Rosemary's Baby and Roman Polanski's satanic sacrifice of Sharon Tate
Roman Polanski was propelled to fame after the film, Rosemary’s Baby, written by Ira Levin in 1967 became a box office success upon its release in 1968.
The book Rosemary’s Baby was written by Ira Levin in 1967 and very quicky in 1968 Roman Polanski wrote the screenplay for the movie of the same title. The film echoes the life of Polanski and his new bride. It is about a newly married young couple in New York City where the husband, an actor, makes a deal with the Devil so that he can become successful.
Upon the release of the film in 1968 Polanski became a noted and celebrated producer. Something that had eluded him for years.
Satanic sacrificial murders, I’ve discovered, are another pattern among the ruling class.
The Manson Family Murders
On August 9, 1969 four members of the Manson Family cult broke into the home of film director, Roman Polanski and his wife, Sharon Tate, at 10050 Cielo Drive. Tate was 8 1/2 months pregnant and was hosting a get together with friends at the Los Angeles home. The guests who attended her dinner party earlier that night included Steve McQueen and music producer Quincy Jones. The first person murdered was 18-year-old Steven Parent who was leaving the residence in his car. Jay Sebring, who was Sharon’s ex-boyfriend and a hairdresser to the stars, Abigail Folger, heiress to the Folger fortune, and her boyfriend Wojciech Frykowski were all killed. Frykowski had been a close friend of Polanski and had appeared in, as well as financed, a 1962 early film for the budding director.
Polanski was in London during the grisly murders. The night before, on August 8th, Polanski called Sharon and the couple argued over his delaying his trip home. She was planning a birthday party for him 10 days later and threatened to divorce him if he hadn’t returned by then.
Charles Manson sent four of his most obedient followers, Charles “Tex” Watson, Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel and Linda Kasabian to the house on Cielo Drive where drug-fueled orgies were alleged to be commonplace. It was Susan Atkins who confessed to stabbing Sharon while the actress begged her murderess to let her have her baby. The plan included removing their eyes and fingers, but this wasn’t done. Atkins then scrawled the word PIG on the front door of the house with Sharon’s blood.
Murdered the following day, on August 10, 1969 were 44-year-old Leno LaBianca, a grocery store owner and his 38-year-old wife Rosemary, who owned a dress shop. This time, Charles Manson accompanied members of his cult and tied up the victims. He left the scene while his followers savagely murdered the couple. Notice the woman’s name is Rosemary—is this a coincidence? The wife in Polanski’s film “Rosemary’s Baby” that made him a Hollywood legend has the same name. Moreover, the movie is about an elite witch coven who conspire with the husband of a young woman to carry and give birth to the Anti-Christ. In return for his help, the man, a failing actor, is promised success.
When Polanski returned to Los Angeles from London, he gave an exclusive interview to Life Magazine. He was heavily criticized for allowing them to photograph him squatting next to the word PIG written with Sharon’s blood . The issue hit the stands on August 11, 1969.
There were other rumors about Polanski. Among these that right after the funeral of his wife Sharon—who was buried with her unborn son in her arms—that he brazenly flirted with a model at Elaine’s in New York City. Even reaching up into her skirt as her boyfriend and another man at the table looked on in horror.
Elaine's was a bar and restaurant in New York City that opened in 1963 by Elaine Kaufman and shut down in 2011 after her death. It was frequented by many celebrities, especially actors, models and authors. Below is a photo showing Andy Warhol leaving the eatery with some of his friends.
Lewis Lapham, then editor of Harper’s Magazine, said he was dining with a friend, financier Edward Perlberg and his girlfriend, a Scandinavian model named Beatte Telle, at Elaine’s when Polanski appeared. Lapham said, “Mr. Polanski pulled up a chair between myself and Beatte Telle and began to talk to her in a forward way … began to praise her beauty, romance her. At one point he had his hand on her leg and said to her ‘I can put you in the movies. I can make you the next Sharon Tate.'”
Graydon Carter, editor of Vanity Fair published the story. Yes, that Graydon Carter. On August 23, 2019, the New York Post revealed that former editor had made a disturbing discovery on his front lawn—the severed head of a cat. It arrived after one of his reporters began digging into Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged sexual misconduct.
Roman Polanski was propelled to fame after the film, Rosemary’s Baby, written by Ira Levin in 1967 became a box office success upon its release in 1968.
Polanski sued Vanity Fair, which Carter found mystifying as he did this from London—never even stepping foot into the courtroom in New York City. Even more upsetting for Carter was that Polanski won. Suddenly, everything Polanski touched turned into gold. His life, after what the ritualistic slaying of his wife, Sharon and his first-almost-born son, became bountifully fruitful.
The one witness who could have collaborated the story, namely, the model Beatte Telle did not appear in court. Among the people who stood firmly by Polanski was Mia Farrow (she is the ex-partner of Woody Allen and the mother of Ronan Farrow). Farrow wrote the explosive article Harvey Weinstein’s Army of Spies for the New Yorker magazine in late 2017. At the age of 59, in 2002, Telle backed the filmmaker’s version of during a media interview.
Sharon was said by her friends to not be happy about the fact that Polanski still wanted to have many other lovers—many of them children. He was said to have told her he didn’t want to be “married to a wife, but wanted to be married to a hippie.” A videotape was found in their house after the terrifying murders. Initially, word was that it was Roman having sex with his wife, Sharon. As it turned out, this was not true. The tape showed Sharon being forced to have sex with two other men while being filmed by Polanski.
In 1977 Polanski was arrested after drugging and raping 13-year-old Samantha Jane Gailey at Jack Nicholson’s mansion on Mulholland Drive in Beverly Hills. Nicholson was not there at the time, however, his home was known as “the wildest house in Hollywood.”
The charges against Polanski were rape by use of drugs, perversion, sodomy, lewd and lascivious act upon a child under 14, unlawful sexual intercourse with a female under the age of 18, and furnishing a controlled substance to a minor. At his arraignment Polanski pleaded not guilty to all charges. Later he accepted a plea bargain whose terms included the dismissal of five of the most serious charges in exchange for a guilty plea to the lesser charge of engaging in unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor. When he learned that he was likely going to face jail time, he fled to London, then France in February 1978 just hours before he was scheduled to be sentenced. Of note, Ghislaine Maxwell is said by some of her friends that she wanted to “pull a Polanski.”
After the grotesque murders that shook a nation, Polanski went on to achieve great success—which had eluded him. Almost one year to the date of the murders, the film Rosemary’s Baby was released.
Anton LaVey, the founder of the Church of Satan, portrayed the Devil who rapes and impregnates Farrow’s character Rosemary.
For years Polanski disputed this insisting it was an unfounded rumor. However, when LaVey died, his obituary mentioned his role in Rosemary’s Baby.
2022-2023 Copyright Kirby Sommers
The above is an excerpt from the book ‘Creating Epstein’