’50s film producer shot movie star wife’s agent after being ‘gripped by a jealous rage’: book

Walter Wanger, who suspected that his movie star wife was having an affair, had enough.

On Dec. 13, 1951, the once hotshot film producer, who had fallen on hard times, grabbed his gun, determined to teach Joan Bennett and her Hollywood agent, Jennings Lang, a lesson. Wanger headed to MCA, Lang’s agency, where he saw his spouse’s Cadillac convertible parked outside.

Hours later, after the sun had set, the couple arrived in Lang’s car. Wanger, who was “gripped by a jealous rage,” leaped out of his vehicle and confronted the pair. Following a war of words, Wanger shot Lang twice. One bullet grazed the agent’s thigh, while the other struck him in the groin.

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Jennings Lang laying in bed being consoled by a nurse as a man in a suit looks on.

Jennings Lang is seen here recovering from a bullet wound inflicted by movie producer Walter Wanger. He received a bedside visit from his wife and his attorney. (Getty Images)

The shooting that rocked Hollywood during its golden era is featured in a new book, “Beverly Hills Noir: Crime, Sin, & Scandal in 90210,” by author and longtime People magazine contributor Scott Huver. It explores some of the most outrageous incidents to occur in the star-studded city.

“When [Wanger] made the decision to physically confront his wife and her agent, he was in a bad place financially and emotionally,” Huver told Fox News Digital.

Book cover for Beverly Hills Noir

Scott Huver’s book, “Beverly Hills Noir,” is out now. (Post Hill Press)

“He was on top of the world in Hollywood,” Huver shared. “He was a very influential, respected producer. And when things started to go badly, his whole self-image was beginning to crumble.

A somber looking Walter Wanger in a black suit

Walter Wanger “lost his mind” after his career took a downward spiral, author Scott Huver claims. (Harry Benson/Daily Express/Getty Images)

“He’d certainly made insinuations that he was willing to take some kind of action when he realized that his wife was involved with her representative. But I think what pushed him over the edge was the actual receiving of the reports from the private detective that confirmed all his suspicions.”

Walter Wanger smoking a pipe next to his wife Joan Bennett waving.

Joan Bennett, seen here with Walter Wanger, became the breadwinner in her household. (Keystone/Getty Images)

“Once he knew, it just gnawed at him,” Huver continued. “It was a compulsion. He had to get in their faces. Look at how sloppily he did it — he did it outside the talent agency in the parking lot, which happened to be directly across the street from the Beverly Hills City Hall and police station. It wasn’t some stealth operation. It was the act of a desperate man.”

At the time, Wanger had declared bankruptcy, although creditors didn’t believe him, The Hollywood Reporter revealed. Huver pointed out that Wanger became dependent on Bennett to pay their bills.

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A glamorous photo of Joan Bennett posing.

Joan Bennett’s femme fatale persona would come back to haunt her. (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Meanwhile, he hired a private eye to follow her, who later shared that she and Lang were spending time together in New Orleans, in the Caribbean and in the Beverly Hills apartment of agent Jay Kanter, one of Wanger’s friends.

Jennings Lang in the arm of his bride.

Jennings Lang was a sought-after Hollywood agent. (Los Angeles Examiner/USC Libraries/Corbis via Getty Images)

“Joan Bennett and Jennings Lang grew close when Walter Wanger’s fortune hit the skids,” Huver explained. “She became the breadwinner when they were in danger of losing their house… which was initially her house built on her fortune from making movies. So, as she was trying to support their family, their children, she became more and more reliant on Jennings Lang, who was truly a terrific agent… and he was a great-looking guy.

“They became so enmeshed that, yes, there was a heat between them, but I think she became pretty dependent on [Lang] emotionally when her husband wasn’t there for her as he was dealing with his own struggles in the business.”

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Wanger and Bennett married in 1940. While he was a well-known womanizer, she yearned for a conventional home life.

“He was a powerful man in Hollywood, and he expected that everything was going to be his way,” Huver explained. “Now, he had previously been married, and in that marriage, it was reportedly an open marriage, and neither he nor his wife had any issues with any relationships that happened outside.

“It wasn’t some stealth operation. It was the act of a desperate man.”

— Scott Huver, author of “Beverly Hills Noir”

Walter Wanger

Walter Wanger pleaded temporary insanity. (Los Angeles Examiner/USC Libraries/Corbis via Getty Images)

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“But Joan was pretty insistent on a traditional marriage, even though she’d been married a couple of times… She wanted a traditional family. She wanted stability.”

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A close-up of Walter Wanger smiling with Joan Bennett wearing a dress and pearls.

Walter Wanger with his wife Joan Bennett in London. They appeared to be the picture-perfect couple, but behind closed doors, there was a different story to tell. (Fred Ramage/Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Wanger and Bennett seemingly had a “picture-perfect marriage” and were a Hollywood power couple, Huver pointed out. But when Wanger began to lose his grip on his star status and finances, it “pushed him to the brink.”

Joan Bennett looking to the side in a coy and glamorous way

During the scandal, Joan Bennett went toe-to-toe with investigators. (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

“They used the defense of a bluish flash going off in his brain that pushed him to this,” said Huver. “And… in a way, that’s… what happened. He finally just snapped… And even though what was good for him wasn’t good for her on paper, he just decided that he could no longer tolerate it.”

While Bennett had sought comfort in Lang, Huver said he wouldn’t call the relationship “a full-on love affair.”

Scott Huver smiling next to Joan Crawford at a dining table.

Jennings Lang with actress Joan Crawford at the Coconut Grove in Los Angeles.  (Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

“It seemed to be something they were both invested in,” he explained. “It went on for quite some time. But as soon as the jig was up, they didn’t try to resume it. They didn’t spend time together after that. There [weren’t] any love letters that anybody knows about being passed back and forth.”

Police were just “steps away” when a bleeding Lang was raced to the hospital. Bennett, who was “wide-eyed with horror,” quickly regained her composure and got to business.

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“She made sure that Jennings… was going to be taken care of, and then showed up at the police station to face… whatever music she needed to face,” said Huver. “The police chief of Beverly Hills was a very tough character, and she went toe-to-toe with him and held her own. She both impressed him and earned his grudging respect.”

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Joan Bennett being surrounded by photographers and reporters looking bewildered.

Joan Bennett is seen here being approached by photographers and reporters. (Los Angeles Examiner/USC Libraries/Corbis via Getty Images)

“Then she faced the press,” said Huver. “She knew that to hide from it and try to dodge it was not going to be an effective strategy. She was going to be hunted and stalked. So, she welcomed the press into her own home to have a press conference. While kind of dismissing the idea that Walter had any reason to act, she also told the public she hoped they wouldn’t think badly of Hollywood people because of this incident.”

“That’s how the old Hollywood system worked, trying to put the best face forward, put the best spin on it, don’t alienate the ticket-buying public,” said Huver. “It was… a masterclass. And she handled it shockingly well.”

Lang survived. Wanger was put on trial for assault with a deadly weapon, The Hollywood Reporter shared. According to the outlet, Wanger pleaded temporary insanity as he was helped by “super lawyer Jerry Giesler and a coterie of Hollywood A-listers.”

Detectives examining a gun and knife.

Captain Walter White of the Beverly Hills Police, left, holds a gun while District Attorney S. Ernest Roll holds a knife that Walter Wanger was carrying.  (Getty Images)

Wanger was sentenced to four months in jail, The New York Times reported.

Huver said that Bennett’s relationship with Lang ended in a flash. As Lang recovered, the pair “went about repairing the damage they’d done to their families.”

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After Wanger was released, he experienced a brief Hollywood comeback.

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A close-up of Walter Wanger walking next to prisoners.

Walter Wanger served a few months behind bars. (Los Angeles Examiner/USC Libraries/Corbis via Getty Images)

“He was determined to make these socially minded prison movies like ‘I Want to Live!,’ which got Susan Hayward an Oscar. It really put him right back on top again,” said Huver.

Susan Hayward behind bars.

Susan Hayward won an Oscar for her role as Barbara Graham in the 1958 movie “I Want to Live!” (Getty Images)

Wanger’s career was undone by his last film, which was also his biggest ever — 1963’s “Cleopatra.” It nearly bankrupted 20th Century Fox.

“At the core of that film’s failure was an adulterous affair behind the scenes with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton that turned the public off,” said Huver.

Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor in costume about to kiss each other.

Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor had a high-profile affair on the set of “Cleopatra,” Walter Wanger’s final film. (Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images)

Lang also thrived after the shooting. Huver said his agency bought Universal Studios, where he became an executive.

Jennings Lang in a bright blue jacket and pal blue shirt smiling

Jennings Lang attends the Fourth Annual Clint Eastwood Celebrity Tennis Tournament at the Beach and Tennis Club in Pebble Beach, California, on July 7, 1973. (Fairchild Archive/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images)

“He saw the invention of TV movies, essentially,” said Huver. “He [also] worked on the big disaster movies of the ‘70s… which were huge sensations.”

Bennett, once a sought-after siren, was blackballed by Hollywood.

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A close-up of Joan Bennett walking in a fur coat and suit next to a man in a suit.

Joan Bennett struggled to find work in Hollywood after the scandal. (Los Angeles Examiner/USC Libraries/Corbis via Getty Images)

“Within a short time, it was painfully clear that I was a professional outcast in Hollywood, one of the ‘untouchables,’” she wrote, as quoted by Vanity Fair. “I was excommunicated. Evidence lies in the fact that before Dec. 13, 1951, I’d made 65 movies in 23 years. In the decade that followed, I made five.”

According to the outlet, Bennett was forced to sell her home. When she expressed a desire to get a divorce and relocate to New York to pursue a career in theater, Wanger threatened a custody battle, the outlet reported. Their divorce was finalized in 1965.

“She stayed in the marriage for some time, even though it eventually became quite loveless,” said Huver. “She did come back with a couple of cool horror projects later in her career. She was on the TV soap opera ‘Dark Shadows,’ which is [still] a huge cult hit.”

A close-up of Joan Bennett surrounded by smoke.

Joan Bennett went on to star in “Dark Shadows.” (ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)

Wanger passed away in 1968. Bennett died in 1990, followed by Lang in 1996.

“Given that this blew up all of their lives in 1951, they managed to keep things together well enough to enjoy life later on,” said Huver.

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