The Mysterious Death of Superman By: Will Dabbs

0
9

the Superman star, George Reeves, was born George Keefer Brewer in January of 1914 in Woolstock, Iowa. He was the son of Donald Carl Brewer and Helen Lescher. Young George entered the world five months after his parents were married at a time when such calendar particulars meant a great deal more than they might today. George’s parents split up soon thereafter. The boy was ultimately raised by his stepfather, Frank Joseph Bessolo, who formally adopted him when he was 13. 

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to follow and signup for notifications!

Though he was not technically the first, George Reeves was the guy who brought Superman to life for millions of people around the globe.

Frank and Helen were married for 15 years. However, the couple separated while George was away visiting relatives. The boy’s mother lied and told him that his stepfather had died unexpectedly. Bessolo actually passed away with George remaining unawares in 1944. This was just one of the many tragic aspects of this young man’s remarkably tragic life.

Table of contents

  • Superman Himself
  • A Great Opportunity
  • Not Superman’s Style
  • A Great Success
  • Hollywood is not the Real World
  • Glory Comes at a Cost
  • Superman Takes a Dive
  • The End For Superman
  • Final Moments
Like most actors, George Reeves was a good-looking guy.

George had a gift for the theater and a good memory. Reeves began acting in school productions in junior high school and continued into his time at Pasadena Junior College. He landed his first film role in 1939 as one of Scarlett O’Hara’s suitors in Gone with the Wind. It turned out that having a Best Picture movie at the top of your CV was pretty good for his career. It also didn’t hurt that he was also handsome, 6 feet 2 inches tall, and a competitive wrestling and judo enthusiast.

Warner Brothers picked the young actor up and convinced him to change his name to George Reeves. This is a common thing in Hollywood. Apparently George Bessolo didn’t look so hot on the marquis.

George Reeves was an undeniably successful big screen actor.

Like many to most aspiring Hollywood stars, George bounced from role to role as the work came available. He once earned a part in a Hopalong Cassidy production by running through seven pages of dialogue without a break. However, a superhuman memory was not the only superpower for which George Reeves would become known.

By the onset of World War 2, George Reeves’s acting career was doing fairly well. He worked in five Hopalong Cassidy films before landing the lead in a war drama called So Proudly We Hail! opposite Claudette Colbert. However, with the war now in full swing Reeves enlisted in the US Army. He spent his time in uniform performing in an Army Air Corps patriotic Broadway spectacle titled Winged Victory and making training films.

Adventures of Superman was originally sponsored by Kelloggs. Their logo was on the original intro shot. It was later removed retroactively when they pulled out of the sponsorship.

After the war Hollywood production was scaled back, and Reeves struggled. He actually made ends meet for a time manually digging cesspools. In 1953, Reeves landed a small part in From Here to Eternity, his second Best Picture project. Two years before this, however, Reeves scored his career-defining part. In 1951 at age 37 George Reeves became Superman.

George Reeves played one of the most iconic roles in the history of television, yet he was still never satisfied. Methinks there’s a message in there someplace, something deep and timeless, perhaps….

Reeves was not initially attracted to the role. Like most Hollywood folk, he viewed television as subordinate to film and a step backward for a successful professional actor. However, in short order his name and persona became household icons. For a driven actor with a compulsion for his craft, this turned out to be a two-edged sword.

Adventures of Superman was quite the low-budget affair. The production schedule called for two half-hour episodes to be shot every six days. Sets were frequently used to shoot multiple scenes in multiple different episodes. As an example, once the crew got Perry White’s office set up for a production they might shoot the footage for three or four episodes all at one sitting. Reeves’ legendary gift for recalling disparate dialogue was a great benefit given the frenetic schedule.

Flying effects were produced through the clever application of available technology. Having bystanders look up suddenly and in unison helped cement the charade.

The pilot was titled Superman and the Mole Men, and it was a great success. The cast and crew produced the next 26 episodes in 13 weeks of shooting. While primitive by today’s standards, the flying effects were radically advanced for the day.

Available on GunsAmerica Now

  • image

    Ruger American .204 Ruger

    $600.00

  • image

    Ruger American Gen II – 204 Ruger

    $599.00

  • image

    Ruger American

    $609.00

  • image

    Ruger SR22

    $370.00

  • image

    Ruger American Custom .20 Varjarg

    $2,575.00

  • image

    Ruger Blackhawk

    $600.00

  • image

    Ruger Hawkeye

    $3,999.00

  • image

    Ruger SR22

    $360.00

  • image

    Ruger Sr22

    $300.00

  • image

    Ruger M77

    $525.00

Scenes of Superman flying were differentiated into three discrete phases—takeoff, in-flight, and landing. While shooting the pilot, Reeves used small cables during the take-off sequences. At one point while shooting Superman and the Mole Men the cables snapped, spilling him to the studio floor. For the remainder of season one, stunt doubles did the take-offs filmed from behind to prevent injury to the star. 

Though crude by modern standards, in the 1950’s George Reeves made folks believe a man could fly.

The later definitive effect was to use an off-screen springboard to allow Reeves to vault through an open window and land on a padded mat out of frame. The production crew created a counterbalanced cantilever device to simulate the in-flight scenes. With Reeves positioned face-down and a wind machine blowing his cape, this contraption could be angled and banked to simulate in-flight maneuvering. Back-projection screens were used to provide the appropriate backdrop for his flying action. The landing scenes had Reeves leap off of a ladder or swing from a horizontal bar to drop into frame. It is no great chore to spot the residual stigmata of wires and apparatus in the final production.

Part of the show’s appeal was the dichotomy between Clark Kent the dork and Superman the Man of Steel.

Reeves rose to the occasion and thrived in his new Superman persona. A heavy lifelong smoker, like many folks of that era, he made a point never to smoke in view of the public and eventually quit altogether. Reeves relished the adoration and respect of children that came from the role. It was estimated that 35 million people watched Adventures of Superman every year, half of whom were adults. The show was popular both in the US and abroad. Reeves once received a fan letter from the Emperor of Japan explaining his enthusiasm for the program. 

He also purportedly once had a child present to a public event with his father’s handgun intending to shoot him in full knowledge that he was impervious to bullets. Reeves supposedly disarmed the kid with an explanation that the richocheted rounds might harm bystanders.

This is MGM General Manager Eddie Mannix. He was a card-carrying scumbag.

Eventually Reeves began a torrid affair with Toni Mannix, wife of notorious studio fixer Eddie Mannix. Mannix is masterfully depicted by Josh Brolin in the Cohen Brothers comedy Hail Caesar! Eddie Mannix had a background with the Mob and enjoyed a well-earned reputation as a man who could bury most anything if it might reflect negatively on the studio. His was likely not the best choice for a wife to steal. Now hold that thought…

With such an iconic role came the inevitable type-casting. Leonard Nimoy, Mark Hamill, and Milla Jovovich are other examples of actors who struggled to distance themselves from truly compelling screen roles. Reeves was making $5,000 per week during production (about $50,000 today) but this only lasted for about eight weeks per year. Additionally, now aged 40 he realized that playing the virile Man of Steel might not be a realistic retirement goal.

This is a still taken from Stamp Day with Superman. This was not likely George Reeves’s image of an ideal role for a mature actor.

Reeves sang as a guest star on the Tony Bennett Show in 1956. The following year he appeared in costume on I Love Lucy. He even toured in a live-action production for a time wherein he would open as Clark Kent before moving off-stage and leaping back as Superman. The villain he fought in these stage productions was called “Mr. Kryptonite.” At one point he appeared in a short produced for the Treasury Department entitled Stamp Day for Superman. In it he caught bad guys while lecturing children on the wholesome benefits of buying government savings stamps. He was known to mutter, “Here I am, wasting my life” in between takes.

This is George Reeves roughly one year before he died. He eventually struggled with his inevitable type-casting.

Reeves and Mrs. Mannix parted ways in 1958. He was engaged to socialite Lenore Lemmon soon thereafter. Now 45 and short on cash, Reeves’ life began spiraling. He had several potential projects in the works, but they were all fairly small and unimpressive. What happened next has been widely disputed.

The P08 Parabellum pistol designed by Georg Luger was the alpha souvenir for GI’s returning from combat in Europe.

In the summer of 1959 Reeves purchased a 9mm German Luger pistol that he kept in his bedroom. On 16 June he was at home with Lemmon and a writer named Robert Condon. He was scheduled for an exhibition bout against Archie Moore, the light heavyweight judo champion, the following day. Two visitors, William Bliss and Carol Van Ronkel, rang the bell around 0100, apparently waking Reeves and rendering him agitated. He was quoted as having said he was, “in no mood for a party.” As Reeves returned upstairs alone, Lemmon cryptically stated, “He’s going upstairs to shoot himself.”

Lenore Lemmon had a weird part to play in the mysterious death of George Reeves.

The guests heard a scraping noise at which point Lenore said, “See, he’s opening the drawer to get the gun.” There then resulted a single gunshot at which point the young woman exclaimed, “See there, I told you. He’s shot himself!” They rushed upstairs to find Reeves naked with a gunshot wound to the head. A 9mm bullet was lodged in the ceiling. The pistol was on the floor between his feet.

The official story was that Reeves had grown depressed with his type-casting and dwindling resources and had taken his own life. Some two months prior he had run his sports car into an embarkment and suffered a 5-inch head wound and concussion for which he spent several days in a local hospital. However, certain physical evidence at the scene threw this narrative into question.

George Reeves and Lenore Lemmon were planning a honeymoon in Tijuana after their wedding. Reeves died under disputed circumstances before the ceremony.

Lemmon later claimed to police that she had only been kidding when she narrated her fiancé’s death from the living room. There were rumors that she had actually been upstairs with him at the time and rushed down imploring the guests to cover for her when the police arrived. There were no fingerprints found on the weapon. Additionally, there were two bullet holes in the floor that were unaccounted for in the witness statements and no evidence of powder residue on Reeves’ hands. Admittedly, there was later some disagreement about whether or not the investigating officers had actually checked the corpse’s hands for gunpowder.

READ MORE: Major William Gail White: The Frag Magnet

George Reeves’ sordid story is a cautionary tale. Even Superman could not find satisfaction in worldly success.

Apparently George Reeves, for all his cluttered emotional baggage, was a pretty decent bloke. The sign on his dressing room read, “Honest George, The People’s Friend.” However, Eddie Mannix was a mobster, and one who likely did not take the theft of his woman lightly. There persist to this day rumors that George Reeves perished as the result of a coordinated mob hit. Regardless, it was a surprising way to lose the Man of Steel.

*** Buy and Sell on GunsAmerica! All Local Sales are FREE! ***