In 1945, Baggett met Polish-born film producer
Sam Spiegel while she was screen tested for his next film
The Stranger (1946). While she did not earn the role, Baggett and Spiegel began dating. On April 10, 1948, they were married in
Las Vegas, with director
John Huston and his wife
Evelyn Keyes as witnesses. Spiegel and Baggett were in an unhappy marriage full of fierceness and dishonesty. In November 1953, Baggett went to court asking for $3,685 per month in temporary alimony, claiming that Spiegel had abandoned her two years earlier. Two months later, Spiegel was ordered to pay her $500 in monthly payments. Spiegel later alleged that Baggett had destroyed his property, including damaging most of his artwork collection and his suits. Baggett was in an affair with
Irwin Shaw and John Huston, while Spiegel was busy working on
The African Queen (1951). Baggett divorced Spiegel in March 1955, three months after Baggett's release from prison following her conviction for felony hit-and-run.
1954 hit and run During the evening of July 7, 1954, Baggett was driving a
Nash Rambler station wagon which she had borrowed from
George Tobias, when she rear-ended another vehicle near Waring and Orlando Avenues in Los Angeles. Its passengers included five young boys returning from day camp, in which nine year-old Joel Watnick was thrown from the vehicle and instantly killed. Another boy, five year-old Anthony Fell, and an adult, Tom Sanderson, were also seriously injured. After briefly examining the scene, Baggett testified she "blacked out" in fear, before leaving the scene. Baggett drove several miles before reaching a movie theatre where she calmed herself. Baggett had the damaged vehicle towed to a vacant lot in
San Fernando Valley and telephoned an auto repair shop in
Northridge to have the car towed there for repairs. The vehicle was stripped of its registration papers, but investigators identified the vehicle belonged to Tobias. He identified Baggett was the driver of the vehicle that evening, and police tracked her down two days later. On July 10, she was charged with felony hit and run driving and manslaughter. The next month, on January 20, 1955, Baggett was released from prison having served 50 days, which was reduced for "good behavior". The
Los Angeles Times reported she had mopped the floors, served as a waitress, washed dishes, and served in the linen room. Baggett told the publication her jail sentence was "memorable — a sort of minor college" and she had hoped to revive her acting career. Baggett and Tobias paid more than $40,000 due to six civil suits filed against them. == Death ==