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Diane Mitchell had not been in touch with Christa for over two years
when the latter contacted her again sometime in 1975. “She
called to tell me that she was getting some bit parts and she also
told me she was dating actor Michael Sarrazin. It was a short conversation…no
more than a few minutes. I got her telephone number and told her
I would call her back. However, when I did call her back some time
later, the phone had been disconnected. That was the last time I
spoke with Sandy.”
In spite of her ambition and seemingly good connections, Christa’s
acting career in Hollywood was nowhere near as successful as she
had expected it would be. In fact, after two years in L.A., she had
only managed to grab a Coppertone TV commercial and two small TV
roles: a bit part as a roller skating waitress on a 1976 Starsky
and Hutch episode and a much larger role later that year as
a bitchy beauty pageant contestant on a memorable episode of Wonder
Woman titled ‘Beauty on Parade’. (Other sexy, 1970’s
TV starlets that appeared with her on the show included Lindsay Bloom,
Paulette Breen and Jenifer Shaw.) Christa continued to pin her hopes
for true stardom on the still in-limbo LET’S GO FOR BROKE.
At one point, the film had been retitled LADY J. and Christa
continually plugged its supposedly forthcoming release whenever she
made the gossip columns. According to one posthumous report, Christa
had shot some new and possibly more explicit scenes for the film
in Hollywood the year before her death but the (now R-rated) drive-in
epic still eluded distribution.
Following her Starsky and Hutch and Wonder Woman roles,
and hot on the heels of her singing lessons back East, Christa decided
she wanted to cut a disco record. Needless to say, with her many
personal and professional connections in town, that was all that
was needed to get the ball rolling. Neil Bogart’s Casablanca
Records brought in expatriated New York DJ Frankie Crocker (the man
credited with coining the radio term “urban contemporary”)
to produce the record but he and Christa reportedly butted heads.
Eventually, though, she would tell friends that she had Crocker “by
the balls” and that he would do whatever she wanted.
Soon after starting the project, Christa, by now exploring her self-professed
tendency toward bisexuality, hooked up with one of the album’s
back-up singers, Patty Collins. The two reportedly became inseparable
lovers with Patty said to be quite proprietary of Christa’s
attentions. Debbie Danilow, a fellow traveler with various rock groups
of the period, was another back-up singer brought onto the project
and she immediately clicked with Christa. According to Debbie, “ Christa
was flirty, and came on to me immediately but with a sense of timeliness.
She let me know she was interested in me (sexually) but wanted me
to be comfortable with her first. I more or less ignored her advances,
all the time keeping my eye on Patty who was keeping her eye on me!
To be quite frank, I have never had an interest in having a relationship
with another woman, especially sexual. I have been married five times — but
always to men! But I accepted Christa as she was, and I appreciated
her interest in me, even though it was not something we would act
upon.”
Debbie Danilow knew Christa only briefly but the latter made a big
impression on her, perhaps even more so because she was to have met
her on the night she was murdered. According to Debbie, though (and
several other witnesses), she had left the party before Christa arrived.
Today she describes the woman she knew as “… gifted
and courageous, brilliant and creative, a rare shining light with
no fear.”
The night that Christa met her destiny started out for her as many
other nights had. She attended a party in Hollywood with her roommate,
a woman named Stephanie. They called a mutual friend, Sanford
(a.k.a. “Sandy”) Smith, a Hollywood talent agent, who
was also a frequent paramour of Christa’s, to join them, but
he had refused. Undeterred, Christa decided to go to his house and
try to talk him into going with the girls. She borrowed Stephanie’s
car and drove to Smith’s house on Lloyd Place in West Hollywood.
Smith later claims that he was sleeping when she got there and that
he never saw nor heard her.
Either enroute to Sandy Smith’s house, or upon leaving (this
part remains unclear), Christa was attacked from behind. Even though
she was a certified Black Belt, the ambushed woman was unable to
fight off her assailant. She was stabbed over 30 times (which tragically
included numerous wounds to her neck and face) and then bludgeoned
with a blunt object thought to be either the handle of a knife or
a hammer. Christa’s badly ravaged body was found shortly after
the attack by a young man crossing the street. Some contemporary
reports say that he found her next to her car with her keys in her
hand. “I was told that my mother was lying partially under
a parked car,” says Nicole, “and that when he approached
her, he heard her let out a long, deep breath — her last.”
Christa’s West Hollywood murder on February 12, 1977 received
surprisingly little press coverage for someone so well known in the
gossip columns and in Hollywood society itself. This led one writer
to speculate in print that "who she knew and what she
knew may be the reason her savage killing was barely reported." According
to witnesses who saw her earlier, Christa was carrying a handbag
that night with the “Tommy Boy” logo on it but the purse
was missing when the police arrived. It was never found and there
has been strong speculation through the years that it may have contained
her so-called ‘love diary’ and that’s why the killer
(or killers) stole it.
Despite the horrific nature of Christa’s death, the story
failed to make national headlines. The investigation into her murder
proceeded apace for a time as police interviewed scores of people
and searched fruitlessly for her diary which was said to be potentially
explosive. When the case drifted into the background, a few crime
writers tried to stir up interest, but to no avail. What remains
in 2007 are two boxes of investigative notes and four notebooks filled
with names and other pertinent information from the LAPD. Over 70
people have been interviewed in the past thirty years, and yet to
date there has been no resolution to the case.
Christa’s daughter, Nicole, only nine years old when her mother
died, grew up determined to see justice served. Toward that end,
she has recently gotten the CBS-TV news magazines 48 HOURS and CELEBRITY
JUSTICE to devote segments of their shows to the murder, and
has herself put a number of cold case specialists on the scent. And
yet, like Christa’s dreams of stardom, the case—and her
killer—somehow continue to fall through the cracks.
Finally, with the rise of the Internet comes a growing “Christa
Helm cult” based almost solely on her memorable TV appearance
on Wonder Woman. Now, with a renewed interest in the long
lost LET’S GO FOR BROKE (a movie that well could have
made her a star), more and more people are suddenly hearing about
the woman, the actress, and the horrifying way she died. As more
and more people want to know what happened, the case will likely
never grow completely cold.
Thirty years after she met her destiny at the cruel thrust of a
killer’s blade, there is still a chance for justice —and
even a type of fame, ironically —for the beautiful but ill-fated
Christa Helm. And with it, perhaps, a sense of peace will come for
one of Hollywood’s lost and forgotten beauties —a wild
and free-spirited angel whose unfettered spirit did not justify the
brutal way she left this earth.
Special thanks to Christa Helm's daughter, Nicole, Diane Mitchell
and Darlene Thoresen for their help in the preparation of this article.
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