@lewismusser7184 2 ай бұрын
You are so right. AI is not an acceptable mode of narration because a documentary needs the ability of a true storyteller to bring the subject matter to life. Thanks for your most pertinent observation.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you, they are very time consuming. I want to do one every week but it makes it hard as so much research goes in to just the material then the script then the editing. So we will just have a quick one on Jayne Mansfield this week. But next week we will delve into the story I have been working on for about a month, about Judy Garland. Her story is so sad and complex, I want to do it justice. I really appreciate the comments and feedback.
@lewismusser7184
@lewismusser7184 2 ай бұрын
​​@@MythicMindScape21I'm Soo aware of the process. I too am involved in the roll-out of a documentary and it just takes time. You are on weekly deadlines which makes quality control an overriding factor. With a film 🎥 one keeps their eyes on the prize (the wrap) but hopefully grace allows your unburnished muse to get there with you. So much shop talk, I know, but I know how very busy you are. Good good luck ❤ and break a leg!...
@irshgrl500
@irshgrl500 2 ай бұрын
This was an interesting & informative video. Thank you
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for the comment. ) Hope you will enjoy our video next Friday.
@Erindhollis
@Erindhollis 2 ай бұрын
Great video!
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you
@atis9061
@atis9061 2 ай бұрын
A fascinating story! I don't know if anyone caught the photo of her with a shotgun after killing a tiger for sport! That made my stomach turn. No one can drive a person to suicide. It is a collection of experiences that incites that. She cursed her own family is what I think. She stood by her mother. That proves she was a decent person who was just exceptionally wounded. I wept when you got to her children's suicides. Her children needed to be with their mother. The sadness is overwhelming!
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Good eyes. Yes, she was very proud of that. She was told she had killed the biggest ever tiger by a woman in India. No idea how true that is, but Ann would tell people that story. She actually killed two tigers. I didn't like the photo either, but felt it should be included. Thanks for the comment, the story is incredibly sad.
@atis9061
@atis9061 2 ай бұрын
I love tigers. They feel like relatives of mine rather than wild animals. My personal Vedic star sign animal is a female tiger. In India, to kill a tiger will bring a curse on you. @@MythicMindScape21
@christinerobbins6512
@christinerobbins6512 Ай бұрын
Is there a movie on this
@bovnycccoperalover3579
@bovnycccoperalover3579 2 ай бұрын
I read that a man admitted to attempting to burgle the home that night Woodward, Jr. was killed.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Yes I cover that later on in the video his name was Paul Wirths.
@lindagatti7796
@lindagatti7796 Күн бұрын
Totally enjoy your narrations.👍👍👍👍
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 Күн бұрын
Thank you so much.
@jackieclark9679
@jackieclark9679 2 ай бұрын
He basically caused her children to each take their lives
@shirleyredd6107
@shirleyredd6107 2 ай бұрын
I don’t believe she was guilty of murder anyway the law said she wasn’t
@jakestroll6518
@jakestroll6518 2 ай бұрын
She shot him but all evidence points to it being an accident. The bullet entered the side of his head as though he was facing downstairs maybe having also heard the same sounds she heard. It also makes no sense that he was walking towards her room in the middle of the night. Either he was investigating the sounds or he was coming to harm her and she covered for him to protect the family name
@mistiroberts1576
@mistiroberts1576 2 ай бұрын
Anne Woodward was born Evangeline Lucille Crowell and she was my 6th cousin twice removed
@windstorm1000
@windstorm1000 2 ай бұрын
Tell us more please
@anonz975
@anonz975 2 ай бұрын
Excellent story and narration. Thank you.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you
@LLynneM
@LLynneM 2 ай бұрын
Wow the background music should be in the background. It’s so loud and the squealing is such a distraction. It’s hard to listen to for a half hour. A shame.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
We are always striving to improve, a few others mentioned that and it has been noted.
@ruthdevisser6632
@ruthdevisser6632 Ай бұрын
Dominick Dunne had a black and white ball two years earlier to which Capote was invited,Capote copied it ,claimed it as original and did not invite Dominick Dunne .He was a deeply flawed person but a brilliant writer.Like all artistic people ,they always live on the edge and have various addictions .
@ria1636
@ria1636 Ай бұрын
On the contrary, not all artistic people live on the edge and have various addictions.
@Andreatheists-yy1oj
@Andreatheists-yy1oj 20 күн бұрын
No but her association to Truman is where she failed herself. He was like a poison. The world she associated with was sick.
@nancyhammons3594
@nancyhammons3594 2 ай бұрын
So, Capote was a toad and the male version of Taylor Swift, "Break up with me and I'll put you in a song."
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
It is interesting he threatened them with that , yet they were still surprised when he did it.
@dawnvierra4063
@dawnvierra4063 2 ай бұрын
😊 i just found your channel on my feed. Very well done, thank you. I have subscribed.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thanks and welcome
@paulasmall5113
@paulasmall5113 2 ай бұрын
New here beauriful reading but the music is very loud and distracts from your voice and reading
@gingergrycel8551
@gingergrycel8551 2 ай бұрын
There was another case in Roanoke VA with similar circumstances but I can’t remember what year? I remember the little girls name was Willow and the man killed her father, mother and sister just so he could have her, then he set their house on fire.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
I am not sure what you mean, maybe the Earl Bramblett case?
@agneslong2323
@agneslong2323 Ай бұрын
@@MythicMindScape21 I live in the area and that's what comes to my mind.
@sandradearing604
@sandradearing604 2 ай бұрын
she was so happy about that tiger. forget her. i understand it was a time...but we ALL know when it is WRONG to do something. poor ann...she was played by a substandard actress. the great depression was a poopie time to have been born.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
She actually killed two tigers. Apparently the one she shot was the biggest ever killed by a woman (according to her biographer). I almost didn't include the pic, as I don't like it, but I felt it was part of her story, as she was indeed proud of it.
@susieq2806
@susieq2806 Ай бұрын
No matter what,Truman Capote was very cruel to push Ann to suicide. Her children are the true tragedy here. 😢
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 27 күн бұрын
Yes, so many lives destroyed.
@joyceadams5765
@joyceadams5765 5 күн бұрын
Ann killed herself. But being cut off from the society she liked so much worked on her. His article was not nice but neither was he. Ann Woodward was selfish in her own right. Billy, the kids and her end was a tragedy
@lioness7582
@lioness7582 2 ай бұрын
I read the book,The two Mrs. Grenville,'s ( I hope that was the title) anyway it was very good but a little crude at times,I might order it because was many moons ago that I read it.
@LaurieMarieValdezRNCCRN
@LaurieMarieValdezRNCCRN Ай бұрын
I remember this😢
@CM-oj3oi
@CM-oj3oi 2 ай бұрын
TRUMAN WAS A SNAKE. SIMPLE AS.
@MissCane9
@MissCane9 Ай бұрын
Being murdered is not the same as commiting suicide.
@_HimToo
@_HimToo 2 ай бұрын
So her story sounds pretty spot on. The prowler was there & broke the window which was the crash she heard, but she just shot her husband instead of the prowler. I think with the prowler's testimony she would've gotten off either way... and it sounds like she did. She's trash for giving up her kids, and she got played by her MIL
@julia-ff9kt
@julia-ff9kt 2 ай бұрын
Great video. Thanks.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thanks so much, its great to hear kind words.
@robertoponce8077
@robertoponce8077 Ай бұрын
Wow, a shocking documentary ❤❤
@saddletramp5000
@saddletramp5000 2 ай бұрын
I'm repulsed by these things. The terms "high society" and "upper echelon". Those things that require the "uncivilized" to attend etiquette classes. I'd rather live my life on my terms, as the person I am, than pretend to be someone I'm not, just to drink champagne from crystal glassware and not have to iron my clothes. Hanging out with women who gossip all day long and despise their husbands. It always sounds horrible to me, yet people still aspire to live that life. I honestly don't get it.
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Ann like many others I think believed in the fairy tales she saw on the silver screen. She was born poor, and knew nothing of the world, so as with many in that time, when they saw the 'glamorous' life in films they believed in it. She didn't know the reality of Joan Crawford's life and in those days the Hollywood machine kept the scandalous stories from ever reaching public ears.
@saddletramp5000
@saddletramp5000 2 ай бұрын
@MythicMindScape21 That's so very true. And behind the eyes of almost every silver screen actress, behind the false lashes and mascara, there's a sad girl who has a tragic story to tell.
@jamesl9371
@jamesl9371 2 ай бұрын
Excellent video Excellent job and informative I think she did kill her husband by accident His mother was terrible and kind of responsible for 3 suicides. I’m thinking that there’s been progress and many people are more understanding of mental and emotional trauma In that period many people were so cruel But hurt people hurt people
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. It is wonderful to read such a positive comment. You are right about there being a better understanding of emotional and mental trauma. Truman's mother hurt him, he hurt others. Elsie, was hateful towards Ann. And the children grew up being told their mother was a murderer and hounded by the press. Such a sad story for everyone involved.
@herminepursch2470
@herminepursch2470 2 ай бұрын
@@MythicMindScape21 I left my husband but kept my in-laws they were good grandparents to my son I miss them
@Karl-dd4om
@Karl-dd4om 2 ай бұрын
In that period many people were so cruel, but now they're just going crazy. The world as it is now, is getting worse day by day!
@James-jf1sc
@James-jf1sc Ай бұрын
Great bio of the intricacies of the flamboyant lifestyles of the rich and famous!
@RosyMischief
@RosyMischief Ай бұрын
Dominick Dunne’s The Two Mrs Grenvilles was about the Woodward case…an excellent book.
@annanardo2358
@annanardo2358 2 ай бұрын
I so hate soap opera's like this story. It just accentuates the fact that people are crazy, making flawed decisions and just not caring enough to live a clean life.🙄🙄
@guilfordbrown8816
@guilfordbrown8816 2 ай бұрын
This is a story I’ve never heard, sounds too good to be true.😊😊😊 ‘
@kathleendobens6648
@kathleendobens6648 2 ай бұрын
How sad she died with no hope. Thats what druves people ceazy. Been there but i decided to go on without my children because of my mental illness. TodY i ztill love my ex and my children. It took many years to be close to them.. truman was a not a nice person.
@adellemery3336
@adellemery3336 16 күн бұрын
Every person in this story was fucked up, beginning with Capote. That he had maybe a smidgen of conscience would be a miracle, since he was raised by a monster of a mother who made it her life's goal to show him how much she loathed him. That Truman grew up to be as monstrous as his mother--well, that apple fell right next to that tree, didn't it? Note: I always have felt sorry for Ann. She wanted so badly to better her life, and all her efforts did was cast her into a hellish pit of NYC socialites.
@Engelhafen
@Engelhafen 9 күн бұрын
What a sad story - I feel sad for this woman and her kids,
@arlem525
@arlem525 2 ай бұрын
The attempted murder of Sunny Von Bulow. She was in a coma when Klaus was on trial.
@memorytapia6337
@memorytapia6337 2 ай бұрын
In a coma for over 20 years. Just awful!
@arlem525
@arlem525 2 ай бұрын
@@memorytapia6337 28 years, poor woman.
@kimbutler6912
@kimbutler6912 Ай бұрын
The book This Crazy Thing Called Love by Susan Braudy was really good . That husband physically beat her badly many times and she covered it up for him
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 Ай бұрын
It is a very good book, I also recommend the Book 'Deliberate Cruelty' If you are interested in this story.
@kimbutler6912
@kimbutler6912 Ай бұрын
@@MythicMindScape21 thank you I’ll look that book up
@shirleyredd6107
@shirleyredd6107 2 ай бұрын
Because Billy’s mother had something to hide
@user-eh3zv1ex5o
@user-eh3zv1ex5o 2 ай бұрын
O, THAT crowd have everything to hide. I also do not believe that Ann committed suicide. She was always a reviled Outsider.... and they never forgive THAT. To the Manor born, you see.....noses UP !
@H_H_____
@H_H_____ 29 күн бұрын
His own mother couldn't stand him and his ways. I agree. Ann once called him a little toad. How funny. I always thought of him as a little troll or little turd. I agree.
@justineharper3346
@justineharper3346 2 ай бұрын
She was really beautiful
@yvonnealbers9189
@yvonnealbers9189 Ай бұрын
Capote was a sleazy little creature
@minelliradney9132
@minelliradney9132 2 ай бұрын
He was so wrong to write on that marriage of Ann!!
@MythicMindScape21
@MythicMindScape21 27 күн бұрын
He was, I always wonder who sent her the advanced copy.
@TheWriterWalker
@TheWriterWalker Ай бұрын
I had never heard of Ann. Interesting story!
@blackwidowspider9852
@blackwidowspider9852 Ай бұрын
Don't forget the radio they went off with
The Tragic Death of Babe Paley. The Last Swan.
6:03
MythicMindScape
Рет қаралды 59 М.
1 класс vs 11 класс (неаккуратность)
01:00
БЕРТ
Рет қаралды 2,2 МЛН
小路飞姐姐居然让路飞小路飞都消失了#海贼王  #路飞
00:47
路飞与唐舞桐
Рет қаралды 93 МЛН
ХОТЯ БЫ КИНОДА 2 - официальный фильм
1:35:34
ХОТЯ БЫ В КИНО
Рет қаралды 2,2 МЛН
Cat story: from hate to love! 😻 #cat #cute #kitten
00:40
Stocat
Рет қаралды 9 МЛН
The Scandalous Life of Pamela Churchill
17:14
MythicMindScape
Рет қаралды 99 М.
From the archives: Author Caleb Carr
9:59
CBS Sunday Morning
Рет қаралды 19 М.
INGRID BERGMAN ,CLASSIC HOLLYWOOD ACTRESSES, BIOGRAPHY,REAR FOOTAGE.
4:54
EXITTO HOLLYWOOD@EXITTOHOLLYWOOD
Рет қаралды 294
3 INSANE OLD HOLLYWOOD SCANDALS
10:46
gabulosis
Рет қаралды 158 М.
Decoding The MYSTERY of 'Answered Prayers' -  Truman Capote's Unfinished GOSSIP Novel!
10:39
Fabulous, Fierce & Feisty Women In History
Рет қаралды 13 М.
The Destruction of Amy Winehouse. Her Tragic Life and Legacy.
25:15
MythicMindScape
Рет қаралды 10 М.
The Fabulous and Enigmatic Life of C.Z. Guest
17:06
MythicMindScape
Рет қаралды 27 М.
Who HATED Him? Who Stayed LOYAL?  Gloria Vanderbilt vs Carol Matthau FEUD Truman Capote vs The Swans
9:42
Fabulous, Fierce & Feisty Women In History
Рет қаралды 35 М.
The Dark Disturbing Death of Eva Peron
12:57
MythicMindScape
Рет қаралды 55 М.
BRUSH ONE’S TEETH WITH A CARDBOARD TOOTHBRUSH!#asmr
0:35
HAYATAKU はやたく
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
СҰЛТАН СҮЛЕЙМАНДАР | bayGUYS
24:46
bayGUYS
Рет қаралды 645 М.
Colgate mix Kar Diya 😱 #shorts
0:31
KK Super Arts
Рет қаралды 95 МЛН
СТОМАТОЛОГ СЪЕЛ ЗУБ?😳😅  #shorts
0:11
Зубландия
Рет қаралды 1,9 МЛН
狼来了的故事你们听过吗?#天使 #小丑 #超人不会飞
0:42
超人不会飞
Рет қаралды 28 МЛН