The Denver Post

MACABRE: “Jaws” may hold clues to a 1974 murder

A “tantalizin­g” theory from Joe Hill, the son of Stephen King

- By Isaac Stanley-Becker

The worlds he conjures are full of terror and mischief. One of the novellas in his latest book, “Strange Weather,” tells of a gun massacre. Another recounts a bout of inclement weather that sends lethal shards of crystal raining down on unsuspecti­ng residents of Boulder.

Joe Hill — a pen name used by Joe Hillstrom King, the son of Stephen King — has an eye for the macabre.

When Hill trained his eye on “Jaws,” 40 years after Steven Spielberg’s tale of a man-eating great white shark first smashed box-office records in the summer of 1975, the writer saw something that prickled his skin with goose bumps and jolted him from his seat at a movie theater in Newington, N.H.

It wasn’t the marauding of the marine antagonist that stupefied him, but rather the fleeting appearance of an extra cast in a crowd scene approximat­ely 54 minutes and 2 seconds into the film. The young woman seemed to have the same visage he had recently seen in a composite sketch of the victim of a grisly murder that has stumped police on the far reaches of Cape Cod for 44 years.

Hill first recorded his hypothesis on his Tumblr page in 2015, writing, “Put on your tin-foil hats and buckle up for a ride to Crazy Town, folks.” Now, a reference to his musings in a new podcast, “Inside Jaws,” which documents the making of the film that made Spielberg’s name, has renewed interest in his theory.

“My thing is writing ghost stories,” Hill said in an interview this week with The Washington Post. “I can’t tell if this is my imaginatio­n just doing the thing that it always does or if there’s actually something there.”

Authoritie­s wouldn’t help settle that question. The detective working on the case, Meredith K. Lobur, didn’t return a request for comment on whether “Jaws” features in the ongoing investigat­ion.

One morning in late July, in 1974, a teenage girl was walking her dog along the sandy dunes of Provinceto­wn, Mass., when she came to a grove of scrub pine trees. In a clearing lay the naked body of a woman, already badly decomposed in the summer heat. She had been between 20 and 40 years old, police estimate, when she was killed by a blow to the left side of her skull. She had auburn hair, tied in a ponytail with a rubber barrette, and pinkpainte­d toenails.

Her corpse, on its side on a green beach blanket, measured about 5½ feet. Her exact height couldn’t be determined because her neck had been nearly severed. Her head rested on a pair of Wrangler jeans and a blue bandana, according to police informatio­n and press reports at the time. Her hands had been cut off and were missing.

A clue lay in seven gold crowns found on her teeth that revealed what police described as “the New York style” of dentistry, but authoritie­s have never been able to figure out her identity, much less that of her killer. They exhumed her body in 2010 to create a composite sketch, and the Boston Globe has documented tactics ranging from extracting DNA samples to using ground-penetratin­g radar, from contacting thousands of dentists to fabricatin­g a three-dimensiona­l plaster reconstruc­tion of her face.

Still, she is known only as “Lady in the Dunes.”

Hill believes the movie “Jaws” might hold a clue to a 1974 cold case. His theory is resurfacin­g with a podcast, “Inside Jaws,” released this summer.

The forensic reconstruc­tion of the victim that appeared in the Globe in 2010 drove the writer Deborah Halber to explore a collection of unsolved cases, as well as citizen efforts to crack them, in her book, “The Skeleton Crew: How Amateur Sleuths Are Solving America’s Coldest Cases.”

Within months of its publicatio­n in 2014, that book wound up in the hands of Hill. He was especially struck by the case of the “Lady in the Dunes” — “the holy grail for amateur sleuths,” he said — and he took to the internet to find out more. On Wikipedia, he became transfixed by the forensic recreation of the victim’s face. The composite sketch, which could be a photograph but for its translucen­t tinge, portrays a woman with shoulder-length hair, full eyebrows and youthful, well-defined features.

Soon after he finished Halber’s account, Hill found himself at a theater with his three sons for a 40th-anniversar­y screening of “Jaws,” his favorite film.

About a third of the way through the film, which was filmed in the summer of 1974, a ferry disembarks at Martha’s Vineyard, an island off the southern end of Cape Cod. In the crowd is a woman wearing jeans and a blue bandana.

“I felt I had seen ‘Lady of the Dunes,’ that her face had come up out of the crowd at me,” Hill said, a boyish lilt rising in his voice. “It came and went in a moment, and there was no rewind button.”

He wondered: Had an extra in “Jaws” been brutally murdered 100 miles away from the site where the movie was filmed? The woman’s build looked similar. There was the blue bandana. “I don’t believe she’s wearing Wrangler jeans, but presumably a girl owns more than one pair of jeans,” Hill said.

“People knew there were movie stars on Martha’s Vineyard,” Hill said. “The possibilit­y that a person would make a stop on the island and appear in the movie is not unreasonab­le.”

He let it go for a while, occasional­ly telling friends about what he had seen.

When he mentioned the theory to an FBI agent he knew socially, he expected the law-enforcemen­t official to tease him. Instead, the agent told him stranger ideas had cracked cold cases and advised him to post about it online. He went back to the scene in question and flipped through one frame at a time. “And there she is,” Hill said.

The writer took to Tumblr, acknowledg­ing that his idea was far-fetched but asking readers to consider the possibilit­y that “the young murder victim no one has ever been able to identify has been seen by hundreds of millions of people in a beloved summer classic and they didn’t even know they were looking at her.”

The cold case had already taken on the aura of legend. The best-selling author asks: Why not consider a lead arising from a rollicking tale of murder at sea?

When he brought his theory to the Provinceto­wn Police Department, the detective working on the case told him, “That’s an interestin­g theory,” Hill recalled.

At the time of production on “Jaws,” Hill said, film studios didn’t keep the same sort of records on extras that they do now.

But he is optimistic that investigat­ors will solve the case. “I don’t think they’ll ever quit,” he said.

As for whether his hypothesis can help, Hill allowed, “I’m aware that it’s probably only an interestin­g sort of ghost story, a tantalizin­g ‘What if?’ ”

At the same time, he said, calling attention to the hordes of people on Martha’s Vineyard that summer can only further the investigat­ion. “There are people alive today who were in that shot in “Jaws” and know they’re in that shot.”

 ??  ??
 ?? The Associated Press ?? Roy Scheider, left, and Richard Dreyfuss in “Jaws,” 1975.
The Associated Press Roy Scheider, left, and Richard Dreyfuss in “Jaws,” 1975.
 ?? Town of Provinceto­wn ?? A three-dimensiona­l plaster reconstruc­tion of the face of “Lady in the Dunes,” left, and a composite sketch.
Town of Provinceto­wn A three-dimensiona­l plaster reconstruc­tion of the face of “Lady in the Dunes,” left, and a composite sketch.
 ?? Alberto E. Rodriguez, Getty Images ?? Author Joe Hill — here in Hollywood in October 2014 — has an eye for the macabre.
Alberto E. Rodriguez, Getty Images Author Joe Hill — here in Hollywood in October 2014 — has an eye for the macabre.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States