A Case of the Human Condition: James Dean’s Last Day — Video with CHP Officers on the Scene

The Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society has put together an excellent video featuring the two California Highway Patrol officers who were first on the scene of the car crash that killed the 1950′s film idol James Dean after another vehicle made a left turn in front of Dean’s Porsche 550 Spyder near Paso Robles, California.

Also interviewed on the video is the CHP officer who cited Dean for speeding just hours before the fatal collision. The speeding ticket states that Dean was traveling 65 mph in a 55 mph zone, but the officer tells his interviewer that he clocked Dean’s Porsche, “Little Bastard,” travelling at 7o mph.

Dean was pleasant, the officer said. “He wasn’t belligerent.” He looked like a Hollywood type; he was wearing dirty jeans held up by a rope through the belt loops.

The video was shown at a public screening on Feb. 28, 2009. The screening was attended by two of the CHP officers, a local crowd, and a James Dean wannabe wearing a red jacket.

The video also shows a public service announcement made just weeks before the young movie star’s death. In it Dean warns America’s youth not to speed on the highway. “The life you save might be mine.”

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A Case of the Human Condition: The Day James Dean Died — The Eyewitnesses to Speak on February 28

By Barbara Falconer Newhall

This Saturday in Southern California, fans of the legendary film star James Dean will have a chance to meet face-to-face with the California Highway Patrol officer who was first on the scene of the head-on car collision that took Dean’s life more than fifty years ago – as well as the officer who investigated the accident and a third CHP officer who had ticketed Dean for speeding two hours before his death.

What’s more, fans will get the inside story on James Dean’s last meal, which according to local legend, was eaten during a quick stop at Tip’s Coffee Shop in what’s now known as the Santa Clarita Valley, just north of Los Angeles.

The occasion is a screening of Dean’s famous “Rebel Without a Cause” and a panel discussion of Dean’s last days and hours, sponsored by the Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society. Panel speakers will include Warren Beath, author of The Death of James Dean, Chris Epting, author of James Dean Died Here, and Tony Newhall (my brother-in-law!), author of a 1985 Newhall Signal article detailing Dean’s stop at Tip’s, which featured interviews with former coffee shop employees.

Thanks to some heavy sleuthing through old telephone books, the Historical Society located both the CHP officer who responded to Dean’s accident near Cholame, California, on September 30, 1955, as well as the officer who participated in the inquest that followed. The two men are still alive and living in California. Also located — the CHP officer who ticketed Dean for speeding near Bakersfield (65 in a 55 mph zone in his Porsche Spyder nicknamed “Little Bastard”).

Armed with video cameras, the Historical Society people drove to three different cities and interviewed each of the three officers. The resulting video will be premiered at the panel discussion.

But that’s not all. “Now they’ve just learned that possibly these three ex-CHP officers want to attend this program,” my brother-in-law reports. “So they may all be there too.”

The event will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, February 28, 2009, at Hart Hall in William S. Hart Park in the town of Newhall, off Highway 14. For the latest details, go to the society’s website at www.scvhs.org.

The Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society presents monthly programs on films that have  local significance. Past films include “The General,” (1927) starring Buster Keaton, some of which was filmed locally in Agua Dulce.

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