Death By Car. Part 2

March 19, 2008

Some art lovers bemoaned the death of James Dean because they thought he was the perfect actor to portray abstract painter JACKSON POLLOCK in a movie. Pollock had achieved celebrity status for his "action painting," a process where he dripped paint onto a flat canvas to form abstract imagery. As it turns out, less than a year after Dean was killed, Pollock was killed when he crashed while driving his Cadillac between taverns near his home on Long Island, New York on August 11, 1956.
STEVE PREFONTAINE was (like Dean) 24 and at the wheel of a sports car when he died in 1975. The record-setting runner flipped his MGB in the early morning of 30 May after attending a post-race party in Eugene, Oregon. Prefontaine was alone in the car when it crashed. Although the exact cause of the crash has never been determined, postmortem tests placed Prefontaine’s blood-alcohol level at 0.16 per cent, well above Oregon’s legal limit.
Another early-morning accident killed actress JAYNE MANSFIELD. The bleached-blonde celebrity was driving from Biloxi, Mississippi to New Orleans around 2:00 am on 29 June 1967, rushing to make a talk show appearance in New Orleans the next morning. Mansfield was in the front seat with her lawyer Sam Brody and a chauffeur when their car ran into the back of a truck that was spraying for mosquitos. Mansfield, Brody and the chauffeur were killed; her three children, riding in the back seat, survived.
NANCY CRUZAN became famous only after the accident which led to her death. Her one-car crash on a Missouri road on 11 January 1983 left Cruzan face-down in a ditch and without oxygen for more than 10 minutes. Paramedics restored her breathing, but Cruzan remained in a coma-like "persistent vegetative state." Her family’s court battle to remove her feeding tube became a famous case in medical and legal ethics. The Cruzan family was successful, and Nancy Cruzan died in December of 1990.
MARY JO KOPECHNE died in an infamous late-night incident on Chappaquiddick Island, Massachusetts. Kopechne was in the passenger seat on 18 July 1969 when a car driven by Senator Edward Kennedy flipped off the Dike Bridge and into a large pond. Kopechne was trapped in the car and died at the scene. Kennedy escaped, but his failure to report the accident until the next morning led to a public scandal that scuttled his plans to run for president in 1972.

Death By Car.

Without further ado, here are some famous people who died in auto mishaps.

LISA LOPES: The popular singer for the R&B group TLC was killed on 25 April 2002 while vacationing in Honduras. Lopes was at the wheel of a rented red Mitsubishi SUV when the accident happened near the tiny village of Roma, Honduras. According to reports in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Lopes was "trying to pass a car on the highway when a truck approached from the other lane, forcing her to veer the car sharply to the left, striking two trees before flipping several times, ending upside down." Lopes was killed but several other passengers, including her sister, survived.

PRINCESS GRACE: The former Grace Kelly was a successful Hollywood actress before abandoning that career to marry Prince Rainier of Monaco in 1956. 26 years later while driving on a hilly Monaco road she lost control of her car. It veered off the road and rolled down a cliffside, injuring the princess and her daughter Stephanie. Stephanie recovered, but Princess Grace died the next day. It was later determined that the princess probably suffered a minor stroke while driving, causing the accident.

Like Princess Grace, Britain’s PRINCESS DIANA became a favorite with her subjects after marrying into a royal family. Diana and Charles, Prince of Wales, were wed in a much-publicized wedding in 1981. The marriage was rocky, and the couple obtained an equally-publicized divorce in 1996. In August 1997, Diana visited Paris with her new boyfriend, billionaire playboy Dodi Fayed. While speeding to escape paparazzi, the car carrying Diana, Fayed, her bodyguard and a driver crashed in a Paris tunnel, killing all but the bodyguard.

A trailblazer of 20th-century dance, ISADORA DUNCAN also had a reputation for eccentric flair in her wardrobe. In the autumn of 1927 she climbed into her sporty new Bugatti automobile while wearing a long flowing scarf. As the driver put the car in motion, Duncan’s scarf got tangled in the car’s rear wheel and jerked tight, snapping her neck and killing her. According to Clifton Fadiman’s The Little, Brown Book of Anecdotes, just before the accident Duncan "waved gaily to her friends, crying ‘Adieu, mes amis! Je vais a la gloire!’" (‘Goodbye, my friends! I go to glory!’)

In 1957 ALBERT CAMUS was at the top of his game: his novels The Stranger, The Plague and The Rebel were internationally recognized as great writing and serious thinking, and he became the youngest person ever to win literature’s Nobel Prize. In 1960 he was working on another novel, a semi-autobiography about his young life in Algiers. On January 4, 1960 Camus was riding in a Facel-Vega sports car with publisher Michel Gallimard and Gallimard’s wife and daughter, travelling from Provence to Paris. Outside the village of Petit Villemomble, the car slid off the wet road and hit a tree, breaking Camus’ neck and killing him instantly (Gallimard died a few days later). The incomplete manuscript he was working on, Le Premier Homme (The First Man), was finally published in 1995.
Author MARGARET MITCHELL lived nearly all her life in Atlanta, the setting of a famous scene from her novel Gone With the Wind. On August 11 of 1949 she was crossing an Atlanta street on her way to the theater when she was hit by a speeding cab. She died of her injuries five days later.

Actor JAMES DEAN was a race-car afficianado who actually drove in a few auto races in 1955. He was killed in a 30 September 1955 highway wipeout in his new car, a Porsche Spyder, while travelling to a race in Salinas, California. Dean and a passenger crashed head-on into a second car; the passenger was thrown clear and survived, but Dean died almost immediately. Dean was just 24 years old, and his untimely death helped make him into a pop-culture legend.
Loud, brash comedian SAM KINISON fueled his comedy routines with stories of his full-speed-ahead lifestyle, including tales of driving while drunk. Just prior to his death, Kinison had managed to reign in some of his manic tendencies: he had quit drinking, was newly married and was about to embark on a new phase of his career. His fans and friends say a breakthrough into mainstream success was on the horizon. On the night of 10 April 1992 Kinison and his new bride, Malika, were driving from Los Angeles to a gig in Laughlin, Nevada. Outside of Needles, California a pick-up truck driven by an intoxicated teenager crossed the center lane and hit Kinison’s car head-on. Kinison emerged from the vehicle with what appeared to be minor injuries, but he collapsed and died at the scene before a medical team could arrive. His wife and a passenger of the pick-up truck sustained minor injuries and were hospitalized.

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