Johnny Stompanato and Lana Turner out on the town. |
Johnny
Stompanato was a Woodstock, Illinois boy, but not
quite the fair haired village lad you might stereotypically expect. On April 4, 1958 he found himself in big
trouble. The worst—dying on the floor of
his meal ticket’s bedroom.
His folks were Sicilian immigrants who
married in Brooklyn, New York and moved to the small town in 1916 where
his dad set up a barber shop.
Johnny was the youngest of four children when he was
born in 1925. Five days later his mother
died of complications from his birth.
His father quickly remarried a local girl, Verena
Freitag,
who Johnny grew up resenting.
He
grew into a large, handsome boy, but wild and always getting into trouble. After barely escaping being thrown out of Woodstock
High School as a bully, his dad sent him to a military school in Missouri.
He
graduated in 1943 and promptly enlisted in the Marine Corps. He saw action
in the South Pacific on Peleliu and Okinawa. At war’s end he was stationed in China where he met an exotic young Turkish beauty, Sarah Utish. He arranged to
be discharge in China where he courted the girl, converted to Islam for her, and married her in 1946.
The
young couple returned to Woodstock where his wife gave birth to Johnny’s only
child, John III. He went to work as a
bread salesman and hated every moment of dull Midwestern drudgery and family life. He was soon romancing other women at local
taverns and getting into fights with outraged husbands and boy fiends.
In
1948 the couple was divorced and Johnny packed his bags for an exciting new
life in California. What was he looking for? Work in the movies? Whatever it was, it didn’t take long for him
to hook up with Los Angeles’s biggest
Gangster, the infamous Mickey Cohen. He started out as a driver and bodyguard but
soon showed such potential as a hoodlum that he was promoted to a bag man and an enforcer specializing in the collection of gambling debts.
By
the early 50’s he had struck out on his own.
He operated a seedy Westwood gift shop that probably served as a cover
for a bookmaking operation. He also became a gigolo specializing in bored, wealthy married women up for a fling
with a handsome lug. He brought his
victims to a room outfitted with hidden cameras and filmed the trysts, making
an excellent living by blackmail.
But
he lived high, spending money as fast as he could extort it and running up big
gambling markers to his old
employer.
Lana Turner was still a reigning queen of in the movies. The former sweater girl had matured into tear
jerking parts in women’s movies,
melodramas that were still big box office.
She was an unhappy woman with a bad history with men, both husbands and
lovers. After her latest marriage to B
movie actor Lex Barker broke up in
1957, Turner was perfect pray for Stompanato’s
charms.
He called her out of the blue and wrangled a date,
at first introducing himself as Johnny Steele. His charm worked better than ever on the
lonely actress and he was soon living with her in her palatial Beverly Hills
home along with her pubescent teenage daughter Cheryl Crane by Lana’s
second—and third—husband restaurateur Joseph Stephen Crane.
Johnny
charmed the daughter as well as the mother, playing a “big brother role” to the
girl who would later claim to have been molested by Barker. For a short while it seemed like a perfect arrangement
for all concerned. But Johnny became insistent
on repeated loans to pay off his gambling debts and flew into jealous
rages.
In
England with Turner while she shot Another
Time, Another Place, he became
increasingly belligerent after she refused to give him $50,000 to clear up his
IOUs with Cohen. He choked her leaving
marks on her throat that shut down production for three weeks. Banned from the set, he stormed in one day
waving a gun at co-star Sean
Connery. A bad choice since the Scott was much tougher than the gigolo. Connery decked him with one blow and disarmed
him.
Stompanato was deported for violating strict British
gun laws and Turner vowed to be done with him.
But after a few weeks back home, she called him up and resumed the
affair.
But the petty gangster was becoming more unstable
and violent. He flew into a rage after
Turner told him he could not accompany her to the Academy Awards where
she was up for an Oscar for Peyton Place. Accusing her
of being ashamed of him, he threatened to end her career by slashing her
beautiful face. It soon became his
standard threat in their increasingly physical altercations.
On April 4, 1958 Johnny once again demanded a huge “loan”
to pay off Cohn, who had been sending hoods around to remind his former
enforcer of his obligations. Turner
flatly refused. He struck her and
repeated his threats of mutilation and also threatened her daughter and
mother. The altercation went on for some
time until Cheryl came home and found them screaming at each other. Turner ordered her daughter not to listen and
leave. Johnny grabbed a heavy coat
hanger and began to try to beat the actress.
She screamed again, the couple tumbled through a door where Cheryl
stabbed him with a large kitchen knife she had retrieved. He quickly bled to death on Lana’s bedroom
floor.
The
case, naturally, became a sensation. Cheryl
quickly confessed after Turner reportedly tried to take the blame herself. The girl was jailed and eventually charged
with man slaughter. The press had a field day. Some hinted that Turner was using her
daughter as a cover for her own guilt.
Many highlighted her long, sad history with men and excoriated her as a
bad parent for exposing her daughter to such a lurid life style. The cruelest hinted that Cheryl and Johnny were lovers.
The trial was a circus. Both mother and daughter tearfully
testified. Some called it the greatest
performance of Turner’s career. Cheryl
was acquitted on the grounds that the killing was a justifiable defense of her
mortally imperiled mother. The public
rallied to the support of mother and daughter.
Cheryl was removed from her mother’s custody and
placed with Turner’s mother, who could never deal with her. She was a repeated runaway and was at least
once remaindered to juvenile detention.
She remained close to her mother, but had a troubled life. After some affairs with men, she settled into
a long term committed lesbian relationship and later wrote a memoir
about the case.
Turner’s career was probably boosted by the
publicity. Her next several pictures
were hits. Her star finally began to dim only
with inevitable ageing in the mid-1960s after which she appeared mostly in
guest roles on television. She married
unhappily three more times.
Lana died of throat cancer at the age of 74
on June 29, 1995.
As for Stompanato, his remains were shipped back to
Woodstock where he was laid to rest between his mother and father in a family plot
in Oakland Cemetery. You can visit his grave if you are in town.
And
while you are here if you are hungry, you can stop in at a D.C. Cobbs, a popular local bar and grill on the Main Street site of the family
barbershop, view a poster with pictures telling Johnny’s tale, and order a
burger named for him.
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