Russ Tamblyn
“Bobby Driscoll had a very rough childhood. I know that his father used to whack him around a lot, when he was very young. His parents used to lock him in the closet all night. He’d have to sit there in the dark.”
Connie Stevens
“He was a wonderful, wonderful person; you can be assured of that. People preyed on his weaknesses, and he didn’t have good parenting. And if he had better friends- if I were a better friend- you don’t know what could’ve happened.”
Connie Stevens
“I ran into him when he was... pretty high. And it was a different human being, and I worried so. I did the Ed Sullivan Show, I was voted the ‘Young Star of Tomorrow’ kind of thing, and he showed up there, at the Ed Sullivan Show, and he was- this was towards the end he was living in the Village. He was very complimentary and sweet. He looked fine, but he wasn’t fine. He needed some money, and I was worried where he was living, and who was taking care of him, was he together with his wife, which he wasn’t… and what was going on in his life, but you know what happens, someone comes along, and right in the middle of that conversation when you finally get to it, somebody whisks you away. And I- ‘I’ll be back!’... And that was the last time I saw him.”
George Herms
“I don’t see Bobby until the wedding where he marries Didi and then takes off for New York with her, and that to me was the slippery slope.”
George Herms
"A newspaper clipping says the ‘First Human in Walt Disney Films is Now the First Human To Be Treated for Narcotics as an Illness, Not a Crime.’ And so, Bobby goes off to the penitentiary, and I communicated with him, and the first letter that he sent me from the penitentiary says, ‘There are no nurses here’. They lied to him.”
George Herms
“I think he was a predecessor in the Berman Semina circle: Billy Grey, Russ Tamblyn, Dean Stockwell, and Dennis Hopper. And Bobby was there before any of them. Bobby told Wally that there was a guy ready to be turned out, and it was Russ Tamblyn.”
Connie Stevens
“It was fun just working with him. I admired him so, and I knew that this was a new phase of his career, getting a film. And so, I was conscious of sort of taking care of him, you know? Making sure everything went well. I’m kind of a nurturing person, it comes with my Italian heritage, and I seem to want to take care of everybody that needs to be taken care of.”
Billy Gray
“I heard that- I don’t know if this is true or not- but I heard that he tried to go into the studio, and they said, ‘Nah, no more. Can’t come in anymore.’ He didn’t even know he was fired until he tried to get into the studio.”
Connie Stevens
“He made such an impact. I think he was a screen actor primarily because on the screen, he- those eyes, mouth- he became very three-dimensional, larger than life. And I think that was his real impact when he was a child. He just captured you, whoever was looking.”
Robert (Bobby) Blake
"I hooked up with Bobby Driscoll and several other people who were all child actors; we were all drugging - especially marijuana."
Billy Gray
"He really was a sweet guy. A lovely guy, a dear friend. He was responsible for one of the real high points of my life. That’s how I remember him."
Billy Gray
"He turned me on to Bach when I was 15. I remember he came up to me so excited, ‘You’ve got to hear this!’ It was Brandenburg Concerto No.5. It was incredible. It really blew me away. And I never listened to any other music after that. Bach was my guy, that was it for me. It’s given me so much joy throughout my life. And then I immersed myself into his extensive collection of work. I still thank [Bobby] for that."
Diane di Prima
‘met Dee Dee and Bobbie Driscoll, and bought them coffee, Dee Dee lovely in an olive green dress and blue polo shirt, I admired her for it, she felt terrible, beat and tired, and had been fighting with Bobbie and they both have to get out of their place, which is the old Michael Smith place where Johnnie Dodd has made a wall of 160 thousand George Washington stamps with the profiles cut out, and where they have been staying, but in spite of all she looked lovely with her dyed red hair, it is the west coast tradition and a kind of noblesse oblige, girls look lovely, even under the most adverse of circumstances. Bobbie looked beat, he will not live very long. Drug has him, Dee Dee knows this. Bought them coffee. […] Bobbie tied up and turned on in the men’s room. They went on their way to find Ondine.’ - Diane di Prima
Kenneth Anger
‘I knew Bobby from his starring days with Disney to his tragic decline and fall in New York, when he would resort to any lie or scam to obtain money for his addiction to crystal meth. Bobby scammed me out of what he said was money needed for his rent when he was, in fact, homeless, and the money; I gave him went straight to his drug connection. I'm not the only victim of his scams: he could still be convincingly charming. (He was, after all, an actor) and a dealer in rare comic books was another of his patsies. In his thirties, looking like a bum with stubble on his face, he would still talk of making an acting comeback. I'm certain he didn't believe it any more than anyone else did. In a sense, Bobby was a victim of Walt Disney, who dismissed him brutally when he turned into an awkward teenager with pimples. It broke Bobby's heart, but no one ever explained to him that a child star has necessarily a short career -- even Shirley Temple or Jackie Coogan or Cooper’. – Kenneth Anger
Billy Gray
"We were buddies. We hung out before he moved to New York City. Then we just kind of lost touch after that. I later heard he was discovered overdosed in an abandoned building. And that was the end of it. He just never got his life together. It was horrible what happened to him."
George Herms
“Bobby was "the classic example of the perfect actor": He could "become what he pretended." George tried to imagine how it would feel to "give everything" to become someone else. Some days Bobby woke up and didn't know who he was. Bobby was an addict and gave George some heroin once. "It's anesthesia," George said. "You don't move."
Billy Gray
"Like many adolescents, he developed a rough complexion, you know, pimples and all that kind of stuff. And I guess Disney thought he was no longer useful for them."
George Herms
“1961 is when we left Larkspur. And then in Topanga, we stayed with Bobby, Susanne, and her son Nicky.
"Bobby visited up there and said, "You know, you can stay with us."
Donald Fine
“I wouldn’t touch that story with a ten-foot pole. Maybe he’s making the whole thing up.” - Donald Fine, publisher at Arbor House. Said that Bobby had asked him to publish a book about his experience with sexual abuse at the Disney company.
George Herms
“We moved in with Bobby Driscoll in Topanga Canyon. Bobby had lived down the alley in Hermosa Beach, and we had stayed close”.
Jane Wyman
“I had several long talks with Bobby. He’s emotionally troubled and needs help. There’s something going on. Something that’s been hushed up. Something that needs to be investigated. I abhor child abuse” - Jane Wyman, a friend of Bobby. She starred alongside him on the radio, and he appeared on her TV show.
Billy Gray
"He came to the lot one day, and they wouldn’t let him in at the gate. They told him he was no longer able to come to the studio. That’s how he found out he was fired. He was devastated. He was treated so rudely by Hollywood. And he didn’t take the news well."
Billy Gray
"He had a drug problem. He got into heroin. He just never found his way and made that choice."
George Herms
“Down the alley in Hermosa Beach Bobby Driscoll is living, and through Bobby I meet Dean Stockwell and Lester Ferguson”.