i never graduated from the university of michigan because i fell in love with a canadian sculptor and wanted to be his wife and a homemaker. she was cooking and decorating their apartment. he loved having her do that like he was being taken care of that way. jeff couldn t handle if i was ever funny and it was very frustrating. there was just a part of me that wasn t being used. and i actually reached a point where i felt like i was dying. one day i went to the theater and i sat there and i thought oh, i just felt so good, you know. that feeling i felt like i belonged, even in the audience. and so i ended up asking if i could work in their box office. they came in and she goes and peeks through the little cubby
i never graduated from the university of michigan because i fell in love with a canadian sculptor and wanted to be his wife and a homemaker. she was cooking and keeping their apartment. he loved having her do that like he was being taken care of that way. jeff couldn t handle if i was ever funny and it was very frustrating. there was just a part of me that wasn t being used. and i actually reached a point where i felt like i was dying. one day i went to the theater and i sat there and i thought oh, i just felt so good, you know. that feeling i felt like i belonged, even in the audience. and so i ended up asking if i could work in their box office. they came in and she goes in and peeks through the little cubby hole that i hand her the
and i sat there and i thought oh, i just felt so good, you know. that feeling i felt like i belonged, even in the audience. and so i ended up asking if i could work in their box office. they came in and she goes in the little cubby hole, i hand her the ticket and she goes, you re kind of cute. they asked me to be in these panemimes for kids in the school system and then they asked me to be in a theater production. they made a whole industry off of gilda. very successful in new york and they posted open auditions in toronto for the toronto company and i went cold from the street and auditioned. everybody from that age group, early 20s, i guess, was auditioning. and i went as a pianist who
one day i went to the theater and i sat there and i thought oh, i just felt so good, you know. that feeling i felt like i belonged, even in the audience. and so i ended up asking if i could work in their box office. they came in and she goes in and peeks through the little cubby hole that i hand her the ticket anderson she goes you re kind of cute. eventually they asked me to be in these pantomimes for kids in the school system and then they asked me to be in a children s theater production. they made a whole industry off of gilda. god spell it, very successful in new york and they posted open auditions in toronto for the toronto company, and i went cold from the street and auditioned. everybody from that age group, early 20s, i guess, was
and was very disturbed. keith morrison: and another time, she said, when she looked out her bathroom window i see mark on a hillside behind my house. he s looking through the scope, pointing the rifle at me. keith morrison: and once, said linda, long after she left him, after mark agreed to plead guilty to the stalking charge, she visited their abandoned paradise, kiket island, to retrieve some personal things. and she said she found in a cubbyhole in the master bedroom a wedding candle that she d thrown away during the divorce. i found the wedding candle in there with a .22 bullet casing and a picture of me along with that in the cubbyhole. keith morrison: was it a message, a threat? in her cross-examination, it was pretty clear that prosecutor rosemary kaholokula was deeply skeptical about linda s fears and allegations. no proof at all from michiel s claims.