Christian Devi Brando

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Christian Devi Brando

Birthdate:
Birthplace: East Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, United States
Death: January 26, 2008 (49)
Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, United States (Pneumonia)
Place of Burial: Kalama, Cowlitz County, Washington, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Marlon Brando and Anna Kashfi
Ex-husband of Private and Private
Father of Private
Half brother of Private; Private; Private; Private; Private and 3 others

Managed by: morel
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

    • Private
      ex-spouse
    • Private
      child
    • Private
      ex-spouse
    • mother
    • father
    • Private
      father's partner
    • Private
      half sibling
    • father's partner
    • Private
      half sibling
    • Private
      half sibling
    • Private
      half sibling
    • father's partner

About Christian Devi Brando

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Brando

Christian Brando (May 11, 1958 – January 26, 2008) was the eldest child of actor Marlon Brando. He pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the death of the boyfriend of his half-sister Cheyenne. On May 16, 1990, Christian Brando had shot Dag Drollet to death at Marlon Brando's residence on Mulholland Drive in Los Angeles. He was released from prison in 1996. In 2005, he pleaded no contest to spousal abuse of his wife, Deborah Presley, and was given probation. He died of pneumonia on January 26, 2008.

Early life

Christian Brando was named after French film director Christian Marquand who later directed Marlon in the film Candy. Christian was born in Los Angeles, California on May 11, 1958, the product of an affair between Marlon Brando and Anna Kashfi, an actress. Marlon and Kashfi met in 1955, and Kashfi became pregnant in 1957. They married in 1958. The couple divorced a year after Christian's birth.

Christian was shuttled between his mother and father. His parents became increasingly hostile towards one another, and engaged in a protracted custody battle. Marlon eventually won custody of Christian, who was then 13 years old.

Marlon was a distant father and spent little time with young Christian, who was raised by nannies and servants. Christian moved between Hollywood and his father's private island near Tahiti. Marlon continued to have relationships with multiple women by whom he fathered numerous children. Years later, while commenting on his childhood, Christian said that: "The family kept changing shape, I'd sit down at the breakfast table and say, 'Who are you?"

In 1972, while his father was abroad filming Last Tango in Paris, Christian was kidnapped by a gang of Anna Kashfi's hippie friends, to whom she had apparently promised to pay $10,000. When she refused to pay they took the boy to Mexico, where a posse of private detectives hired by Brando, from an agency named "The Investigators", led by private investigator Jay J. Armes, rescued him late one night and returned him to Los Angeles. Back in court his father was awarded sole custody.

Brando attended Cal Preparatory High School with Michael Jackson and Danny Bonaduce.

As a child, Christian had two small roles in movies: in The Secret Life of an American Wife and I Love You, Alice B. Toklas!, both released in 1968. He appeared in four other films and four made-for-TV productions, sometimes using the alias Gary Brown between 1980 and 1990. He played a killer in the Sacra Corona Unita (the Quarter Italian Mafia) in the film La Posta in gioco ("The Prize at Stake"), filmed in Southern Italy in 1987.

Manslaughter

Christian pleaded guilty to manslaughter for killing Dag Drollet in 1990. Drollet was in a four-year relationship with Christian's younger half-sister Cheyenne, who was pregnant by Drollet at the time. The child, a son named Tuki, is now known as Tuki Brando and is a model for Versace menswear.

A few days before the incident, Dag Drollet had flown in from Tahiti to Los Angeles to visit Cheyenne, who was eight months pregnant. Cheyenne was visiting her father along with her mother and both were staying at Marlon Brando's residence on Mulholland Drive. Marlon Brando had known the Drollet family for years. Christian Brando, however, had only met Dag Drollet for the first time just several hours before he shot him to death.

On the evening of the killing, Christian and Cheyenne had dinner at Musso & Frank Grill where Cheyenne told Christian that Drollet had been physically abusive toward her, which may have been untrue. Christian Brando said to a reporter from The Los Angeles Times: "She went off on this bizarre tangent."

Later, around 11 p.m. that night, Christian, who admits to being drunk at the time, confronted Drollet at the Brando home and shot him. Christian claimed that he did not intend to kill Drollet. "I just wanted to scare him," he said. The killing occurred in the den where Drollet was staying. Cheyenne was staying in a separate room.

Christian Brando claimed that he and Drollet were fighting over the gun when it accidentally went off.

Robert Shapiro was one of Christian Brando's lawyers. Brando was initially charged with murder. However, prosecutors were unable to proceed with a murder charge because of the absence of Cheyenne, who was a crucial witness to their case. Marlon Brando had Cheyenne admitted into a psychiatric hospital in Tahiti. After several attempts to get her to return to California, a judge eventually quashed all efforts by the prosecution.

After heavily publicized pre-trial proceedings, Christian pleaded guilty to manslaughter and spent five years in prison after which he worked as a tree cutter and welder.

His half-sister Cheyenne committed suicide in 1995 at the age of 25.

Bonnie Lee Bakley

Robert Blake and his defense attorneys claimed that Christian Brando was involved in the 2001 murder of Blake's 44-year-old wife Bonnie Lee Bakley. Robert Blake was ultimately charged with his wife's murder and although acquitted in the criminal trial, he was found liable for her death in the civil case.

Testimony introduced during the criminal pre-trial hearings and the subsequent civil trial attempted to implicate Christian in the murder, suggesting that he had the same motive as Blake to have Bonny Lee Bakley killed. Bonnie Lee Bakley was dating Robert Blake and Christian Brando at the same time. Letters to Robert Blake from Bakley outlined financial motives for the relationships with Blake and Brando.[8] Bakley became pregnant and claimed to both Brando and Blake that they were the father. Bakley named Christian Brando as the father in the official birth certificate and named the baby Christian Shannon Brando. However, a DNA test determined that Robert Blake, not Christian Brando, was the biological father.

According to trial testimony, just days before her death, Bakley sent a letter and photos of the baby to Christian Brando whom she continued to claim was the father. Dianne Mattson testified in court that Brando became enraged, and at one point stated "somebody should put a bullet in that bitch's head". In a tape-recorded conversation between Brando and Bakley, Brando stated, "You’re lucky. You know, I mean, not on my behalf, but you’re lucky someone ain’t out there to put a bullet in your head.”

According to pre-trial testimony and corroboration, Christian Brando was in Washington state on the night of Bakley's death. Other pre-trial testimony alleged that associates of Brando were involved in the murder. One of those allegedly involved was the prosecution star witness: Duffy Hambleton, a stunt man. Hambleton claimed that Blake tried to hire him to kill Bakley. Hambleton claimed he refused the offer. Blake, however, testified that he hired Hambleton for personal security to protect himself and Bakley from a stalker. Criminal pre-trial and civil trial testimony claimed that Hambleton was an associate of Christian Brando and that he arranged the murder of Bakley to curry favor with Brando. The judge in the criminal case prevented the defense from presenting that view during trial.

Brando was called as a witness in actor Robert Blake’s civil trial but refused to testify, invoking his Fifth Amendment constitutional rights. Brando's behavior in court got him a contempt of court charge and conviction.

According to legal analyst Andrew Cohen, Blake's acquittal was a result of defense lawyer M. Gerald Schwartzbach's successful impeachment of the prosecution's "stuntmen" witnesses and suggestions that others could have been involved in the murder. Another civil trial witness, Brian Allan Fiebelkorn, testified that he alerted authorities to information that could confirm that Hambleton was lying in his assertions against Blake. Fiebelkorn (as well as other trial witnesses) asserted that Hambleton had an "association" of some kind with Christian Brando, but Fiebelkorn was rebuked by law enforcement. Fiebelkorn and Blake's defense attorney, Schwartzbach subsequently filed a formal complaint against the LAPD and the lead LAPD detective, Ron Y. Ito

The civil trial verdict concluded that Robert Blake was liable for the death of Bonnie Lee Bakley. An appeal was filed on February 28, 2007 and was argued on January 15, 2008. On April 26, 2008, an appeals court upheld the 2007 civil case verdict, but cut Blake's penalty assessment in half. (Blake's attorneys had protested that jurors improperly discussed the Michael Jackson and O.J. Simpson verdicts during deliberations of his case, but the appeals judge ruled that such discussions were not improper.)

Marriage and spousal abuse

Brando's first marriage to Mary Brando ended without acrimony in 1987 after six years; they first met when both were ten years old.

Brando married Deborah Presley on October 16, 2004 in Las Vegas. Presley, two years Brando's senior, claimed to be Elvis Presley's daughter though she failed in legal efforts to obtain an inheritance. The marriage lasted a very short time and was annulled in June 2005.

Brando pleaded no contest to charges of spousal abuse involving Presley in January 2005.

In December 2005, Presley filed a lawsuit against Brando in Los Angeles County Superior Court, alleging spousal abuse involving an incident in Brando's home. Brando counterclaimed for "a savage beating" during the same incident. The case was settled on undisclosed terms in February 2007.

Death

Brando died of pneumonia on January 26, 2008 at Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center in Los Angeles. He was 49 years old. He was admitted into Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center on January 11, 2008. At the time, Brando's attorney, Benjamin Brin, announced he was hospitalized with pneumonia.

Brando was buried on February 17, 2008 at the Kalama Oddfellows Cemetery in Kalama, Washington,. Christian, who had lived in Kalama for about 14 years was well liked by locals who remembered him as "a regular guy". Chaplain Timothy Berg, who performed the service, said, "I guess as a society, we've made it really hard for people who are famous." Berg said, "God, he had a hard life, he really did, and I guess that's really true of a lot of people who are born into fame."

According to former girlfriend Donna Goen (as quoted in the Feb 11, 2008 edition of People magazine), at the time of his death Brando had been attempting to turn his life around. "He was trying so hard to finally have a life," she said.

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Christian Devi Brando's Timeline

1958
March 11, 1958
East Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, United States
2008
January 26, 2008
Age 49
Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, United States
????
Kalama Oddfellows Cemetery, Kalama, Cowlitz County, Washington, United States