Posted on October 6, 2023
This entry will make more sense if you have read at least the 2nd half of this website.
I was in Los Angeles in April of 2023 and visited with Melanie Myers from the Daily Mail and Secrets of Playboy.
She showed me an old paper she had saved with phone numbers she copied out of Paige’s personal phone directory, after her suicide.
Melanie and B.J. Royale, who lived in the front duplex in front of Paige’s apartment in 1974, were preparing to share the task of calling Paige’s friends to tell them the news of her suicide. And to inform some, that Paige left instructions for them to receive one (or more) of her paintings.
Melanie made me a copy of her original notes. I took photos of that as well.
Thank you Melanie, I enjoyed our interview and appreciate the phone list. It has given me several more clues into the last couple years of Paige’s life.
Below are images of the phone list.
Joni-Hefner entry below Jonathan Guinness. Joni refers to Joni Mattis, Hugh Hefner’s longtime assistant, personal secretary and friend from the Chicago mansion days and possible (probable) “fixer.” I believe Joni Mattis is the person who put into motion (with HMH approval) the actions taken to cover up Paige’s suicide and all the blame she placed on HMH and his friends, for instance: preventing the sensational news from leaking to the press, leaving out important details in the police incident report (like the mural), destroying or hiding the police photos taken at the scene, destroying notes written by Paige at scene.
Melanie in Daily Mail-“police read some of the note to me… most vitriol for HH and John Huston.” And Paige’s apartment being “cleaned and cleared out very quickly,” according to Melanie.
Melanie told me that that Paige’s mother (Donna) and sister (Constance) came the next day to pack up belongings. They gave a painting to Melanie before leaving.
Hefner received reports on a regular basis from employees about goings on at the mansion, its’ players and visitors. (PJ Masten)
Proximity: Paige lived in Westwood, a 10 minute car drive to Holmby Hills. The local police had a friendly relationship with Hefner and the mansion employees.
Many former LAPD officers became Mansion security for Hefner over the decades. This according to Secrets of Playboy. (PJ Masten).
The LAPD certainly knew who the hell Hugh Hefner was when they were greeted by Paige’s mural at her suicide scene 2 miles from the Playboy mansion.
As I continue to read and study the history of the LAPD, it’s for good reason they have Mythic status as a corrupt institution.
So really, it is not surprising that information unflattering to Hefner could be buried and made up to be like it just didn’t happen.
I am not in any way saying Hugh Hefner is directly responsible for Paige’s suicide.
But it’s all about the image.
Particularly at this date, when Bobbie Arnstein was arrested in Chicago on (exaggerated) cocaine smuggling charges just 9 days previous to Paige’s suicide.
Joni and Hef could have “believed” that by burying Paige’s story from getting out, they were helping Bobbie and Hef.
There was more motivation than usual to justify sweeping this incident under the rug.
PJ Masten in Secrets of Playboy talked about an awareness that negative press was to be avoided.
Jennifer Saginor, Secrets of Playboy and author of Playground said on the podcast Power,“Hef was always image conscious.”
I think the Playboy people including Hugh Hefner saw an opportunity to shut down the possibility of this news about Paige from getting out and they took it.
Jim Ellis, former body guard for Hefner in the early 1980s, said in Secrets of Playboy that his job was not only “protecting” his clients physical being, but “also their reputation.”
Why does Paige Young’s entry in the Playmate Book, say “drug overdose.” If they knowingly made that up, why that manner of death was chosen is beyond me.
END
The following screenshots are from a real estate website and show the interior of Paige’s carriage house/apartment over a garage in Westwood, located down the street from the Mormon Temple. The apartment was built over a garage in 1940, it is where Paige lived the last years of her life and committed suicide. Among her belongings was a suicide note mentioning names she said were complicit in her downfall, a will, a mural proclaiming “Hugh Hefner is the devil,” and many of her paintings. A few unfinished. All her personal belongings.
These real estate photos are all the world has left of this particular place of what is old Los Angeles.
Unless there are photographs lying in some attic or perhaps in a landfill placed there decades ago?
In this case a carriage house over a garage built there in 1940 by Kathryn Eddy, who had appeared in some walk-ons in the Silents.
All original built-ins. (Visiting reminded me of another LA trip — I visited the place Paige was born as Diana Lee Cotterell: 1933 Griffith Park Blvd, originally a Christian Science Maternity center and the building was being torn down on the day I was there.)
The builts-in of the 800 sq. foot apartment were being ripped out the day I visited; the place was being completely renovated.
Meet Michael Butler
The next section provides information on the Michael Butler entry found in Paige’s phone book seen below. Top right below sister Connie Smashey’s contact information.
I believe he is the same Michael Butler who was the producer of Hair, the famous “Tribal Love Rock” musical producing several pop hits that endure to this day. Hair is a definitive part of what represents 1960s culture.
A detailed description of Michael Butler and his upper crust background in article below by Eugenia Sheppard. It appeared in newspapers across the country in 1968, the year Hair opened. The year Paige Young was a Vietnam era Playboy Playmate.
Mary Blume wrote an eye-opening article about Butler in the LAT. Oct. 11, 1970.
Three marriages so far and a production company in LA “Natoma” And an avid polo player.
Page 1
Page #3 of the LAT article. Butler was and avid polo player
San Francisco Examiner, May 1, 1972
END
Note below that David Shane right below a Geo. Roberts.
Shane is an important character from several other chapters. He was a man with a pornstache, business owner set up by his successful Beverly Hills business owner father and brother of Cici Shane (Mrs.John) Huston. He was a visitor to the LA Mansion and alleged holder or keeper, of Paige’s “sex tape.” See chapters with Shane in the title.
Nothing comes up for Gus Prall at the top left.
LAT Nov. 1, 1973. I think the CC Playboy Club opened earlier in the fall. Paige lived about a 3 minute drive from Century City.
Marty Tregman is a long time realtor in Santa Monica, he doesn’t remember Paige. Jon Von Newman…. came up with nothing. Brian Wilson is a common name.
I began researching it as I am doing with all the entries.
Turns out it played a not insignificant role in the 2nd Wave Feminist movement.
This FWHC was one of, if not the first, women’s self-help health centers in the nation.
There were many services that Paige might have used at the “Feminist Women’s Health Center 746 Crenshaw,” as you will see through newspaper articles written at the time, both local and national.
A brief context of the times is important:
In the early 1970s, the Feminist movement was more active than ever.
More so even than the 1960s, despite publication of The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan in 1963.
1973: The Roe V.Wade case enabled a woman’ right to an abortion to become national law in January of 1973.
1972: The Equal Rights Amendment was reintroduced and 22 states quickly ratified. This same year Title 9 was made a law.
Domestic violence and rape crisis centers and phone lines opened and self-defense classes for women proliferated in the 1970s.
So did media conversations about equal pay for equal work, ending workplace sexual harassment, limited job opportunity, gender discrimination in housing and credit, and implementation of subsidized childcare and wages for housework.
1974 – Housing discrimination on the basis of sex and credit discrimination against women are outlawed by Congress.
1975: An influential book about sexual violence and rape, “Against Our Will” by Susan Brownmiller was published.
In this environment were many women weary and fed up with their treatment by almost always male doctors, OB/Gyns, as experts and authorities on their own female bodies, including the parts and functions that make up the whole woman.
The health and reproductive aspect of “Women’s Liberation” is symbolized by the worldwide success of the book “Our Bodies, Ourselves,” published in 1970 and now on its’ 9th edition.
You or someone you know may very well have a copy.
Women were talking about it and organized.
Please see article at right about the FWHC by Linda Zink of Long Beach.
2 such women were Carol Downer and Lorraine Rothman, both mothers in the Los Angles area. Together they started the Los Angeles Feminist W0men’s Health Clinic and taught classes to women on how to be the expert on their own reproductive health, which of course, includes control of fertility.
Some examples of what was taught at the FWHC:
How to do a self-check on your cervix (pelvic exam) using a speculum and mirror, how to extract one’s menstrual period before it starts (explained in-depth below) treat one’s own female health concerns and conditions, self -insertion of an IUD, practice these procedures on other women and teach them self-care.
Quote below from LA Conservancy Website as part of their nomination for historic status of the FWHC building at 1027 Crenshaw.
“Women’s Self-Help One clinic was the first in the nation and consequently placed the Crenshaw Women’s Center at the genesis point of the women’s self-help movement. Founded by Carol Downer and Lorraine Rothman, the clinic became a model for the national movement. In 1972, the Center was raided by police. Ms. Downer had applied yogurt as a cure for a yeast infection and was arrested for practicing medicine without a license. She was acquitted and the platform and publicity of The Great Yogurt Conspiracy raised the consciousness of the nation and helped make woman’s clinics a national movement.”
The raid happened at 1027 Crenshaw.
746 Crenshaw was demolished in the 1980s.
The Great Yogurt Conspiracy received wide press coverage due to its’ humorous title and the absurdity of the charges.
“Carol Downer revolutionized the women’s health movement, learning how to perform abortions and vaginal self-examinations, and teaching other women how to, as well. In the early 70s, at a time when abortion, birth control, and fertility information was not widely available to women, Carol and some other women developed the practice of menstrual extraction, offering women a means to take control of their reproduction. She and her group, which incorporated as the Feminist Women’s Health Center (FWHC) post-Roe v Wade, and travelled around the United States, equipped with vaginal speculums, teaching women about their bodies and reproductive systems. The FWHC also established the Women’s Abortion Referral Service, the first of its kind to offer pregnancy screening. From the website Feminist Current, an interview with Carol Downer conducted about 2 years ago.
Move to 746 mentioned below.
The “yogurt conspiracy,” arrest and acquittal caught the attention of cultural icons like Gloria Steinem, Bella Abzug and Dr. Benjamin Spock, bringing national attention to these LA activists.
Last column in Zink article. 5/13/73
“Lorraine Rothman was a founding member of the feminist centered Self-Help Clinic movement and a major mover of many successful behind-the-scenes projects. With Carol Downer, she worked on the concept of menstrual extraction as a viable women’s home health care technique; and, in 1971, she invented the Del-Em menstrual extraction kit, which was patented n 1974……… Rothman’s collaborative relationship with Downer and the self-help clinic movement began when she attended an April 7, 1971 meeting organized by Downer to discuss women’s reproductive rights and abortion. At the second meeting, one week later, Rothman shared her idea of a safe home health care tool, demonstrating the prototype of the Del-Em menstrual extraction kit. Shortly afterwards, Downer and Rothman founded the Feminist Women’s Health Center (FWHC) in Los Angeles; Rothman went on to open a second FWHC in Orange County, closer to her home and family. Over the next two decades, Rothman traveled widely, taking the Self-Help Clinic concept to women’s groups both in and outside the US....”Archived interview subject description at CSU Long Beach.
Carol Downer continues to lives in Eagle Rock and has been working in disability and immigration law for many years. She has lived a life of activism in the field of women’s reproductive rights and the peace movement.
For more details, please see the Carol Downer entry in the Embryo Project Encyclopedia.
END
Veronica remembers buying groceries for Paige, at a store located at the bottom of “Fernwood & Topanga Canyon Dr.”
And the Safeway on Sunset & PCH, later Vons.
This happened about once a month for quite a while and the “2 friends would chit chat and catch up on news” and Paige never wanted more food than she could physically carry.
This was before her move to Westwood. After that Veronica didn’t see Paige as much but they frequently talked on the phone.
She remembers just vaguely: Paige telling her about her own art studio in Venice Beach, a block away from the beach. (See 2 chapters: Venice Beach, Richard Sample.)
(Dennis Hopper has a connection to Paige as he knew the artists that Paige knew, Larry Bell and in the same building: DeWayne Valentine. Robert Irwin lived across the street at this time. )
Paige sometimes expressed her suicide ideation in phone conversations with Veronica.
She did not discuss Hugh Hefner or John Huston, David Shane, Desmond Guinness or a”sex tape.”(See related chapters)
Several times Paige needed a ride to visit her sister, but Veronica never met the sister: Constance/Connie.
The last couple times the two friends had a phone conversation, Veronica noted an “echoey sound in the background like Paige was in a bathroom.” Veronica tried to lighten the mood by asking her about the echoey sound and said,”Paige are you already in heaven?” Paige laughed and they hung up the phone with Veronica feeling Paige was in a better space.
It would be the last time they spoke.
Paige one time had checked herself into the UCLA Psych Center but was released in a just a few days.
Paige told Veronica “she said she had cured all the patients at the ward.”
Veronica said she never believed that Paige would actually go through with the suicide.
Separately, Melanie told me about one time driving Paige to the UCLA Psych Ward. Melanie remembers Paige returning from the ward with a very strange character who acted violently but the women scared him off. Paige showed up with a gun and he bolted.
“In California we have a law (5150) that the police (or yourself if you may harm yourself) can commit you for 3 days to a hospital for psych care. If you are pronounced no longer liable to harm yourself or others or decide you want to leave voluntarily you can after three days.”
Paige probably took advantage of the 51/50 law, which began in California in 1967.
Veronica does remember before Paige’s suicide she had expressed not having enough money for paint and told her to just wait a few days and she would be able to help her out with that. But Paige was dead before that happened.
Lack of money was a recurring problem for Paige.
She did not know Paige to own a car, says Veronica.
Paige did not talk of her past or much about her future, she seemed to always exist in and speak in the present moment.
Melanie said does not remember Paige owning a car either.
I personally think Paige must have sold her yellow Mustang that was seen by Sample in Malibu 64-67, and seen by her cousin Christian/Chris in Sherman Oaks in 1964, when Paige made Chris a cup of coffee during his visit to her apartment.
Paige told Chris about her short lived marriage, (did not say the name Mark F. Segal to Chris) and impending divorce. She did not mention the violence and threats in her divorce papers to Chris, I told him and he said “Oh, she would not have put up with that.”
No one I’ve communicated with who knew Paige say they can remember a time when she talked about her childhood her family or her background. Veronica says Joe Rank may have known about Paige’s background.
Chris Young already knew about it as they were family in each others lives in childhood when she was Diana Cotterell in Sherman Oaks in the 1950s. He last saw her right before the move to a chicken coop converted house near the east end of Malibu.
Chris said he and his mother were contacted by Connie, Paige’s sister, about the suicide. Chris remembers Connie had a cold and seemingly indifferent attitude about Paige’s death. He said this made he and his mother sick to their stomach and angry.
“Joe Rank, a Los Angeles broadcasting executive who had managed KMEX-TV, the Spanish language TV station in Los Angeles, moved to Mexico in 1973 to establish a printed tee shirt business on the beach resorts which were booming with international tourism. By 1978, Rank had shops in 75 stores in Acapulco, Cancun, Puerto Vallarta, Mazatlán, and Mexico City, plus tee shirt shops in 15 of the popular Carlos n’ Charlie’s bars and restaurants throughout Mexico.
In 1983, the name was changed to Aca Joe and product distribution was limited only to Aca Joe owned or franchised stores. The line was expanded to include pants, jackets, sweaters, and more than just tee shirts. After changing to this more exclusive distribution of the product, the stores were swamped with customers. Lines were formed in front of the stores with people waiting to get in at all hours of the day.
The success of Aca Joe did not go without notice by international investors, and soon a deal was made with American partners for the expansion of Aca Joe outside of Mexico. William Meyer became Rank’s partner in Aca Joe International and the first stores in the U.S. were opened in the Bay Area of San Francisco, with shops in Union Square, Sausalito, and the Stanford Shopping Center.
The U.S. shops were very successful, and to provide financing for expansion, the new U.S. company filed for listing on the NASDAQ stock exchange. Prospects for the future of the stores were bright, and in 1985 Aca Joe International was the fastest rising stock on NASDAQ” From the ACA Joe website.
Joe left LA and had moved to Mexico in 1973, before Paige killed herself.
I have not communicated with anyone who heard about Paige’s death through any media with the exception of Veronica who heard part of an announcement about it on the radio.
Away from the backyard and duplex.
I’m looking up from the alley. This window faces the building next door. There is a bit of yard between trees house and fence, I did not see that part. It’s where Paige kept the Akitas she wanted to breed and Melanie complained about them barking. LAPD reports talks about a man named DeWitt to whom Paige wrote instructions to take her dogs. (See chapter on death certificate.) Veronika thinks Paige was going to try and make money from breeding the Akitas.
These windows face the alley. Garage had storage in it but no cars says Melanie.
Category: #Paige Young, 1970s, LA Locations, Playboy, PMOM, Popular Culture Tagged: #Paige Young, 1970s, 1970sLA, 2nd Wave Feminists, Abortion rights, Aquarius Theatre, Bill Cosby, Carol Downer, celebrity connections, Celeste Shane Huston, Connie Smashey, David Shane, Desmond Guinness, Feminist History, Feminist Women's Health Care Clinic, Feminist Women's Health Center, Fernwood Market, Fran, FWHC, Hair, Hair the musical, Hon. Desmond Guiness, Hugh Hefner, Jody Jacobs, Jonathan Guinness, Joni Mattis, LA History, Lorraine Rothman, Los Angeles History, Michael Butler, Michael Butler Hair, Our Bodies Ourselves, PCH, Playboy Playmate, Roe vs. Wade 1973, Santa Barbara, Sunset Blvd., Sunset Strip, Suzy Knickerbocker, Vons, Westwood, Women's Liberation, Women's self-health care movement