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View Full Version : Bobby Driscoll won an Oscar when he was 12 but now lies buried in an unmarked grave


bkohatl
03-01-2004, 04:41 PM
Hart Island/New York's Prison for the Dead

In 1949, when he was 12-years-old, Bobby Driscoll won an Oscar for his roles as "Jeremiah Kincaid" in the sentimental story about a boy and his pet lamb in Disney's "So Dear To My Heart" and as "Tommy Woodry" in the RKO thriller "The Window"(Best Mystery/The Writers Guild).
But most people, if they remember Bobby at all, remember him for dying destitute and alone of a heart attack at age 31 in an abandoned tenement at 371 East 10th Street in New York City on March 30, 1968. The irony is that an abandoned tenement in New York was also the setting for the exciting dénouement of his Oscar winning film "The Window".
Bobby was one of the most successful actors in the history of Hollywood. Between the ages of six and sixteen, Bobby made 18 movies in nine years. Even before he won the role of "Johnny" in Disney's "Song of the South" in 1945, Bobby's acting attracted attention. Bobby appeared in the WWII story "Identity Unknown" for about 10 minutes. Leonard Maltin wrote that seven-year-old Bobby's performance was the best thing in the film even though he was listed fourth in the credits. As Fox Director Lloyd Bacon said after directing Bobby in "The Sullivans" when he was six, "Bobby was a natural, a born actor."
Walt Disney fired Bobby when he was 16 after he developed a severe case of acne. Bobby had worked for Walt Disney for almost 10 years, since he won the audition for the role of "Johnny" in "Song of the South" in 1945. "Song of the South" was the #1 movie at the Box Office in 1946. Bobby was considered the best male child star in Hollywood in the late 1940's and early 1950's. His last movie for Disney was Peter Pan, which was a huge blockbuster. It was the #1 movie of 1953 and the second highest grossing movie at the box-office for the entire 1950's. After he was fired, Bobby's life collapsed. Everyone who knew him was stunned by how quickly Bobby went downhill. He was 16 when Walt Disney fired because he had pimples and 17 when he injected heroin for the first time.

Bobby Driscoll now lies buried in an unmarked pauper's grave on Hart Island in New York.

"Some men see things as they are and ask 'Why?' I dream things that never were and ask 'Why not?'" Robert F. Kennedy

New York's Pauper's Cemetery is run by the New York Department of Corrections: It is a Prison for the dead.

New York's Pauper's Cemetery is called Potter's Field and is located on Hart Island in New York. Between 500,000 and a million people are buried there, no one is quite sure. Hart Island lies along Long Island Sound within yards of the millions of people who populate New York City, but the New York Department of Corrections does not allow visitors to its poor people's cemetery. Hart Island is a lonely, forlorn place, a final resting place for the abandoned, the unloved and the forgotten. Their only crime was being poor and for that the Department of Corrections has given these poor a lonely, unmourned death; a sentence which is to be served for eternity. It truly is a prison for the dead.

A few years ago the New York newspapers had a story about a poor woman in her 80's who got on a bus to New Jersey looking for a place to die. She was terrified of being buried in Potter's Field on Hart Island. To most New Yorkers, Hart Island is seen as New York's "human garbage dump," a place for the unloved and the unwanted to be thrown away and forgotten.

Hart Island's Pauper's Cemetery is run by the New York Department of Corrections and staffed with prison guards and prisoners. Prisoners are used to bury Hart Island's "inmates". The prisoners are ferried in to bury the unwanted dead and then taken back "home" to the Rikers Island Jail. Hart Island is now an abandoned derelict island with no permanent residents. Some effort is made to maintain the grounds, but vandals have left their mark too. Many of the buildings bear graffiti. More than that, a feeling of loneliness hangs over Hart Island like a shroud because there is no love there. And at the end of the day, everyone goes home except for the poor.

Honoring the Dead
In 1946, the prisoners took it upon themselves to build a monument to remember the honorable dead buried there. The prisoners erected a monument with the one word inscribed on it: Peace. It is one of the few times that anyone has ever shown love for the people buried there. But the prisoners did more than that. Against the opposition of the Department of Corrections they undertook a fund drive for the building materials and only used their own labor to complete their monument. They viewed these poor lost souls, as having finished serving their life-sentences of poverty, loneliness and unhappiness, and deserving of love and respect in death. And it was the right thing to do. Sometimes it is hard to tell the good from the bad, and sometimes it isn't.

The New York Department of Corrections doesn't allow visitors or mourners to Hart Island except under extraordinary circumstances.
If I could have my way, I would turn Hart Island into a park. I would run a ferry there every day and never charge anyone to go there. I would welcome all who are willing to come and visit. Having never gotten enough love during their lifetimes, the people buried there should receive all the love we have to share. And all of our love would still not be enough. Like Oliver Twist, they deserve more... They deserve paradise, because they have already been to hell.
My opinion is irrelevant because I don't count; The Department of Corrections opinion is irrelevant because they don't care; and The State of New York is irrelevant because to them it is a question of money.
It should be a question of love. I believe that the only people who have earned the right to decide the fate of the people buried on Hart Island are the people who loved them. Bobby deserves that much, anyone does.........everyone does.

Bobby's family and friends want him brought back home and buried next to his Dad at the Eternal Hills Memorial Park Cemetery in Oceanside, California or next to his wife, Marilyn. Either choice is the right choice. What they want is the only thing that matters. It should be done because it is the right thing to do.

No one should be remembered for the way they died; they should only be remembered for the way they lived.

In 2005, The Santa Monica Museum of Art, in association with The Getty Museum, will have a retrospective of the works of Modern Artist Wallace Berman. Mr. Berman's collected works and letters are in The Smithsonian Institution. The exhibition at The Santa Monica Museum of Art will include works by his colleagues and protégés. Among the paintings exhibited will be three paintings by Bobby Driscoll. Mr. Berman was a Mentor to Bobby. Bobby also studied under Andy Warhol and was a frequent visitor to his studio, The Factory, on 47th Street in New York City. Bobby took his art as seriously as he took his acting: one of Bobby's paintings is in The Smithsonian Museum of Modern Art/Wallace Berman Collection.



People should remember Bobby as an actor, an artist and a poet, but most of all as a friend. Bobby's friends always begin any conversation about him by talking about what a great friend he was. Bobby made friends the old fashioned way: he earned them. That is a legacy anyone could be proud of.
Bobby Driscoll was a Straight A student. He was also a Boy Scout who played Little League. He just happened to make movies on the side. Bobby had an IQ of over 140. He was also, perhaps, the most unaffected star to ever come out of Hollywood. He had no ego and was always polite and respectful. He always tried to please the adults who populated his life. Adults thought he was an angel. Even though he won an Oscar when he was 12-years-old, he never lauded it over anyone's head. He remained very popular with the kids at The Hollywood Professional School where he was a student. When he wasn't working, he wore jeans and t-shirts. He was hardly ever recognized and seemed to prefer it that way. If you did recognize Bobby, he would gladly give you his autograph and a smile.
Until Walt Disney fired him, there was nothing wrong with Bobby, but in five minutes his life fell apart. And it isn't so much what Walt Disney did as the way he did it. Walt Disney had a secretary fire Bobby after eight years of working at Disney and then had the crying, distraught teenager ejected from the studio escorted by a security guard. It would be hard to imagine a more cruel way to handle the situation.
Bobby's parents were from Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The family never lived in Bel Air, Malibu or Beverly Hills; they lived in a nice middle class neighborhood in West LA. His best friend from the neighborhood in which he grew up still chokes up talking about Bobby. He misses Bobby to this day. Dean Stockwell was Bobby's best friend in Hollywood. They grew up together. Dean can't even talk about Bobby without breaking down. Everyone who knew Bobby liked him. The people who knew him best loved him: that isn't a bad legacy either... If you remember Bobby at all, I think that is the right way to remember him.

Remember Me

Remember me with smiles and laughter;
Because that is the way I will remember you all.
If you can only remember me with tears,
Then don't remember me at all.

An Irish Poem of Remembrance



Many Thanks,

Brian Keith O'Hara Email: bkohatl@hotmail.com
PO Box 6021
Marietta, Georgia 30065


"Silence gives consent!"



"I am a man, nothing human is alien to me" (Terence)



The best way to remember anyone is found in John Gunther's book "Death Be Not Proud". In his book, John Gunther wrote about the death of his son Johnny at age 17 from a brain tumor on June 30, 1947. Johnny was an extraordinary boy. Once, when he was working on a physics problem for school, he wrote Albert Einstein for help in finding the answer. Dr. Einstein was so impressed with his letter that he wrote back with the answer. Johnny's great dream was to go to Harvard.
While at Deerfield School, Johnny starting experiencing headaches and was hospitalized. His divorced parents rushed to his side to comfort him. In his eloquent narrative, John speaks about how it was Johnny who comforted them, instead of the other way around, as people would expect. Johnny achieved his greatest dream: a few weeks before his death Johnny received an acceptance letter from Harvard University. Johnny was a man who filled "the unforgiving minute with sixty seconds of distance run."
His example is the example we should follow. Read his book and you will understand why I am fighting for the cause for which I am fighting: Justice.

No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main… any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. (John Donne)

Bringing Bobby Home
In 1968 Bobby's desperate mother, Isabelle, begged Roy Disney to help find him after he disappeared. She also contacted Merv Griffin for help. Both men applied pressure on the FBI, which eventually led to the discovery of Bobby's burial on Hart Island. The New York Department of Corrections uncooperative attitude and elementary forensics prevented Bobby's return home in 1969. Now, with DNA that is no longer an excuse.
Now is the time to bring Bobby home to his children, family and friends.


A web page with about 400 photos of and about Bobby Driscoll is located at:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BobbyDriscoll/

You will need to create a Yahoo Account and become a member of the group to see the photos.

It is time to put some Heart back into Hart Island…

Penny Lane
03-01-2004, 07:16 PM
Aw, that's sad. Unfortunately many child actors ended up like this! RIP Bobby:(

automatic princess
03-01-2004, 07:32 PM
What a sad story.:(

EricIdlefan
03-01-2004, 08:19 PM
Every child actor is now a has-been and either wounds up on the homeless streets, alcoholic, on drugs, or worse, dead!! Wish they could follow child-stars to adult stars like Rick Schroder, Jodie Foster, Ron Howard, Scott Baio to name a few!!

dawsongirl
03-01-2004, 10:04 PM
That place sounds spooky, yet interesting.

But geez...if they know he's in there, what's it to NY if they take him out and move him? It means one more space for them. Sheesh. NY is a rude place.

bkohatl
03-02-2004, 07:24 AM
After Bobby was fired by Walt Disney he never heard one word from him again, that is until the grand opening of Disneyland on July 17, 1955. Bobby's agent got a call a few days before the opening and was ordered to wardrobe to be outfitted in his Peter Pan Kit. Walt had tried to get the Wonderful Robert Newton(Long John Silver/Treasure Island) to introduce the Pirate Ride in the Treasure Island Area of the park. Argggggggghhhhhhhhhh. Bobby found out later that Robert Newton was dying and that was why they called him. Bobby cried his eyes out at Robert's funeral a few months later.
Most child stars who go on to careers as adult actors turn out mostly OK.
Most people don't know this but Shirley Temple's career ended almost as abruptly as Bobby's. Shirley was among the cutest and most precocious kids who ever lived. By her late teens, people made a startling discovery about Shirley: she wasn't a very good actress. From the time she was 14 until she turned 17, she saw fewer and fewer roles come her way, and the ones she did get were all co-starring roles. When she hit her 20's, Shirley got her first "with" role and quit acting.

For Bobby it was pimples, but for Shirley it was growing up and finding that she was no longer cute and precocious, they actually expected her to act. As an adult, Shirley could play any role, but you always knew she was acting. Bobby greatest praise came from Variety which said Bobby is so natural that you think of him as an actor, you believe he is who he says he is. Thanks goodness Disney has an actor like that, because that is how dreams come true: you have to believe. With Bobby that is easy.
Bosley Crowther is the most famous film critic in American film
history(Just ask Robert Ebert or Leonard Maltin). He wrote for The New York Times from 1930's to 1970's. He was pretty tough and never fauned over anyone. It is his opinion of Shirley Temple that I referred to above.

Of Bobby he wrote:

"Bobby Driscoll is a remarkable, brilliant actor"
"Bobby Driscoll is Jim Hawkins"(Treasure Island).
"'The Window' belongs to Bobby Driscoll. He is the best thing in it. Without him the movie wouldn't have worked."

There is one other young actor who earned Mr. Crowther's highest praise: Mary Badham in "To Kill A Mockingbird". Citing Gregory Peck as the greatest actor of his time and "Atticus Finch" as his greatest role, he noted that Mary Badham's "Scout" was just the right touch to give the movie a human touch and keep it from wandering off into preaching its message. Mr. Crowther considered "To Kill A Mockingbird" one of the greatest movies ever made and the best movie of 1962. I almost agree with him. Lawrence of Arabia came out in 1962 too. But even I will admit it was a horse race at the Oscar's that year.
Mary was nominated as best supporting actress and deserved to win. She didn't. That is a shame. Gregory Peck thought so too. In his speech for winning the Best Actor Oscar, Gregory Peck spent a great deal of the time telling what wonderful actors Mary Badham and Phillip Alford
Mary was a great actress, even though she was under 13 years old. But when she hit her teens she became an awkward teenager. After that she couldn't find any work. That is crummy. Go to IMdb and read her resume/filmography. Bosley Crowther called Mary a brilliant actress, and he was right, she was.

Mary's parents were damn good parents and they raised a wondeful daughter. Mary lives in Richmond, Virginia and is happily married with happy children of her own today. Someone actually got it right for a change, for that everyone should be happy.

Despite what many former child stars say, never forget human beings have human problems. Bobby's acne would have been a problem to be dealt with in any school in America.


There are some heroes in Bobby's story and they aren't who you would expect.
Jack Webb was one of the most powerful men in Hollywood. His series Dragnet is one of the great classics in TV History. His role as LAPD Detective "Joe Friday" is as memorable Superman. "Just the facts" is many a parent's favorite phrase in talks with their kids ever since.
Jack was known as the best friend LAPD and Police Officers ever had. He was their strongest supporter and greatest defender.
Well, after Walt Disney fired Bobby his life fell apart. Bobby turned to drugs as an answer, which of course they weren't. A few weeks after Disney fired him, Bobby experimented with marijuana for the first time. A few months later he was arrested for possession of a joint. That was a huge deal in the 1950's. He got in a lot of trouble over it and it should have been the end of his career.
Jack Webb called Bobby and asked him to audition for an episode of Dragnet. He got the role on Dragnet/The Big Sophomore 10/1/1954. And Bobby gave another great performance. I am trying to track it down to see it, but I've actually talked to someone who remembers it and Bobby's performance 50 years later. Bobby was that good an actor. Jack believed in Bobby and Bobby didn't let him down.
Jack may have been a great supporter of LAPD, but he was also a human being and he never lost sight of what was important in life. You don't throw people away. Good for you, Jack!
The other hero is as interesting, Loretta Young was one of greatest actresses in Hollywood in the 1930's and 1940's. She too won an Oscar for "The Farmer's Daughter" in 1948. Loretta was one of the few "stars" to easily translate her success in movies to success on TV. Her show, "The Loretta Young Show" lasted over ten years and was a huge success. She had a reputation as a Saint in Hollywood. She wasn't, but she was a damn good person.

She called Bobby for a role in The Loretta Young Show/Big Jim. I've seen this episode, Bobby was terrific. One of his best roles.
But no amount of make-up could hide his pimples. 99.9% of Hollywood types would have never given an acne scarred teenager the time of day, but these two saw beyond that and did a good deed for a drowning young man. It wasn't enough to save him, but I know it meant a lot to him. Thank God, there are people like Jack Webb and Loretta Young in the world and that has nothing to do with Hollywood.
Which brings us to Walt Disney. Walt fired Bobby because he had pimples. The one time in a teenagers life that they need support is when they have a bad case of acne. Other kids tease you, your self confidence is undermined. I've read Adolescent Psychology books about how devastating this can be for any kid. To have it wreck your career and your life is/was a huge burden. Maybe too much for any kid to bear.
Well, Bobby may have been an actor, but he was a real kid. After he was fired, he told his best friend that he couldn't understand how he could be fired that way. I don't either.
He told his friend, I thought he(they) loved me.
When Bobby was 8, Walt Disney gave several interviews in which he said that he loved Bobby like his own son. That opinion was expressed over and over again in interviews through "Treasure Island's" release in 1950 when Bobby was 13.
Bosley Crowther of "The New York Times" said Bobby Driscoll was a brilliant actor.
Bobby wasn't as good an actor as Walt Disney was. When Walt told Bobby that he loved him, he was acting and that was just good business. Walt Disney was a great actor and was very convincing. Bobby believed him. Bobby would break down and cry about for years afterwards, because Walt Disney not only fired him, but he ripped his heart out.
That is not Disney, that's Shakespeare.

hawaii five-o
03-02-2004, 08:49 PM
Hollywood is a heartless town. Especially for former child stars. There are dozens of examples of this happening. Look at some of the "Little Rascals" for example. One minute you're cute, and everyone is fawning over you. A couple of years later, you're ugly and awkward and nobody wants you. What a sad life.

Brian
03-02-2004, 09:05 PM
I think what happened to him was very depressing. I wish that the people in the film industry would realize what they are doing when things like this happen. Driscoll is alleged to be quoted as saying, "They carried me on a satin pillow and threw me out in the garbage." Nothing could describe what happens to most child stars any better than that.

Rhiannon
03-02-2004, 10:24 PM
I think that's a sad story. We should remember these people..

bkohatl
03-03-2004, 05:51 AM
In the end, all I can do for Bobby is tell his story.

I want to bring him home to his friends and family. That is where he belongs, either buried by his father or his wife, Marilyn. That is what his children want and that is good enough for me. Hollywood owes him that much. If there is some reason that isn't possible, then I want to put some Heart into Hart Island by turning it into a park and not only allowing any visitors who want to come to visit, but encouraging them, cherishing them.

I still cannot believe that a cemetery with a million graves is run by the NY Department of Corrections. Not allowing visitors or memorials services is exactly what I would expect from them. And that is the reason they shouldn't be allowed to run the place.

Nobody deserves to be buried in a prison for the dead.

We should demand that Hart Island is turned into a park, but first it should be turned over to human beings who will love and cherish the people buried there. It should be done for Bobby, it should be done for everyone buried there.

Dean Stockwell was his best Hollywood friend. He can't talk about Bobby without breaking down and crying. Despite his other problems, Robert Blake is still furious about what happened to Bobby. Just bring Bobby's name up in front of him, he we tell you what he thinks of Walt Disney and the other Hollywood Moghul's. Before he was fired by Walt Disney, nobody ever had one bad thing to say about Bobby. After he got hooked on drugs it was a sense of sadness and disbelief that overwhelmed his friends. They couldn't fathom how anyone could fall apart so quickly, and they all felt powerless to stop it. Only a few years later, his wife, Marilyn, stuck by him for four years. They had three kids together. Bobby was the nicest person you could ever meet, but he was also a heroin addict. Marilyn must have been an incredibly strong woman, and she loved him. Marilyn was only married to Bobby for four years, but she never remarried. Everyone says that Bobby was the love of her life.

Bobby should be brought home to the people who love him.


In 2000, Mayor Rudy Juliani spent $3,000,000.00 on his personal Limousines. Current Mayor Bloomberg is a billionaire, I can't believe that he would spend less taxpayer's money. Someone gave me a figure of $2,000,000.00 to turn Hart Island into a park. This is one argument that has nothing to do with money: it has to do with what is right.

If you agree, here is Mayor Bloombergs address:


Mayor of New York

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg
City Hall
New York, NY 10007
(212) 788-9600
Fax: (212) 788-2460
E-MAIL: http://nyc.gov/html/mail/html/mayor.html

Governor of New York

Governor George E. Pataki
State Capitol
Albany, NY 12224
gov.pataki@chamber.state.ny.us
To Email The Governor: PLEASE INCLUDE YOUR MAILING ADDRESS. Responses may be sent via the U.S. Mail.

Though technically this is a state issue, New York's two Senators are very high profile and their words would carry a lot of weight, encourage them to speak up.

The Honorable Hillary Rodham Clinton
780 Third Avenue
Suite 2601
New York, NY 10017
(212) 688-6262
fax (212) 688-7444
Email: http://clinton.senate.gov/email_form.html

The Honorable Charles Schumer
757 Third Avenue
Suite 17-02
New York, NY 10017
Phone: 212-486-4430
Fax: 212-486-7693
TDD: 212-486-7803
Email: http://schumer.senate.gov/webform.html

Bring Bobby Home and turn Hart Island into a Cemetery and a park where people can show their love for the people buried there.

webuster
03-04-2004, 01:11 PM
While I was reading about the Hart Island cemtary, I was thinking the same, about making it into a park or something. This is the first time I've ever heard of that place- I never thought that'd happen to the dead- it's a really horrible thought.