peoplepill id: diane-linkletter
DL
United States of America
1 views today
1 views this week
Diane Linkletter
American television personality, musician

Diane Linkletter

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American television personality, musician
Gender
Female
Star sign
ScorpioScorpio
Birth
31 October 1948, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Death
4 October 1969, West Hollywood, Los Angeles County, California, USA (aged 20 years)
Age
20 years
Family
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Diane Linkletter (October 31, 1948 – October 4, 1969) was the daughter and youngest child of popular American media personality Art Linkletter, and his wife Lois Foerster. In 1969, she died by suicide at the age of 20.

Background

Not widely known to the public before her death, Diane Linkletter was the youngest of five children born to Art Linkletter and his wife Lois Foerster.

In 1965, 17-year-old Linkletter married 19-year-old Grant Conroy. The brief marriage was quickly annulled and was not publicized, as both Linkletter's and Conroy's families wanted to keep the marriage quiet.Linkletter pursued a career in acting. She performed in summer stock, and in 1968 she appeared in a sketch on The Red Skelton Show, then traveled with her father to Europe to entertain servicemen's families.

Death

At 9 a.m. on October 4, 1969, Linkletter jumped out of a window of her sixth-floor apartment at the Shoreham Towers in West Hollywood, California. She was first taken to Hollywood Receiving Hospital, then to Los Angeles County+USC Medical Center where she died of injuries she sustained in the fall. Her father blamed her death, which the media widely reported at the time, on drug use, specifically LSD.

Edward Durston, the last person known to have seen Linkletter alive, said that he had attempted to grab her, but she had jumped over the balcony. Durston was also the last person to see the actress Carol Wayne alive, who disappeared after an argument with him.

The day after Linkletter’s death, Art Linkletter held a press conference where he stated that his daughter’s death "wasn't a suicide. She was not herself. She was murdered by the people who manufacture and distribute LSD." He also stated that Linkletter had used LSD in the six months prior to her death and the two discussed a "bum trip" she had experienced. Although Linkletter hadn't spoken to Diane in the last twenty four hours of her life, he believed that she had taken LSD the night before her death and had experienced another bad trip which caused her to leap to her death.

A police investigation was launched to determine the events surrounding Linkletter's death. Police questioned Edward Durston, who claimed that Linkletter had phoned him the night before her death and "was very upset" and asked him to come over. He went to Linkletter's apartment at around 3 a.m., and the two stayed up all night talking. He claimed that Linkletter's behavior was "extremely emotional, extremely despondent and very irrational at times, in fact most of the time." He said she was also upset over her career and complained that she "could not be her own person."

Based on Edward Durston's account and the toxicology reports, police concluded that Linkletter's death was a suicide caused by her despondent mental state.

Aftermath

After Diane Linkletter’s death, Art Linkletter became a prominent anti-drug campaigner.

In 1970, Art and Diane Linkletter won the 1970 Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Recording for their record "We Love You, Call Collect". The record, which was released in November 1969—just a few weeks after her death—sold 275,000 copies in eight weeks, peaking at #42 on the Billboard Hot 100. According to Art Linkletter, royalties from the sales went "to combat problems arising from drug abuse."

In popular culture

  • On October 5, 1969, the day after Diane Linkletter's death, filmmaker John Waters made a nine-minute film entitled The Diane Linkletter Story, a fictionalized version of the events surrounding Linkletter's death.
  • In David Foster Wallace's posthumous novel The Pale King, an IRS officer recounting his recreational drug use in the 1970s before joining the Service states that "personally psychedelics frightened me, mostly because of what I remembered happening to Art Linkletter's daughter—my parents had been very into watching Art Linkletter in my childhood."
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 20 May 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Diane Linkletter is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Reference sources
References
Diane Linkletter
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes