• Hollywood’s Broken Angel

  • Jan 20 2025
  • Length: 4 mins
  • Podcast

Hollywood’s Broken Angel

  • Summary

  • Her name was Lillian Millicent Entwistle, “Peg” to her friends. She was born in 1908.

    At the age of 19, Peg married Robert Keith, 10 years older than she. Then she discovered that he had been married before and had a 6 year-old son. The couple was soon divorced.

    “I’ll move to a new place and get a new start,” she thought. “Goodbye, New York. Hello, L.A. I’m going to become an actress.”

    But hopes and dreams are fragile things and hearts are easily broken.

    At the age of 24 “She decided she’d failed,” says David Wallace, author of Hollywoodland. “She was very dejected and one day in 1932 she came up to the Hollywood sign, found a maintenance ladder by the ‘H,’ climbed up to the top and presumably took one last look over the city she had failed to conquer, and jumped.”

    Her body was discovered two days later by a hiker.

    A handwritten note was found in her purse. “I am afraid I am a coward. I am sorry for everything. If I had done this a long time ago, it would have saved a lot of pain.”

    A letter arrived at her home on the same day her body was discovered. It was from The Beverly Hills Playhouse. They wanted her to star in their next production.

    Are you ready for this? It was to be a play about a young girl who loses all hope and commits suicide in the final act.

    Peg, if only you could’ve hung on. Things are never as bad as they seem. But now all we have left of you is a photograph and a note.

    Remember that 6-year-old son of Robert Keith you heard about in the second paragraph?

    That boy, Brian Keith, grew up to be a famous actor, best known for his role as “Uncle Bill” on the hit TV show, “Family Affair.” He also played the perfect Teddy Roosevelt opposite Sean Connery in “The Wind and the Lion,” (1975).

    I have seen that movie 14 times. Brian Keith made Teddy Roosevelt come alive for me.

    Brian Keith shot himself in 1997.

    Yes, hopes and dreams are fragile things and hearts are easily broken.

    Be gentle with the hearts that have been entrusted to you.

    Roy H. Williams

    Mike Frick started a side hustle as a way to help his college-student son earn extra cash. Today that business sells its products nationwide to construction sites, quarries, farms, mines, and the US military. “Our products are simple, durable, and cost effective,” Mike tells roving reporter Rotbart. In spite of heavy competition from Chinese knock-offs, Mike and his company continue to thrive by manufacturing their products only in America. It’s a story of focus, humility, and fantastic success. Because that’s how we roll at MondayMorningRadio.com.

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