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The Theresa Duncan Tragedy

A writer–game designer and her boyfriend commit suicide, and a façade falls away

IN 2001, THERESA DUNCAN was on top of the world. She had a two-picture deal with Fox Searchlight, and came to Los Angeles confident in her ability to conquer Hollywood. In July 2007, she was dead by her own hand, having washed down an overdose of Tylenol PM with bourbon in her Greenwich Village apartment. New York police say her handwritten note indicated she was at peace with her decision.

Intertwined: Duncan, here with Jeremy Blake, pushed two storylines: Conspiracies and dream film projects always just around the corner. (Photo by Stephanie Halmos/Patrick Mcmullan.com)
Intertwined: Duncan, here with Jeremy Blake, pushed two storylines: Conspiracies and dream film projects always just around the corner. (Photo by Stephanie Halmos/Patrick Mcmullan.com)

News of her suicide spread on the Internet, where she had gained a small but devoted audience as a blogger. A week after her suicide, her longtime romantic partner Jeremy Blake, 35, went missing, his clothes and wallet found on the Atlantic shore at Far Rockaway with a note implying he had walked into the sea.

Online conspiracy theorists quickly repeated Duncan’s accounts of being harassed by mysterious forces, including the Church of Scientology.Others saw a twinship with poet Sarah Hannah, herself a recent suicide, and still others saw parallels to an elaborate alternate reality game. Experts, some of whom had never met her, weighed in on everything from her mental state to her sexiness.

I knew her, and I knew that much of what she wrote about her world was an elaborate tale, taken as fact by the uninitiated. Duncan blogged daily on her elegant Web site, The Wit of the Staircase, about her bohemian-chic cottage on a Venice canal, meetings of the slightly sinister and probably nonexistent Lunar Society of Los Angeles, and the turbulent love life of Kate Moss.

But her image as a player in Hollywood, albeit one with powerful enemies, was at odds with the facts. Perhaps she got tired of patching the little fissures that threatened to destroy her carefully constructed fantasy. Maybe that is why, at 40, she decided not to go on.

For years, Duncan’s storytelling made her a success, as she commingled girly creativity with the high-tech world. She made a splash with her first CD-ROM game for girls, Chop Suey, selected by Entertainment Weekly as 1995’s CD-ROM of the Year. In 1998, with the dot-com craze heating up, she told Chris Larson of Cosmopolitan, “At my old job . . . I started playing with the World Bank’s computers. The more I learned about new media, the more I saw the chance to tell stories — children’s stories, of course — in a really creative new way.”

The Cosmo piece was headlined, “Turn your obsession into your dream profession” — a title that, looking back, seems to have contained a warning about what was to come.

Most of what Duncan told Cosmo nine years ago was true — but not all of it. Even then, she indulged in embroideries, shaving a few years off her youthful age in 1995, telling Entertainment Weekly she was 27. (Born in 1966, she was 28 or 29.) And although friends thought Duncan had graduated from Wayne State or the University of Michigan, both universities tell the L.A. Weekly they have no record of her degree. Cary Logan, her friend, confirms that she worked at his bookstore while attending Wayne State; officials there say that she did, at least, attend classes.

DESPITE HER SOMETIMES FANCIFUL personal history, Duncan’s story was filled with vividly authentic tales. Long before the career downturns and aborted projects piled up in Los Angeles, she really did work at the World Bank in Washington, D.C. And she really did co-create Chop Suey.

Monica Lynn Gesue, who created Chop Suey with Duncan, first met her in an elevator at the World Bank. “I saw Theresa in the elevator, plaid tights, purple sequin miniskirt,” she told the Weekly shortly after the dual deaths. Duncan left the World Bank for Magnet Interactive, where she worked the phones, and helped Gesue get a job there too. “I was grateful,” recalls Gesue. “I dreamt up the idea for Chop Suey, and I went to Theresa. We went to lunch at Dean & DeLuca, and she wrote up the proposal and pitched it. She was the most confident person in the world. She had the brains, the charisma to get it made.”

For two years, Gesue and Duncan worked on the story of two little girls, Lily and June Bugg, who ate too much at the Ping Ping Palace. In the tale, the girls look at clouds that change from teapots into tennis shoes into Aunt Vera — a character who acts as a window into another world.

Gesue, today an illustrator, says, “I loved her like a sister. Theresa was a larger-than-life personality. Sometimes wonderful and charming, and other times scary and downright vicious . . . She had this great apartment in Mount Pleasant, with all sorts of stuff — gilded mirrors, stuffed furniture, tons of books. She wasn’t promiscuous, she wasn’t preppy, she wasn’t punk rock. She was unique.””

One day, Gesue recalls, an employee in Human Resources at Magnet whispered to her, “Theresa lies about everything.” Duncan had a dark childhood, but it was never clear which bits were real. “She claimed [her father] had serious mental-health problems and was notorious around town for doing bizarre things,” recalls Gesue. “She also said that her mom had to work two jobs — one stocking shelves in a grocery store at night, often having to leave them all alone in a freezing house with not enough to eat.” (Duncan’s mother did not return calls to the Weekly.)

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  • Ash 12/03/2010 9:17:00 PM

    This is one of the ugliest displays of journalism I have ever seen, and Ms. Coe should feel ashamed of herself. Truly sad that even in death, this journalist felt the need to degrade her spirit... let her rest in peace.

  • JulieD 11/19/2009 8:52:00 AM

    I don't see anything wrong with this article. It has plenty in common with the Vanity Fair piece, and the darker aspects of Duncan's life are well-sourced by Coe. Duncan's Jekyll-and-Hyde aspects, as well as her reported lying, feel more likely to be part of a narcissistic personality disorder than schizophrenia. Her apparent dark childhood, plus the mixed blessing of being very good-looking, may have transpired to leave her with boundary problems, an unrealistic sense of entitlement, and a tendency to crate a perfect facade - to defend herself from being hurt again. I'm not saying she wasn't talented or charming, but people with NPD are often low-functioning and self-sabotging as part of the package. And they don't play well with others. Narcissists are also much more likely to commit suicide than most people - as are those who take the role of Echo, which seems to be what happened to Blake. It's a sad story, but the cautionary note here is about narcissism.

  • calgodot 10/22/2009 7:10:00 AM

    Journalists have always slandered dead artists. If you're anyone at all, in the weeks after you die some little gnome at the Weekly or the Times will go to your detractors and spurned former lovers and compile whatever malice their hurtful hurts display as truth. This is why everyone in Hollywood is such a bastard: when you die, they are going to say you are a bastard whether you are a bastard or not, so you might as well enjoy the benefits, however dubious and few, of being a bastard while you;re alive. And if you're lucky, you'll get to be a bastard to one of those victims of failed imagination who populate the tar pits of local journalism, who will perhaps in turn write the post-mortem wherein you are dubbed a bastard, proving that there is some rough justice in this world, no matter what the bastards tell you.

  • Ben 07/21/2009 7:49:00 AM

    Doherty's been trying to suppress this piece at Wikipedia, but it doesn't change the intrinsic truth.

  • Ralphie 01/27/2009 2:00:00 AM

    Its kinda odd that you wrote "she was 28 or 29. " She was born in Oct. making her 28 ....period. I agree she's no Saint, but you didn't think that would reflect on your own credibility?

  • Sophia 08/30/2008 8:46:00 AM

    There was a Law & Order episode based on them

  • Ray 08/08/2008 7:34:00 AM

    Over a year later, and this story still holds up! Well done.

  • Rachel 04/08/2008 2:29:00 AM

    What are licensed sources? I think this piece is very well done, and has very few anonymous quotes--far fewer than the Vanity Fair story. And when are journalists supposed to be all nicey-nice?

  • kt 03/07/2008 6:57:00 AM

    Isn't it considered "rude" to speak so nastily about the recently "suicided". What an ODD manner you have about you, Ms. Coe!?

  • William 02/16/2008 11:37:00 AM

    I do not know enough about Duncan to say whether or not this article is factual, but I am certain there is a strong smell of malice between the lines. Ugly journalism.

  • audrey 01/03/2008 7:05:00 AM

    I think your story would be more interesting if instead of feeding unfounded rumors with personal opinions (from unqualifed and unlicensed sources) you dispelled such rumors and focused more on the history or electricity. After all, she is dead and cannot defend herself.

  • Raymond Doherty 12/14/2007 7:19:00 PM

    I was a close friend of Theresa's, and here is my response to Coe's wildly off-the-mark portrayal of her... <a href="http://dohray.typepad.com/t/"> A Letter to Kate Coe: How You Got the Theresa Duncan Story - Wrong</a> And if you really want to get a feel on who Theresa was as a person, all you need to do is watch <a href="http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/video/2008/historyofglamour_video200801">The History of Glamour</a>.

  • Victoria 09/07/2007 12:47:00 AM

    Unless there were drugs involved (and that is nowhere alleged) what appears is a case of mental illness that was very clearn and public, yet no one intervended. A paranoid schitzophrenic, even one so seductive that her illness was embraced by her partner, is an unpleasant person to deal with, no doubts. But what does it say about our society that that two such brilliant people self-destructed in full view, and no one did a thing to get help for them?! IJS

  • coricancha 08/29/2007 9:32:00 PM

    Raymond Dohert, a friend of Theresa's, posted a letter in answer to Coe's very mean spirited article arguing that she got it all wrong. Here is the link http://dohray.typepad.com/t/2007/08/a-letter-to-kat.html

 

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