
The world has always known people who just do not want to be told what to do. Sometimes it can be hard to draw the line between rebellion and mental illness, especially when you throw in exacerbating factors. Frances Farmer was a beautiful woman who became a movie star in the 1930s. Naturally rebellious, she could not abide the Hollywood studio system that had her under contract. They told her what to wear, who to talk to, and even who to marry. They prescribed amphetamines to keep her weight under control. Eventually, it became too much.
Farmer was arrested several times in the 1940s for various offenses, in which she resisted arrest, even fighting the cops. She back talked a judge in a court exchange that reporters found hilarious. To keep her out of jail, Farmer was sent to a series of mental institutions, where she underwent electroconvulsive therapy, and she came out with stories of neglect, rape, and abuse that were common to such institutions at the time. She still made comebacks, in film, in television, and then on stage, but she never lost her rebellious streak. Read about the crimes of Frances Farmer at Messy Nessy Chic.
(Image source: Photoplay, January 1937)







