Irish Daily Mirror

THE BIG READ: Femme fatale, spy and orga Niser of S&M parties for the rich and powerful Was Mariella murdered?

E was the girl from Grimsby who scandalise­d the 60s by hosting e Man in the Mask orgy, while she had links with Keeler, Profumo JFK. Now a writer suggests her death in 1983 may not have been accidental overdose.. she simply may have known too much..

- BY LILIAN PIZZICHINI ■■The Novotny Papers: A Bit Vulture, A Bit Eagle, by Lilian Pizzichini, by Amberley Publishing, is out now. news@irishmirro­r.ie @Irishmirro­r

EXCLUSIVE

SHE came into the world as Stella Capes, daughter of a hard-working, saltof-the-earth single mother in Grimsby.

Yet she became Mariella Novotny, agent provocateu­r, a femme fatale who bedded John F Kennedy, had a baby with a British double agent and brought down more gangsters and bent coppers than Line of Duty’s AC-12.

She counted Christine Keeler as a friend, and had the great and the good of the 1960s at her mercy – quite literally as the whip-cracking hostess of the notorious Man in the Mask orgy exposed by the Profumo inquiry.

No one was ever sure who was pulling her strings. Were her romps with JFK a set-up by his enemies? Did osteopath

To this day the death of the call-girl Mariella Novotny haunts me. Rumour has it, her death was orchestrat­ed by the British secret services.

The rumour persists because shortly after her death, her house was burgled.

When her widower realised that Mariella’s diaries and the manuscript of the kiss-and-tell memoir she had been threatenin­g to write for years had been taken, he feared the worst.

Her friends, such as the former showgirl Christine Keeler, who had been at the centre of the notorious sex scandal, the Profumo Affair, in the 1960s, said it was murder.

I can see why Keeler said this. Mariella, the most infamous woman of her generation, had the kind of contacts that would make Special Branch certainly keep a close eye on her.

She was also known by the FBI for an entangleme­nt with a former president. But was this enough to kill her? And how did a girl born Stella Capes to a single mother from Grimsby achieve such renown?

Just this week I was approached by a former Grenadier Guard.

He told me about his friend, a chauffeur who had been employed by a man in the highest ranks of British aristocrac­y – a household name.

This aristocrat, the old soldier told me, was one of Mariella’s clients.

Back in the 1960s, his friend the chauffeur recalled driving his boss, and three other high-ranking members of the Establishm­ent, one of whom was

AGENT

Eddie Chapman and wife Betty in 1954

Stephen Ward introduce her to John Profumo before Christine Keeler?

Why did she help police bring down gangland fixer Charles Taylor? Was Mariella’s paternal uncle a Czech president as she once claimed?

Mariella had promised to reveal the answers to those questions in her autobiogra­phy, but it was never written.

Aged 41, Mariella was found dead, face down in a bowl of milk pudding.

Now, after a 10-year project, Charlie Taylor’s crime-writing granddaugh­ter, LILIAN PIZZICHINI, wants justice.

Not for her grandfathe­r, but for the woman who destroyed him.

And here she asks: Was Mariella Novotny murdered? another household name, to an address in Hyde Park Square in London.

This address belonged to S&M dominatrix Mariella or, as the chauffeur heard his boss call her, “the Government Chief Whip”.

The men who frequented Mariella’s place were from the top rank of society.

This could be why Mariella never got to tell her own story, and why it was essential that I do it for her.

After all, it wasn’t just political, I had a personal connection with her, too.

On May 6, 1978, a week shy of my 14th birthday, my great-aunt came home with the Daily Mirror and some tinned salmon. A story on page seven concerned the imminent downfall of my grandfathe­r, Charlie Taylor, who was a fixer for South London gangsters.

At Charlie’s behest, villains and Flying Squad officers would meet at his hotel in Streatham to strike deals. Charlie would get a cut from each side. But he now faced charges of defrauding the Bank of England of £1million.

The Mirror said Charlie’s co-defendant, conman Lennie Ash, had told the court they were objects of a police sting featuring “sex party queen Mariella Novotny”. The photo showed a woman with a confrontat­ional gaze, aggressive eye make-up and a luxurious, Julie Christie bob.

The reporter wrote that the “blonde bombshell who hosted the notorious Man in the Mask nude party” in the Profumo scandal was “an undercover

Intelligen­ce agent”. Her mission, Lennie Ash alleged, “was to spy on top Scotland Yard officers”.

I later found out that Mariella had seduced Lennie, and agreed to be his fiancee, with the express purpose of getting close to Charlie.

She did this so that she could pass informatio­n to Operation Countryman – an investigat­ion into police corruption in London in the late 1970s – about Charlie’s dealings with “bent coppers”.

Charlie knew every bent copper in the Flying Squad. Days later, he

dropped dead on his way to the Old Bailey. I was intrigued by the woman who brought him down.

I liked the fact that Mariella had seen through my grandfathe­r’s front as a hard man. It felt like retributio­n for the time he had conned my Great Aunt Dolly out of her life savings.

In later life, Mariella Novotny called herself an “agent provocateu­r”.

She was born for this role. She was 4ft 8ins tall and barely out of her teens when she was hosting orgies for Members of Parliament and other VIPS.

Mariella had moved from her home up north to London aged 16.

By 18, she was dancing topless at the Windmill Theatre in Soho and married to nightclub owner Horace “Hod” Dibben, 56 and a major player in the London orgy scene.

Hod was close to the society osteopath and portraitis­t Stephen Ward. Alongside Ward and Keeler, Mariella became a key player in the 1961 scandal that saw War Minister

John Profumo disgraced, and, in turn, PM Harold Macmillan fatally compromise­d. She was still only 20 years old.

Before then, Mariella had been involved in another scandal involving the most powerful man in the world, then President-elect, John F Kennedy.

In 1960, she flew to New York with British TV producer Harry Alan Towers, who had promised to make her a proverbial star.

But it turned out she would “entertain” some of his friends. She hung out in a club in Washington, run by an aide to Lyndon B Johnson, Kennedy’s former rival turned Vice President-elect.

There, Mariella met actor Peter Lawford, brother-in-law of the Kennedys, who decided Jack would like her and took her to a party hosted by Italian-american crooner, Vic Damone.

Kennedy did indeed like the British girl with the cut-glass accent and a whip in her handbag.

He took Mariella into a bedroom where they discussed the political scene while undressing. Mariella continued to see Kennedy, meeting in a room at the United Nations HQ. Once, she allegedly dressed as a nurse alongside another girl, Suzy Chang.

The fact that Mariella claimed to be the niece of the Czech communist president, Antonin Novotny, and Suzy was Chinese, had FBI Director J Edgar Hoover frothing at the mouth.

Harry Towers was arrested for white-slave traffickin­g, but jumped bail and headed back to Europe. Mariella was shipped back to Britain.

The more I found out about this Internatio­nal Woman of Mystery, the more I wanted to know. For starters how did a girl born Stella Marie Capes, in the north of England, in 1941, to a shorthand typist, get an upper-class accent and the style to match?

Mariella’s paternal origins are uncertain. She claimed to have a Czech father, but all that is confirmed is that she arrived in London in 1958, met Hod at his nightclub, The Black Sheep, and married in Caxton Hall in 1960. David Bailey took photograph­s.

Mariella and Hod entertaine­d on a lavish scale, including the “Man in the

Mask party” at 13 Hyde Park Square in December 1961, the party at which the aristocrat­ic gentleman stood naked, but for a mask, while other guests took turns at whipping him.

The event has since been the centre of speculatio­ns regarding Mariella’s death. She refused to identify the man in the mask – maybe because she feared the repercussi­ons.

In 1963, with President Kennedy assassinat­ed and Ward dead from suicide, Mariella embarked on an affair with Eddie Chapman, aka Agent Zigzag, England’s most successful criminal-turned-wartime double agent.

Former safecracke­r Chapman was so successful as a “German spy”, that Adolf Hitler awarded him the Iron Cross, while he was actually working for MI5.

Eddie lived in a castle on the outskirts of Rome with Mariella and Hod, and in 1964, she had his child.

When a French journalist interviewe­d the threesome, he asked Mariella what she had left behind in England. Her answer was “hypocrisy”. This girl had some chutzpah.

In the 1970s, Mariella fictionali­sed her exploits with her much-maligned novel, King’s Road.

Then she went undergroun­d.

In an interview with LWT in 1979, she revealed she had been working with Operation Countryman.

My grandfathe­r was just one of her targets. There was also a gang of internatio­nal fraudsters called The Hungarian Circle. By now, Mariella was approachin­g her forties.

Michael Eddowes, who championed victims of injustice, tried to ghost-write her autobiogra­phy. But after two men broke into his home and beat him up he burnt the manuscript.

Mariella then claimed the brakes on her car had been tampered with. Her mental health was increasing­ly erratic.

In 1980, Harry Alan Towers finally surrendere­d to the US police. He was let off with a small fine that reporters found suspicious.

Mariella picked herself up and revealed that she was writing a memoir about her top-ranking clients and a “plot to discredit Jack Kennedy”.

She told the London Programme: “I kept a diary of all my appointmen­ts in the UN building. Believe me, it’s dynamite.” Someone was keeping tabs on her. Or maybe it was just an accident.

At any rate, on May 9, 1983, Mariella made herself a bowl of milk pudding. Several hours later she was found face down in it. The official version is she died of a Temazepam overdose.

A friend of hers whom I interviewe­d, said: “Very hard to die of an overdose when she had been taking them for 20 years.” No one investigat­ed her death.

The girl from Grimsby who bedded some of the most powerful men in the world was dead. I cannot say if she was murdered because she was about to blow the whistle on the misconduct of those men in power.

But I do know she was calling Time’s Up before there was such a thing.

 ?? She the &J an ?? FUN & GAMES Mariella in fancy dress in early 60s
HUSB Mariella and Ho
EXPLOSIVE Mariella’s novel and, left, gangland fixer Charlie Taylor
She the &J an FUN & GAMES Mariella in fancy dress in early 60s HUSB Mariella and Ho EXPLOSIVE Mariella’s novel and, left, gangland fixer Charlie Taylor
 ??  ?? PRESIDENT John F Kennedy with Peter Lawford
PRESIDENT John F Kennedy with Peter Lawford
 ??  ?? SENSATIONA­L Mirror’s story on Mariella in 1978
SENSATIONA­L Mirror’s story on Mariella in 1978
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? BAND orace Dibben in 1960
ASSOCIATES
With Keeler, right, Stephen Ward and Sally Norie
BAND orace Dibben in 1960 ASSOCIATES With Keeler, right, Stephen Ward and Sally Norie
 ??  ?? CALL GIRL
Mariella, pictured in 1972, wrote a novel, King’s Road
CALL GIRL Mariella, pictured in 1972, wrote a novel, King’s Road

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