Wednesday, October 23, 2013

High-Profile Murders and Shocking Deaths in Hollywood Are Told in E! Special

Hollywood Death Trip, a revealing look at some of Tinseltown’s best known tragedies, airs on E! on Thursday, October 24, at 10 p.m. (ET/PT). Scott Michaels of Dearly Departed Tours takes movie scream queen Danielle Harris of Halloween, Halloween II and Hallows’ Eve on a special tour of Hollywood’s most shocking scenes of death while offering rare behind-the-scenes details.

Scott Michaels (left) during filming of Hollywood Death Trap
(Photo: Courtesy of Scott Michaels)
“I think this show will be a compelling, truthful account of some very bizarre stories,” host Scott Michaels tells me. He and Harris explore the tragedy surrounding actor Johnny Lewis of Sons of Anarchy with a first-hand account from a neighbor who narrowly escaped becoming a victim herself. 
Other stories unfold with the strange deaths of Playboy Playmate Dorothy Stratten and her estranged husband, told through a revealing chat with the model’s roommate who discovered their bodies; the father of actress Brittany Murphy tells what he believes is the shocking truth about his daughter’s 2009 death; an investigative journalists talks about his research into the shooting death of powerful publicist Ronni Chasen; and an interview with the best friend and roommate of aspiring actress Ashley Ellerin, a possible victim of the “Hollywood Ripper” on the night of what would have been her first date with Ashton Kutcher.
I asked host Scott Michaels what he found most interesting during the special’s filming. “Working on Hollywood Death Trip was both fascinating and frightening. Fascinating because the research taught us so much about these people and the incidents, frightening because we get first horrific first-hand accounts by people who were there. The people we interview are their friends, their parents and their loved ones. They opened up and trusted us with their very personal stories.” 

Scott Michaels takes movie scream queen Danielle Harris on a tour of
Tinseltown's most shocking scenes of death (Courtesy of Scott Michaels)