Thursday, December 17, 2009

Nympho Noir: Barbara Payton




Barbara with Lloyd Bridges in Trapped



The Monarch butterfly learns where it was born and it passes this knowledge via genetics to its offspring. This was one of the key animals that tipped scientists off that knowledge can be passed genetically. The Illuminati Formula

In the annals of Hollywood degradation, no tale is more sordid than that of Barbara Payton. In her earliest days in the film business she starred in pictures opposite James Cagney and Gregory Peck -- then hit the skids and ended up in her 30s hooking on the Sunset Strip, addled by drugs and alcohol, bloated and with a few of her front teeth missing. She was dead at 39.

Her spiral to the bottom seems to have started with her disastrous alliance with B-movie star Tom Neal (above), who achieved immortality as the lead in the classic film noir Detour but whose arrogance and violent temper kept him perpetually on the fringes of the movie business. Payton tried to leave him and became engaged to classy but alcoholic star Franchot Tone (below). Neal confronted Tone one night at Payton's home and beat him within an inch of his life, creating one of the biggest tabloid scandals of the 50s. Tone recovered, barely, married Payton and divorced her a few months later -- apparently because she was cheating on him with Neal.


Payton's career never quite recovered, mainly because she couldn't slow down. A sex addict and an increasingly dysfunctional alcoholic, she went from one bad relationship to another, and by the time she realized that her reputation had ruined her career it was too late to rescue it. She proceeded down her road to oblivion with almost manic determination, eventually selling blow-jobs on the Strip for $5 a pop, with several arrests for prostitution and theft along the way.


There are serious hints that the occult world didn't stop programming people with dissociative states and triggers when the ancient Egyptian empires fell. Instead of using modern lingo such as "hypnotize", they would say "cast a spell."
The occultist Baum, a member of the Theosophical Society, was inspired by some spirit who gave him the "magic key" to write the Wizard of Oz book, which came out in 1900.
When the movie was made, Judy Garland, who had lived a life touched by the occult world's abuse, was chosen to act as Dorothy. Judy's later husband, Mickey De Vinko was a Satanist and the chief assistant Roy Radin, a rich Satanist who worked with the Illuminati, and who controlled the "Process church" covens which had as its members mass murderers Berkowitz and Monarch slave Charlie Manson. The Illuminati Formula


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