Once Johnnie Ray and Bill Franklin were a couple and in a star-manager relationship, and Johnnie's health began to restore, the two of them went to live in Torremelios, Spain, not yet a resort, and lived a simple and affordable life. Johnnie had wanted to quit the show business treadmill he was on. At this point he was 38 years old and had given up drinking knowing the cirrhosis could kill him. Actually most people would have died as much as he drank.
"That he was still unable to sleep even after this average daily elbow bending and pill popping regimen is an ugly insight to the myriad tensions, pressures, anxieties and mental snares that assailed him. Johnnie's life was an exercise in extremes, unimaginable emotional zeniths, the rise and plunge of glorious rapture and shattering torture. His anguish, like his capacity for intoxicants, was beyond comprehension. (page 313).
"Like New York, Dorothy Kilgallen had also changed. Johnnie was shocked when they met face to face. Dorothy was obviously deteriorating - her face was puffy, her figure was shot. She had gained quite a bit of weight and seemed weak; her bearing and gait were stilted, her speech was no longer the tuneful silvery voice of Broadway, but closer to labored, thick-tongued voice of the Bowery. Dorothy's passion and principals ranj as high, true and clear as ever, but her mental clarity and standards of practice were also degenerating. (Page 318)
She had also taken up with a new lover, the one that author Mark Shaw thinks may have cooperated with the Mafia to murder Dorothy.
Johnnie was trying to make a return (ie. not called a comeback) changing his show song list. When he restarted his return with a show at The Latin Quarter in 1965, Dorothy was back stage for every show. After this success, bookers will calling from all over, and Johnnie agreed to perform in Las Vegas at the Tropicana. He was now mod in his appearance, upgrading to the 1960's with tossled hair and the picture of health.
Dorothy and her husband were also experiencing financial problems like never before. So she took a paid "press junket" to Vegas in order to see Johnnie perform there. It was important to Johnnie that she be there to show her support. At the same time she was, as an investigative journalist, independently investigating the President John F. Kennedy assassination.
Bill Franklin took her calls and said she was using a "Little Girl Lost" voice. He thought drugs were taking over her life. (Page 423-324) Still, she arrived dressed beautifully to hear him sing and show her support.
"Dorothy spent four days in Las Vegas. Between her boundless passion and limited time, Bill felt even more uncomfortable that he had as part of a trio in New York. "We all saw a lot of each other, and there were times when Johnnie and she went out alone. She would come out to the house one night, Johnnie would go to her hotel the next," he said. "I kind of felt in the middle there... a lot in the middle. That happened a lot with her anyway, but it seemed she was feeling like maybe Johnnie didn't love her like she thought he should." (page 326)
After the success of The Tropicana, Bill still had to search out more bookings for Johnnie. On the night that Dorothy died, Johnnie wanted to watch "To Tell The Truth," another television game show on which there were mystery guests. Dorothy was one of the mystery guests and the show had been taped previously.
"We had lunch on the Sunset strip," Jimmy Campbell recalled. "And John picked up the newspaper, opened it up and there was the headline: 'Dorothy Kilgallen Dies In Her Sleep.' Jesus Christ -- he almost fainted on the spot.
He said, 'Wait a minute now ... and started crying like a baby. He cried for real. She was a good lady, man. Good to him, good to me, good to all of us," Campbell's voice tapered to near silence with the recollection. "We got back up to the house, we're both crying now, and John says, 'Give me a drink.' We got drunk. They were close, man, really tight. She was one of the best friends he had.
"After he got done crying about it, he got pissed off." Campbell said, "John didn't believe she died of natural causes. He said, 'I ain't gonna tell you everything that I know about what Dorothy knows, but I don't believe she just laid down and went to sleep like that.' He didn't tell me the whole story though. Never would. I asked him that day and he just said, 'It's dangerous to know what Dorothy knows." (pages 332-333)
Dorothy's funeral in New York in 1965 took place at St. Vincent Ferrer, the same Roman Catholic church she had been married in. A couple thousand New Yorkers showed up. Johnnie watched the news coverage on television and cried.
"John went berserk when Dorothy died," Jim Low said. "That just tore him apart. I''' never forget it. He was always very high on her, thought the world of her." The loss was a brutal, devastating blow that smashed Johnnie's life apart." (page 347)
Missy here! This is the only reference to Johnnie's reaction to his lover's death I could find and I'm glad to know that his feelings for her were genuine.
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