Dearly Departed Tours & Artifact Museum

Dearly Departed Tours and Artifact Museum was a guided bus tour started in 2004 of the locations of tragic events in Hollywood, Los Angeles, such as the site of the Tate–LaBianca murders perpetrated by members of the Manson Family, and an adjacent museum with artifacts from these events.[1]

It was created by author, documentarian and historian Scott Michaels. Michaels coined the term "Death Hag" which has been embraced by the community who are devotees of celebrity death. The Artifact Museum museum was located on Santa Monica Boulevard, across from the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles, California. It opened in April 2017.[2] It displayed a smashed 1966 Buick Electra sedan in which Jayne Mansfield died in 1967.[3][4] Other items on display in the museum included Sharon Tate's brassiere, Carrie Fisher's cigarette butt, Annette Funicello's gun permit, Rock Hudson's death bed, Mae West's false teeth, and a funeral urn with the ashes of Michu Meszaros, a dwarf and stunt double who played ALF.[5]

Via a crowdfunding campaign, the owner of the museum raised the funds to have Ken Weatherwax interred in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood in 2017.[6]

Scott Michaels was approached by Quentin Tarantino to be a consultant for the film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, providing details of the Tate Labianca case, earning Scott a Special Thanks credit in the film.

The Dearly Departed Tours Museum shut down during the COVID-19 pandemic.[7]

References

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  1. ^ "Most Morbid Hollywood Tours". KCAL-TV. October 23, 2012.
  2. ^ "Dearly Departed Tours". Time Out.
  3. ^ Bartlett, James (April 20, 2017). "A New, Improved Hollywood Death Tours and Museum Is Opening Across From Hollywood Forever". LA Weekly.
  4. ^ NICHOLS, CHRIS (May 24, 2018). "An Inside Look at the Business of Hosting Celebrity Death Tours". Los Angeles.
  5. ^ "Charles Manson: visita guiada al horror de los 60" [Charles Manson: guided tour of the horror of the 60s]. La Nación. July 28, 2019.
  6. ^ Bartlett, James (October 19, 2017). "On Halloween, a Deceased Child Star Gets the Sendoff He Deserves". LA Weekly.
  7. ^ CHILAND, ELIJAH (January 24, 2021). "Pandemic Brings Changes, Closures for LA Tour Companies". Los Angeles Business Journal.

External list

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34°5′27.4″N 118°19′5.3″W / 34.090944°N 118.318139°W / 34.090944; -118.318139