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- <text id=89TT1954>
- <title>
- July 31, 1989: A Fatal Obsession With The Stars
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 31, 1989 Doctors And Patients
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 43
- A Fatal Obsession with the Stars
- </hdr><body>
- <p>An actress's murder points to growing problem of disturbed fans
- </p>
- <p> Neighbors said the slight, bookish-looking man with curly
- brown hair had been wandering the streets of Los Angeles'
- prosperous Fairfax district for hours. He stopped residents,
- pulled a picture of a young woman out of a large manila
- envelope, and asked if they had seen her around. Eventually he
- learned her address. On Tuesday morning last week, say police,
- he waited outside her apartment for nearly four hours. Finally
- he apparently rang her bell. When she answered the door, he
- allegedly shot her dead.
- </p>
- <p> The victim was Rebecca Schaeffer, 21, a rising actress who
- co-starred in the CBS series My Sister Sam and is featured in
- the current movie Scenes from the Class Struggle in Beverly
- Hills. Arrested for her murder in Tucson the next day was Robert
- John Bardo, 19, a former fast-food restaurant worker.
- Authorities describe him as "an obsessive fan of Miss
- Schaeffer's."
- </p>
- <p> The words "obsessive fan" cause a premonitory chill among
- celebrities these days. Increasingly they have seen that the
- most fervent admirers can turn into crazed attackers. The
- problem has become more evident since the beginning of the
- decade, when Mark David Chapman killed John Lennon and John
- Hinckley shot President Ronald Reagan in a bizarre bid for the
- affection of actress Jodie Foster. There has been a rash of ugly
- episodes, some murderous, some merely distressing:
- </p>
- <p> A 26-year-old woman was arrested earlier this year after
- allegedly sending more than 5,000 threatening letters to actor
- Michael J. Fox. The letters said that Fox and his new wife,
- actress Tracy Pollan, would die if he did not divorce her. They
- were signed "Your No. 1 Fan."
- </p>
- <p> A former mental patient showed up at Universal Studios last
- December and allegedly shot and killed two unarmed guards after
- they refused his demand to see actor Michael Landon.
- </p>
- <p> A crazed fan, convicted of knifing actress Theresa Saldana
- in 1982, has repeatedly threatened to kill her when he gets out
- of jail. Saldana has waged a public campaign to prevent the
- man's release. Authorities recently stayed his parole, but it
- is now scheduled for March.
- </p>
- <p> A 41-year-old former legal secretary who calls herself
- Billie Jean Jackson was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in jail for
- violating a court order to stay away from singer Michael
- Jackson's Encino home and stop representing herself as his wife.
- </p>
- <p> Talk-show host David Letterman has had his Connecticut
- home broken into four times and his sports car taken for a spin
- by a 36-year-old woman who refers to herself as "Mrs.
- Letterman."
- </p>
- <p> Since 1980, a 52-year-old farmer has been convicted eleven
- times of harassing singer Anne Murray. He called her office 263
- times in six months last year.
- </p>
- <p> Such star stalkers are only just beginning to be
- understood. Most people are attracted by celebrities' aura of
- glamour, power and wealth, but normal fans know their fantasies
- are bounded by reality. Obsessed fans do not. Typically they are
- young, between 20 and 34, and emotionally unbalanced. Unable to
- forge relationships with the real people in their lives, they
- imagine intimacy with a public figure. Actors, singers,
- athletes, politicians -- any will serve their needs.
- </p>
- <p> The attachment is usually expressed as love. In a study
- sponsored by the National Institute of Justice and released
- this year, researchers analyzed 1,500 "inappropriate" letters
- sent to dozens of Hollywood celebrities. Only 5% of the writers
- cast themselves as enemies or would-be assassins. Others saw
- themselves as business associates, friends or religious saviors.
- But the rest acted like spouses or suitors. Says Park Dietz, a
- forensic psychiatrist in Newport Beach, Calif., who directed the
- project: "If you didn't know who the two people were, you would
- think it was a normal love letter." About 15% of the writers
- tried to approach the stars personally, usually at their homes.
- </p>
- <p> When obsessed fans turn violent, say experts, it is usually
- not out of hatred but because their romantic fantasies cannot
- be fulfilled. Celebrities with the sweetest images may be the
- most vulnerable, perhaps because their seeming availability
- makes the frustrated fan's disappointment more intense. Thus an
- actress like Joan Collins who portrays bitchy characters may
- inspire hate mail, but those who are seen as the girl next door,
- like Schaeffer and Saldana, will attract fans who are
- potentially more dangerous. Those who kill "may feel that they
- are going to be united in heaven, or that the person is being
- taken over by devils and that they're going to save them from
- a worse punishment," explains Janet Warren, a professor of
- behavioral medicine at the University of Virginia, who worked
- on the Justice study.
- </p>
- <p> Celebrities, sometimes deliberately, sometimes unwittingly,
- encourage overinvolvement by their fans. A sort of perverse
- symbiosis exists between star and votary. Many celebrities lack
- sturdy egos and are looking for unqualified adoration. Others
- think that their most emotional and devoted fans are integral
- to their success and must be cultivated. Dietz deplores the
- Hollywood routine of answering fan mail. And he is especially
- critical of the practice of sending out autographed publicity
- photos: "Sometimes mentally ill recipients interpret the signed
- photograph as a personal communication confirming, for example,
- that they are about to be married."
- </p>
- <p> Disturbed admirers may also get the wrong impression when
- celebrities share their private lives. Some stars appear eager
- to confide their most personal secrets in popular magazines, and
- they allow cameras to roam freely in their homes -- even their
- bedrooms -- on shows like Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.
- "There's a tremendous need for caution and restraint," says
- Theresa Saldana. But she and others argue that it is their
- profession more than their publicity that exposes stars to the
- public.
- </p>
- <p> Some celebrities invest a great deal of money to protect
- themselves from their fans. Gavin de Becker, who operates a
- 100-client security service in Los Angeles, charges those who
- request full-time protection an average of $225,000 a year. De
- Becker provides the staffs and publicists of celebrities with
- 20 pointers to help them screen letters or calls. A direct
- threat is not necessarily a good indicator of true danger, he
- says. "`I'm going to kill you' is as common as a fan letter to
- many of these people." But, he adds, "it becomes different if
- someone says, `I've sold my house, and I'm coming to get you.'"
- De Becker and his staff of 31 are currently keeping tabs on
- 5,400 people who may pose a safety hazard to his clients; about
- half are considered serious threats.
- </p>
- <p> Warning signs of obsession are usually evident long before
- fans attack. Overardent admirers talk incessantly about their
- idols. They watch their films again and again or play their
- recordings over and over. They neglect responsibilities at home,
- school or work. Sometimes they devote an entire room to a
- celebrity, filling it with photographs and clippings, making it
- a sort of shrine. "Families should take this seriously," warns
- Dietz, "but they usually don't." The next step in the compulsion
- often involves travel, according to De Becker, first in a random
- pattern, then with a purpose: to follow the object of their
- desires.
- </p>
- <p> The alleged killer of Rebecca Schaeffer appears to fit the
- profile to a remarkable degree. He kept a video collection of
- episodes of her television show. He proudly displayed an
- autographed publicity photo of the actress, and he sent her "an
- affectionate letter" a year ago. He called her agency several
- times. Sadly, no one discerned in time the pattern of a fatal
- obsession.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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