Gravesite tourism
Halloween only comes around on October 31st, but gravesite tourism happens year round. The Dead Celebrity Tour of Pop Culture is travelled by many. That’s because they are always ‘in’, which happens to be Jack Lemmon’s epitaph. The most iconic figures always draw the biggest crowds. The trifecta of dead celebrity grave hopping would have to include Elvis Presley, Jim Morrison and Marilyn Monroe
Graceland
As dictated by his larger-than-life personality while alive, a visit to pay your respects to the King is the Las Vegas of celebrity gravesite visits. After a nasty episode that involved grave robbers at the Forest Hill Cemetery in Memphis, Elvis is now buried at home
The Eternal Elvis experience starts with a tour of Graceland, as visitors are greeted by The King singing ‘Welcome to My World’ as they enter through the front door of his mansion. Tourists get to see the world-famous Jungle Room, TV Room and Trophy Building. Fans have the opportunity to tour his airplanes and can even eat a peanut butter and banana sandwich at the restaurant in the Graceland Plaza and Visitor Center Complex across the street, as a form of communion with The King. While at Graceland, you can’t help thinking that ‘Elvis has left the building’ since it’s like touring a monument to the excess that finally killed the poor boy of humble beginnings from Tupelo, Mississippi.
While visiting Graceland, make sure you bring a permanent marker. Fans have been writing messages to Elvis on the wall surrounding Graceland since it was installed in 1957. Since his death in 1977, the unique cultural and sociological phenomenon has intensified. Some of these personal tributes sound like petitions to Saints instead of graffiti. Fans ask Elvis to bless them with everything from money and happiness to a cure for cancer. A crew cleans the wall regularly with a pressurized water system, so there is always room for new round of messages
Paris
More than 2 million visitors set out on a pilgrimage each year to visit the Pere Lachaise Cemetery, one of the most visited tourist attractions in Paris, where Jim Morrison is the main draw. This historical cemetery, which holds the title ‘Most Visited Cemetery in the World’, also contains the graves of Proust, Chopin, Balzac, and Moliere, in addition to Oscar Wilde, whose tombstone can be identified by the purple lipstick smudges left by gay admirers. Morrison, the front man for the Doors, is buried in ‘The Poets Corner’. There are diagrams of the cemetery at each entrance. Morrison fans have been notorious nuisances leaving litter, graffiti, and cannabis behind after their visits. Complaints by numerous families of the deceased about desecration of surrounding grave sites seem to matter little to the Parisian authorities, who are well aware that Morrison’s grave has become a major draw for tourism on par with the Eiffel Tower and Notre Dame
Hollywood
Everyone visits Hollywood hoping to run into a celebrity or two. A visit to the final resting place of Marilyn Monroe never disappoints gravesite tourists, since Hollywood’s most famous icon is interred at Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park, which has more dead celebrities per square inch than anywhere else in the world. Located behind the skyscrapers that line Wilshire Boulevard, Pierce Brothers is just steps away from LA’s most fashionable addresses and busiest intersection. The most intimate cemetery in Hollywood has acquired Rodney Dangerfield, Farrah Fawcett, Dean Martin, Truman Capote and a host of other celebs, including Monroe’s’s co-star in Some Like It Hot, Jack Lemmon and the movie’s legendary director, Billy Wilder. Incidentally, Marilyn Monroe fans should note that 12305 5th Helena Drive, the address where the goddess herself became immortal, is less than three miles away from her final resting place. But if you decide to visit, make it brief since the owners are not thrilled by Monroe fans seeking to take a peek at their property. Another advantage experienced by gravesite tourists who make Marilyn Monroe a destination, is that she is conveniently located near the two other memorial parks most chosen by the Hollywood elite as their final resting place
At Forest Lawn Memorial Park, located in Glendale California, they claim to have more major Hollywood stars on their grounds than anywhere else in the world. More than a million tourists make a pilgrimage each year to search for their favorite beloved dead celebrities and over 60,000 people, including Ronald Reagan, have actually been married at this historic cemetery. ‘Golden Age’ Hollywood stars are buried on these grounds such as Clark Gable, Humphrey Bogart, Jean Harlow and Errol Flynn. Other tenants include George Burns, Walt Disney, Nat King Cole and countless other Hollywood mega-stars, but there is a huge downside to exploring this cemetery during a gravesite tourism outing. The sheer size of the park can make finding your favorite star an exercise in frustration—over a quarter of a million people have been buried at Forest Lawn. This park is comprised of over 300 acres of prime California real estate. The cemetery does nothing to encourage sightseeing by movie fans and refuses to offer any assistance by way of directions or by providing a map pinpointing specific graves to help tourists. Many of the celebrity tombs at this location are private, with no entry access for the public since they are located in exclusive gardens or behind locked gates. Cemetery employees have a reputation for being downright hostile when interacting with fans seeking to pay homage to dead celebrities
Those tending to the stars at Hollywood Forever , often called Disneyland for the Dead, are much more accommodating to the needs of tourists seeking the burial places of dead celebrities—maybe it’s because the location also offers a terrific view of the historic Hollywood sign. Tourists can buy a map pinpointing specific celebrity graves at the Hollywood Forever flower shop as they drive through the park entrance. Hollywood Forever is located directly behind the famous back lot of Paramount Studios. After a visit to Hollywood Forever, visitors will always notice how many movie and television scenes with a cemetery setting are actually filmed in this memorial park. Hollywood Forever boasts celebrity greats such as Rudolph Valentino, Tyrone Power, and punk rock legend Johnny Ramone. Hattie McDaniel, the Academy Award winning actress who played Mammy in Gone with the Wind, was originally denied access to burial at the memorial park in 1952 because she was black. In 1999, a new owner wanted to right the wrong and have McDaniel interred in the cemetery. Her family did not want to disturb her remains and declined the offer. Instead, Hollywood Forever erected a memorial in her honour that has become one of the most popular visitor sites in the cemetery
And back at home……
Not since the assassination of JFK had the world experienced such a shocking death as Princess Diana’s and, for many, the memory of her untimely demise still haunts. At the time of her death, Diana’s final resting place was a topic of much discussion, with the public’s wish to have a public memorial tempered by her family’s wishes to make her grave private. In the end a compromise was met, and now between July and September, members of the public can visit Althorp in Northamptonshire and view the simple urn on Round Oval Island from afar
Visiting dead celebrities has become so popular, that you don’t even have to leave the comfort of your own home to partake in the voyeuristic pleasure of peeking into the afterlife of the famous. Thanks to various websites such as FindaGrave.com, seeing the final resting place of your favourite star is just a mouse-click away. This site relies on volunteers to contribute pictures and information to its database, making it a Wikipedia-like listing of burial places of just about anyone who amounted to something in anything. Happy Grave hunting!
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