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Some mourners agreed that Davis would have preferred a different tone at her funeral. "Gaw, why is everyone bein' so serious?" you could hear her ask. Still, there were piano-bar tunes--her friend Marilee Bryan could barely get through "Moon River" as the sobs strangled her notes, although she returned for a lovely rendition of "Somewhere Over the Rainbow." ("One for the queens," came that ghostly dry twang again, followed by the explosive, head-thrown-back laugh).
I was a relatively brief, last-minute intrusion in the life of Davis, whose cancer had already progressed to its final stages last summer when I began interviews with her for a Dallas Observer feature ("Party Girl," September 7). Over the years, she had developed a love-hate relationship with the nonstop attention surrounding her near-fatal 1976 gunshot wound, the murder of her 12-year-old daughter Andrea and of her boyfriend Stan Farr by "The Man in Black" at husband Cullen Davis' Fort Worth mansion. Toward the end of her life, as the cancer treatments grew more punishing at Parkland Hospital (Davis was uninsured and penniless), it was clear that "hate" was beginning to win out. There were only so many times she could discuss Andrea's killing or dredge up her plainspoken hatred of Cullen Davis, whom she, two other eyewitnesses, family, and friends always maintained was the black-clad gunman. Amid the following months-long media frenzy that transformed platinum-tressed, neckline-plunging Davis into "the biggest slut in the state," as Morning News columnist Marlyn Schwarz said with bitter irony, Cullen Davis was acquitted of Andrea's killing as well as separate murder-for-hire charges. The acquittals came despite an FBI tape that captured him delivering money to a phony hit man. (One of the people he allegedly wanted capped was Priscilla.)
But I pressed her to revisit the past, and finally, after several meetings, we had a three-hour chat on her Oak Lawn couch. Feeling less than her best, Davis still couldn't keep herself from laughing when something struck her as funny (and it often did). She'd pause periodically between sips of a dirty vodka martini and reapply her pale pink lipstick.
Few people would argue that Priscilla Davis rejected the spotlight--she relished male attention especially, be it straight or gay--but close friends insist she never enjoyed the public stares from strangers that followed her right up to her untimely death. She could never be sure what thoughts--sympathy, or "Slut!"--lay behind them. The relentless courtroom trashing of her by Cullen Davis' defense attorney Richard "Racehorse" Haynes had so permanently affected her, she refused to take pain medication for the cancer that ravaged her body. "Pill-popper" was another sobriquet she'd been stuck with after Haynes trumpeted her Percodan dependency in the '70s.
Jack Strickland, the Fort Worth attorney who prosecuted Cullen Davis on the murder-for-hire charges and later briefly dated Priscilla, spoke at her funeral service to rescue an event that would have had the woman rolling her eyes and saying, "Oh, puh-leeze." His eulogy, he warned, would offend anyone who expected a "syrupy and sentimental" tribute to her.
She was a model of "neither punctuality nor organization" (her motto was something like, as long as she came before the event was over, "I'm not late"; and when she entered a closet, Strickland said, "clothes flew off the handles of their own volition"). She had "big hair, big boobs," and "was generous to a fault," he noted.