MovieChat Forums > Frances (1983) Discussion > The Facts about the alleged Lobotomy + o...

The Facts about the alleged Lobotomy + other issues


I see someone in the thread below has already mentioned my essay, which is the subject of a thread on the Frances Farmer board. My family has known the Farmers for several generations (including Frances herself), and I personally have spent over 20 years researching her life (I was featured on the A&E Biography about Frances, along with Jessica Lange). My essay has received worldwide attention and has been cited in several recent books and articles about subjects tangentially related to Frances. Let me state here for the record:

1. It has been conclusively proven, beyond any possible doubt, that Frances was NOT lobotomized. This legend began with the book "Shadowland" by William Arnold, which in turn was the basis for the Jessica Lange feature. In a court proceeding, William Arnold admitted he had "fictionalized" (in other words, made up!) several elements of Frances' story, INCLUDING THE LOBOTOMY. This is part of the court record (which is liberally quoted in my essay, including the judge's harsh denunciation of Arnold for initially claiming his book was non-fiction, then later "changing his story."). I am one of the few people who has had access to some of Frances' medical records--she was never operated on for any reason at Western State Hospital. Furthermore (again as is pointed out in my essay), EVERY nurse who worked there at the time on the lobotomy ward insists she was not lobotomized AND the psychiatric resident at the time (who performed most, if not all, of the lobotomies himself after Walter Freeman had trained him) insists she was not lobotomized. I have complete surgical records on every lobotomy patient at Western State (both transorbital and prefrontal) and Frances, quite simply, was NOT lobotomized. Walter Freeman NEVER mentioned Frances in ANY of his private papers or patient records, and he was notorious for keeping anal-retentive records on all the patients he operated on.

2. Frances remained opinionated, forceful and intellectually "prickly" up until the day she died. I have the only existing film of her hosting her Indianapolis tv show, and it shows a completely engaged, lovely and gregarious host who, in this case, is also a wonderful mentor for beginning drama students at Purdue (these segments were filmed when Frances was appearing there in "The Sea Gull").

3. Frances did NOT write "Will There Really Be A Morning?", so to judge her at all based on that book is specious. It was written by Jean Ratcliffe, who made numerous errors of fact (including the garbage about Frances' family), and who also admitted in private that she had made up the more horrible aspects of Frances' institutionalization (i.e., the rapes, rats and other horrors) in order to insure a quick sale of the property to the movies (Ida Lupino optioned the book, but died before she could film it).

The real Frances Farmer endured enough heartache in her life. If you're interested in the truth about Frances Farmer, I invite you to read the *real* story (though it may be relatively mundane compared to all the sensationalized trash that has been written and filmed about her). My essay can be found at:

http://www.jeffreykauffman.net/francesfarmer

Then click on the "Shedding Light" tab on left.

reply

Neat! You were on A&E Bography!

reply

JM - So are you saying that this Jean Ratcliffe who came off in the book (she herself wrote) as a great friend to Frances but may have been not such a great friend to Frances? I took that book seriously as tho Frances had personally written it, or at least had a hand in how it turned. The last chapter sounded as tho Frances had sat down and told us about the cancer herself. Another question is why did Frances allow Jean to write the book and say what she said or was the book edited and or re-writen to suit Jean Ratcliffe after Frances passed away?

Hey, sorry about being rotten to ya yesterday. I was in a sensitive mood..

shelby

reply

The evolution of "Will There Really Be a Morning?" is a story in and of itself (as with so much regarding Frances). Frances *did* start work on an autobiography, with Lois Kibbee helping. That is why in another thread I recommended that people read Patrick Agan's chapter on Frances in his book "The Decline and Fall of the Love Goddesses," because he had access to Lois' notes (including several letters Frances wrote to Lois).

Unfortunately, there was little publisher interest at the time (which influenced Jean later, as I will discuss in a minute), so the project was dropped (though Frances wasn't told about this, as she was battling the cancer that would kill her).

After Frances' death, Jean sensed an opportunity, took over the writing, and completely redid everything, sensationalizing elements in order to guarantee publisher interest and, as she readily admitted to friends in Indianapolis, to also guarantee the sale of the property to the movies for a film adaptation. Jean made up the rapes, rats, dead cats, et al., because the publisher (Putnams) told her that's what it would take to make the book a success. Sad, isn't it?

Jean was certainly a friend to Frances, there's no denying that. But like so many of Frances' "friends" throughout her life, Jean was also an opportunist who used Frances' fame and fortune to her own benefit.

The fact that Jean uses the second half of "WTRBAM" to basically aggrandize her own role in Frances' life (not to mention dedicating the book to herself) tells you a lot about her. But, as with all people, she was a mixture of good and bad--she was there for Frances when Frances needed somebody. And she was Frances' "home nurse" during Frances' final illness.

reply

I, for one, want to thank you for clarifying the inaccuracies in the book and the film. I had seen this film many times, actually thought it was entertaining, but when I find out something is a blatant lie, it really upsets me...kinda like when everyone found out Milli Vanilla were fake, ya know? Anyway, I read your essay, very well written and informative, and thank you for bringing out the truth of Miss Farmer. It kind of makes you wonder what other biopics and biographies that are out there that are so misleading (Mommie Dearest comes to mind). Even so, I still have great respect for Miss Farmer, and would like to read more about her and her life.

Thank you again. The truth is always the best story.



I'm not going to be IGNORED, Dan!

reply

I forgot to ask, however, how do you feel Jessica Lange's performance was as Miss Farmer? Besides of the script inaccuracies, was she true to her actual persona or her mannerisms????


I'm not going to be IGNORED, Dan!

reply

First of all, thanks very much for your kind comments. One of the reasons getting the truth out has been so important to me is that I, evidently like you, felt completely emotionally ripped off, so to speak, by the film and "Shadowland" after I learned what the actual facts were. A lot of people ask me what I think of Jessica's performance and I have to say that while I respect her intensity immensely, I frankly get so angry at the inaccuracies and fictions of the film itself that it makes "enjoying" (not that this is a film one "enjoys") the performances very difficult at times. I think Jessica gets a lot of Frances right--her intelligence, her anger, even, at times, her vulnerability. But there's simply so much more--the real Frances Farmer was one of the most fascinating women of the 20th century (IMHO, of course), with far-ranging interests and activities that Lange only hints at in her performance.

reply

Is it possible to obtain a copy of the episode with your A&E appearence?

reply

[deleted]

NPR's Fresh Air program featured Freeman biographer Jack El-Hai yesterday. For those interested, I believe the NPR website archives the program for at least a month, so you can listen to the interview. Jack had exclusive access to Freeman's papers, and as is discussed in my article "Shedding Light on Shadowland", concurs that Freeman never had any contact with Farmer (unfortunately Jack had already submitted his final version of the book when I got the actual lobotomy records that prove Frances wasn't operated on, as is also discussed in my article). There will be another NPR documentary about Freeman coming soon, probably by fall 2005.

"Shedding Light on Shadowland" can be found at:

http://hometown.aol.com/jmkauffman/sheddinglight.html

reply

[deleted]

thank you very much for that essay
after watching Frances i just had to find out how much was real or not

in conclusion though i would just like to say that...HOLLYWOOD REALLY SUCKED! but i do love my movies *sigh*

reply

[deleted]

I used both FOIA requests as well as personal connections to get me access to privately held archives. An amazing amount of material is still extant if you know where to look.

reply

What about the story that walter freemans son says she had lobotomy? [email protected]

reply

If you read my essay that is gone into in great detail. However, I will add this: only one of Freeman's sons ever made that claim, and he later recanted (after the Mysteries & Scandals episode aired). Details about his recantation can be found in Jack El-Hai's authoritative new biography of Freeman, "The Lobotomist." What is not so widely known is that Freeman's younger son always disputed his older brother's claims, which of course turns out to be the truth. Freeman kept anal-retentive track of all of his patients, and his patient records are quite clear: he never operated on Frances Farmer. He never even saw her at Western State.

reply

I have always been troubled about Frances's fate after watching this movie. I know one shouldn't always take movies at face value, but it is difficult not to when there is no competing version of the truth. I feel a lot better about the real Frances's life now, after reading your careful research. Thanks for the time you put into this. I think you probably made a lot of people besides just me feel better. I hope your work becomes more widely known.

reply

Conspiracy?

reply

Thanks for the posting. I am pissed off that the filmmakers lied to us so blatantly to the extent where they actualy put a fact note at the end of the movie telling us how Frances led the rest of her life.

OK, so the movie as told is pretty interesting. But why not change the name slightly and do it as an "inspired by" production instead of passing it off as a true story?

They could have called her Frances Farber or something. Looks like half the movie was made up. We are not dealing with mere composites.

reply

[deleted]

As one of the very few people who's seen the actual medical archives, I can tell you the "awful procedures" FF went through were electroshock and perhaps hydrotherapy (the records are not complete on that technique) at Western State, and evidently insulin shock at La Crescenta. While lamentable, these were all standard treatments in those days--Frances was not put through anything "out of the ordinary," as sad as even these treatments seem to us all nowadays.

reply

[deleted]

As I said quite clearly, the techniques were lamentable. That still doesn't mean Frances was singled out for "extra" treatment. In terms of her mother "putting her there," if you had read my essay "Shedding Light on Shadowland," you would know two things: first of all, it was Frances' brother and sister-in-law who signed the original commitment order, not Lillian. Second of all, Frances was reinstitutionalized only after she became physically violent, as her nephew has described, including knife attacks on family members. What would you have had them do?

reply

[deleted]

My research certainly doesn't rely solely on the Farmer family. As I've stated several times, I've seen the historical medical records, which still exist (despite some assertions that they don't), as well as court records and contemporary news articles. You'd have to believe *everyone* was lying, not just the Farmers, including judges, attorneys, journalists, physicians and everyone else involved in the story.

reply

Just a quick note about electroshock: I was working on a story about a mental facility in NJ. Turns out that electroshock has been "rehabbed" as a treatment for severe depression that's untreatable by chemical or psychiatric methods. It's currently in use again in certain limited circumstances.

reply

The link for your essay is no longer working. Is there anywhere else I can read it? Thank you.

reply

Sorry about that--I moved to my own website years ago. I've edited the original post, but the correct URL is:

http://www.jeffreykauffman.net/francesfarmer

Then click on the "Shedding Light" tab on left.

reply

Thank you for providing the new URL and, much more importantly, for your exhaustive work to correct the publicized inaccuracies of Ms. Farmer's life.

reply

Thanks for the historical corrections. I just watched the film and grew up in the area where Western State Hospital is located. Do you know :
1. Were the patients housed in huge rooms like the film portrays?
2. Was she given some miracle injection that made her interview before the board show her to be recovered?
3. Was her mother much like the character in the film? Did she call her daughter "little sister?"

reply

Recently viewing this movie, I am very pleased to find that there is an article giving the true details of her life. I look forward to reading it, but in the meantime, like the previous poster, I am interested to know if FF was given medication to assist her through the interview, and, of so, does anyone know what it was? ECT is still commonly and successfully used to treat chronic, intractable depression, and is not the ghastly procedure that is usually presented in films.

reply

Walter Freeman is also the doctor, who had no surgical training, who lobotomized Rosemary Kennedy, sister of Bobby, Jack and Ted.
she was ruined at age 23, lived 63 more years, when, to read about her behavior at the time, she was a moody, spoiled young kid. there arent more than a few million of those. tragic.

reply

The Rosemary Kennedy story is one of the most horrific mistreatments of a human being I ever read. She was turned into a vegetable by that horror; pictures and stories of her (including a diary she kept) show she was an attractive, vivid and creative young woman. Papa Joe thought she has "slutty" tendencies and wanted her made more "manageable."

He turned his daughter into a zombie to make sure her antics didn't disrupt the political careers he had planned for his sons.

There's a hot spot in hell for a man like that.

reply