Review: Famous Players by Rick Geary

Famous Players: The Mysterious Death of William Desmond Taylor
By Rick Geary
NBM, August 2009, $15.95
No one does murder like Rick Geary. For more than a
decade he’s been regularly creating slim books in this loose series, each depicting
a separate, horribly violent crime of passion in his inimitable crisp and
detailed style, each with enough Geary detachment and subdued whimsy to keep
the blood from being too much. This is the tenth – not including an earlier,
larger-format [[[Treasury of Victorian Murder, Vol. 1]]],
which had shorter stories and served as a dry run for the later books – and Geary
is still at it. As usual, he’s digging into once-scandalous events from about a
century ago; the series was explicitly “Victorian” until last year’s [[[Lindbergh Child]]], and this book examines a murder case in the early
days of Hollywood.
After a few pages of scene-setting – and no
one does scene-setting better than Geary, one of the very few cartoonists who
routinely incorporates maps and schematics into his comics pages, and makes
them fit perfectly – Geary focuses his story on 1922, when the star director of
the highbrow but very successful Famous Players studio was William Desmond
Taylor, a man of middle years who – as it turned out – was not really named William Desmond Taylor, and who had a
complicated hidden past. That all came out after the morning of February 2nd,
when his cook/valet found him dead on the floor of his apartment. Police
science was not advanced at that point, and the power of the studios was, so the crime scene was tampered with by various
people – both random sightseers, hangers-on, and reporters as well as possibly
culpable parties such as Famous Players’ “troubleshooter” and two of Taylor’s
colleagues, whom Geary shows moving, concealing, and removing evidence. (What
that evidence was – and whether it had anything to do with Taylor’s death – is of
course impossible to know now.)

First, we had the worry about
















Via
The title is a killer: 


