etradefactory.com – There are very few heroes in Netflix’s Dahmer: Monster – The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, but Glenda Cleveland is undoubtedly one of them. Glenda became a key fighter to put Jeffrey Dahmer behind bars when the police disobeyed his multiple warnings. She continued to fight for the justice of the victims long after Dahmer’s arrest.
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[catlist id=100371 numberposts=5] But who was the real Glenda and where is she now? Here’s what happened to her and why Niecy Nash called her an “honor” to portray her.Who was the real Glenda Cleveland?
Contrary to the true story, Glenda Cleveland was not, as portrayed in Dahmer: Monster, Dahmer’s next door neighbor. In real life, the neighbor was Pamela Bass, a woman Dahmer was very fond of. In fact, Bass has said in interviews since his arrest that he was “kind and sharing,” even giving her sandwiches, though she feared that when her crimes came to light they might contain human flesh. But for the sake of the story, Pamela Bass was somewhat obliterated, with elements of her personality and history merged with those of Glenda Cleveland, who had lived in the building next to the Oxford Apartments Dahmer, called Home. Glenda had long been suspicious of Dahmer, mostly because of the unpleasant smell from her apartment and his tendency to use power tools late into the night. But she turned it on completely on May 21, 1991, when her daughter Sandra Smith and granddaughter Nicole Childress warned Glenda about a stunned and confused Konerak Sinthasomphone. The 14-year-old was almost catatonic after Dahmer drugged him, punched a hole in his head and poured acid into his brain. Miraculously, the teenager managed to regain consciousness and staggered out of the building, where she Glenda was looking after him when she called the police on the street. Dahmer found the police and Sinthasomphone with the women when he returned from a run to the store and – amazingly – managed to convince the police that the teenager was 19 and his friend was “just drunk”. The police officers involved believed Dahmer for the women and then helped bring Sinthasomphone back to Dahmer’s apartment to “freshen up”. In a now infamous recording of a phone conversation, Glenda called the police for an update, only to be abruptly dismissed by the men on the other end of the line, who said she had been “taken into charge”, despite their pleas, “are you ‘secure?’. When missing Sinthasomphone posters circulated, she called the police again, only to be ignored again. If they had listened to their repeated cries for help, at least five victims would have been saved.What happened to Glenda Cleveland?
Glenda largely shunned the media spotlight after Dahmer’s arrest, insisting she “just wanted to get back to normal.” In the years that followed, she was praised for the hero she was and had tried to be, officially honored by the Town Council and County Council, and celebrated by local women’s groups and the police department. of Milwaukee. Overall, she was back to normal and continued her data entry work until her position was no longer needed. After that, she practically retired. According to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Glenda Cleveland lived in her home at the Oxford Apartments until 2009 (which was later demolished and turned into a vacant lot). She then she moved to another building less than a mile away. She died on December 24, 2010 at the age of 56 of natural causes.Speaking of playing her in Dahmer, actress Niecy Nash said, “If nothing else, I wish people knew Glenda Cleveland was special. She was a special woman. Going on and on trying to create something that did so much more. of a cheap plaque at the bottom of a social room somewhere. “She deserved a lot more than the police to stand in front of her and say, ‘Look what we did and what we were trying to do.’ And I want people to know that we all know, or have been, or will be, a Glenda Cleveland in this lifetime.” Via:digitalspyNiecy Nash discusses how this is a timeless story and the profound impact of what it meant to portray Dahmer neighbor, Glenda Cleveland: the brave woman who tried in vain to inform the authorities of Dahmer's insidious behavior and was ignored. 9/21 on @Netflix pic.twitter.com/sMbmawKnpr
— Ryan Murphy Productions (@ryanmurphyprod) September 16, 2022