“I think they’re people with a gun control agenda. This was to build up the sympathy factor,” she said. If Watt’s children died, wouldn’t she also speak highly of them and their gifts? Watt a few minutes earlier had boasted about her son Jordan’s voracious reading habits and how well her daughter, Madison, played the piano. Watt’s feral lack of empathy astonished me. “ ‘She had a white coffin, and we busted out the Sharpies and drew a skillet and a sailboat.’ NOBODY CRIED,” she barked. She loved loved loved loved loved Sandy Hook, and we’re glad she’s in heaven with her teacher, and she’s with her classmates, and we feel good about that,’ ” she said. Watt mocked this reminiscence in a singsong tone. She described the abyss she felt upon seeing her daughter’s white casket and recalled how she, Chris, and Grace’s brother, Jack, used markers to fill its stark emptiness with colorful drawings of things Grace loved. Lynn McDonnell told CNN’s Anderson Cooper that Grace had drawn a peace sign and the message “Grace Loves Mommy” in the fogged bathroom mirror after her shower, leaving traces her mother found after her death. She brought up Chris and Lynn McDonnell, parents of 7-year-old Grace, a child with striking pale blue eyes who liked to paint. Watt had read widely about the shooting and the families, choosing from each account only the facts that suited her false narrative. Their lives had fallen to pieces, but in Watt’s mind they seemed “too perfect,” and also not perfect enough. Where were their “messy buns,” “cute torn jeans,” their “Tory Burch jewelry”? She mocked their broken stoicism. She judged the parents as “too old to have kids that age.” She found their clothes dowdy, their hairstyles dated. “Too many of those parents just rub me the wrong way.” I just had a strong sense that this didn’t happen,” she said. When we spoke, I asked her whether she doubted Sandy Hook because first grade children being murdered in their classrooms was too hard for her to face. They smile and hug, peek through doorways-a fantastical, eerie ideal for how children should look and live. Their hair is often flowing, framing enormous eyes with irises in unusual colors. They wear fur-trimmed hoods, chic berets, oversize bows, earrings. Watt has a Pinterest board called “Beautiful Children.” She had posted more than 100 photos there of babies, toddlers, and prepubescent girls, many of them twins. I would have been a really good first grade teacher.” “My whole life has been about kids,” she said. He lent his voice for Watership Down, Labyrinth, and Paddington, to much success.īut his best role of all was as the dry and pompously witty narrator in Barry Lyndon.Īfter typing up this list, I did not realize he was in so many famous films. His film roles date back to the 1930's- The Good Time Girl, Passport to Pimlico, The Astonished Heart, Trio, Tom Brown's Schooldays, The Magic Box, A Christmas Carol, The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men, Svengali, The Man Who Never Was, Alexander the Great, Man in the Moon, Macbeth, Cleopatra, The V.I.P.'s, Genghis Khan, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, The Taming of the Shrew, Where Eagle's Dare, Anne of the Thousand Days, The Possession of Joel Delaney, Demons of the Mind, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Theatre of Blood, The MacKintosh Man, The Three Musketeers, The Story of Cinderella, The Medusa Touch, Gandhi, Cymbeline, Yellowbeard, The Tale of Beatrix Potter, Lady Jane, Comrades, and Dark Obsession. Known for portraying Lear, Prospero, and Polonius, he was a much appreciated regular player at the Old Vic. The actor, narrator, and comedian is one of my favorite character actors of all time. He then pulled down his shorts, ostensibly to show a surgery scar, and exposed his penis to Locane. LeBranche told Locane that he was born with both “male and female parts” but that his ovaries had been removed when he was young. She refused his advances, at which point he sat down next to her. I left quickly.” The following day, LaBranche approached Locane in the showers and asked if he could write her a letter. When I came out, was just sitting there with legs together.” Locane said that she had decided to leave some of her clothing on, and exited the shower wearing her undergarments.
“I was the girl in the shower,” Locane says, “ was in the shower when I went in there. LaBranche, who is 6’7 and serving a thirty-year sentence for the murder of his roommate in 1995, is currently recorded as a “female” inmate by the New Jersey Department of Corrections.