Virginia Rappe (pronounced *) (September 19, 1895 - September 9, 1921) was an American silent film actress. She was allegedly raped by Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle, dying days after the rape, although the details of the event are unclear, due to conflicting eyewitness accounts.
In 1920, she began working for the production company run by director/producer Henry Lehrman and the two began a relationship that led to their engagement. Never a major star, Virginia Rappe appeared in only eleven films before her life was cut short at the age of twenty-six.
She was best known in her lifetime as the girl pictured on the sheet music cover of "Let Me Call You Sweetheart," a popular song of the era.
The exact events of that infamous party are still unclear, with witnesses relating numerous versions of what happened. It was alleged that she died as a result of a violent sexual assault by Fatty Arbuckle. Other rumors circulated that Rappe died of injuries resulting from an earlier botched abortion or complications from gonorrhea.
After three murder trials, Arbuckle was formally acquitted of any charges, although his reputation and career were permanently ruined.
Arbuckle's case has been examined by scholars and historians over the years and is still speculated about today, although a number of detailed books about this case such as David Yallop's The Day the Laughter Stopped: The True Story Of Fatty Arbuckle (1976) and Andy Edmonds' Frame Up! The Untold Story Of Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle (1993) have concluded that Arbuckle was innocent.
1895 births | 1921 deaths | American actors | American film actors | American silent film actors | People from New York | Entertainers who died in their 20s | Burials at Hollywood Forever Cemetery | Sex scandals
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"Virginia Rappe".
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