You Must Remember This is a storytelling podcast exploring the secret and/or forgotten histories of
Jean Seberg, now plagued with mental illness and alcoholism, comes to a tragic end in Paris. Jane Fo
Jean buries her child in Iowa, and then returns to Paris in a fragile mental state. Increasingly pla
After shooting a film with a much-changed Jean-Luc Godard, Jane Fonda travels to Vietnam, where she
On the heels of making her biggest Hollywood movies in years, Jean Seberg becomes involved with two
Having coaxed Jane into participating in an open marriage, Vadim began casting her in films as a mal
Having left her husband to be the mistress of writer/diplomat Romain Gary, Jean secretly gave birth
With her Hollywood career already something of a disappointment, Jean Seberg took a chance on a Fren
Jean Seberg made her first two films, Saint Joan and Bonjour Tristesse, for director Otto Preminger,
Introducing our new series, “Jean and Jane,” exploring the parallel lives of Jane Fonda and Jean Seb
Our Dead Blondes season concludes with the story of Dorothy Stratten. Coaxed into nude modeling by P
Barbara Loden won a Tony Award for playing a character based on Marilyn Monroe in Arthur Miller’s Af
The quintessential “Hitchcock blonde,” Grace Kelly had an apparently charmed life. Her movies were m
In our Joan Crawford series, we talked about Barbara Payton as the young, troubled third wife of Cra
More famous today for her gruesome car crash death than for any of the movies she made while alive,
How did a star whose persona seemed to be all about childlike joy and eternally vibrant sexuality di
How did Marilyn Monroe become the most iconic blonde of the 1950s, if not the century? Today we will
Today we begin the first of three episodes on the most iconic dead blonde of them all, Marilyn Monro
Carole Landis was a gifted comedienne, a decent singer, and - once she dyed her natural brown hair b
Veronica Lake had the most famous hairdo of the 1940s, if not the twentieth century. Her star turn i
Jean Harlow was the top blonde of the 1930s, and even though she didn’t survive the decade - she die