Ann Woodward

Ann Eden Woodward (born Evangeline Lucille Crowell; December 12, 1915 – October 10, 1975) was an American socialite, showgirl, model, and radio actress. In 1940, while working as a nightclub dancer and radio actress, she was voted "The Most Beautiful Girl in Radio." Woodward became a prominent and controversial figure in New York high society after her marriage to banking heir William Woodward Jr. Although never convicted, she was suspected of murder after she shot and killed her husband in 1955, claiming that she had mistaken him for a burglar. The circumstances surrounding her husband's death led to Woodward becoming a cause célèbre and, later, being banished from high society. Life called the event "The Shooting of the Century." In 1975 Truman Capote published excerpts from an unfinished novel Answered Prayers, which accused Woodward of murdering her husband. Just before the stories were to be published in Esquire, she killed herself by taking cyanide.

Ann Woodward
Born
Evangeline Lucille Crowell

(1915-12-12)December 12, 1915
Pittsburgh, Kansas, U.S.
DiedOctober 10, 1975(1975-10-10) (aged 59)
Upper East Side, Manhattan
New York City, U.S.
Cause of deathsuicide by cyanide poisoning
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery
NationalityAmerican
Occupationshowgirl, model, actress, socialite
Spouse(s)
(
m. 19431955)
(his death)
Children2
Parent(s)M. Jesse Crowell (father)

Biography

Woodward was born Evangeline Lucille Crowell on December 12, 1915 in Pittsburg, Kansas to Colonel M. Jesse Crowell, a streetcar conductor and retired military officer from Detroit, and his wife.[1][2][3][4] She attended Kansas City Junior College for one year.[4] As a young adult, she moved to Kansas City and changed her name to Ann Eden after her parents divorced and remarried.[2] In 1937 Woodward moved to New York City to work as a model and actress and was signed with John Robert Powers modeling agency.[2][5] Through the Powers agency, Woodward landed roles as a radio actress, and was voted "The Most Beautiful Girl in Radio" in 1940.[2][6] She had a role in Sir Noël Coward's Set to Music.[4]

While working as a showgirl at FeFe's Monte Carlo, a nightclub in New York City, Woodward met William Woodward Sr., a wealthy banker from a prominent old money family who served as Chairman of the Central Hanover Bank & Trust.[2] It is speculated that she was Woodward's mistress. She was later courted by Woodward's son, William Woodward Jr., and married him in 1943 at St Luke's Memorial Episcopal Church in Tacoma, Washington.[2][4] The marriage was a controversial one, and she was initially shunned by New York high society.[2][1] Her mother-in-law, Elizabeth Odgen Cryder Woodward, objected to the marriage.[6][3] She was eventually welcomed into prominent social circles and became a leading figure in society. She had two sons with her husband, William Woodward III and James Woodward.[2][6]

The Woodwards' marriage was an unhappy one, both having strings of affairs.[3][7][8] Her husband asked for a divorce in 1947, but Woodward refused.[2]

Shooting, aftermath, and suicide

In the fall of 1955, there were a string of burglaries in the Woodwards' neighborhood in Oyster Bay.[3][2] On October 30, 1955 Woodward and her husband returned to their country estate after attending a party hosted by Florence Tucker Baker in honor of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, sleeping in separate bedrooms.[3][1] Later that night Ann fired a shotgun twice, killing her husband. She claimed she had mistaken him for a burglar.[6] She was not indicted for the shooting, and a Nassau County grand jury deemed the event an accident.[6][9] The shooting led to Woodward becoming a cause célèbre in New York, and was referred to by Life as "The Shooting of the Century."[6][5] Although never proven guilty of murder, she was shunned by high society for the rest of her life.[1][9] She and her children moved in with her mother-in-law.

In 1975 Truman Capote published excerpts of his unfinished novel Answered Prayers in Esquire, which scandalized high society.[10] The novel's characters were based on Capote's real-life acquaintances who were prominent socialites of the time.[6][2] The novel revealed scandals and issues within the lives of William S. Paley, Babe Paley, Happy Rockefeller, Gloria Vanderbilt, and Woodward. In the novel, Capote based a character named Ann Cutler, a bigamist and gold digger who shoots her husband, off of Woodward's killing of her husband, implying that it was murder.[6][5][6] Answered Prayers caused such a scandal prior to its release, that Woodward killed herself by taking cyanide later that year.[11][9] Her body was discovered on October 10, 1975 in her apartment on Fifth Avenue. Her mother in law said of her death, "she shot my son, and Truman just murdered her, and so now I suppose we don't have to worry about that anymore."[6] Subsequently, both of Woodward's sons committed suicide; James in 1976 and William in 1999.[6] The incident was also portrayed in Dominick Dunne's 1985 novel The Two Mrs. Grenvilles, which was turned into a television miniseries in 1987.[2][5]

Woodward's funeral took place at St. James Episcopal Church on the Upper East Side.[4] She was buried at the Woodward family plot in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx.

gollark: Really, the most something people are those who can actually focus on lots of work and don't have horrible mental issues resulting from it.
gollark: Hmmm.
gollark: Might be mixed up with something else.
gollark: I thought they had completion rates around 95% for the first year.
gollark: Really?

References

  1. Inc, Time (November 14, 1955). "LIFE". Time Inc via Google Books.
  2. "Ann Woodward". Biography.
  3. "The History of New York Scandals - Ann Woodward Shot Her Husband -- New York Magazine - Nymag". New York Magazine.
  4. Spiegel, Irving (October 12, 1975). "Ann Woodward, Cleared in '55 Of Slaying Her Husband, Dead" via NYTimes.com.
  5. "The Free Lance-Star - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  6. Yardley, Jim (May 8, 1999). "Heir to a Fortune, and to Tragedy; Suicide Ends the Life of a Wealthy, and Haunted, Man" via NYTimes.com.
  7. "W. Woodward; Scion of Rich Family Plagued by Tragedy". Los Angeles Times. May 8, 1999.
  8. "The Two Mrs. Woodwards: The Scandalous Story of a High-Society Shooting". www.nypress.com.
  9. "Fate's Captive". PEOPLE.com.
  10. Callahan, Maureen (January 24, 2016). "The story that destroyed Truman Capote — and high society".
  11. LLC, New York Media (November 26, 1984). "New York Magazine". New York Media, LLC via Google Books.
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