How Debbie Harry narrowly escaped being kidnapped by Ted Bundy

Blondie
The band that almost never was
The quintessential serial killer
Sentenced to death
An unexpected revelation
Unforgettable experiences
It happened in New York
A sketchy car
Worst fears confirmed
Her only goal: get out of the car!
She managed to open the door and jump out of the car when he made a sharp turn
She didn't say anything for years
Was it really Ted Bundy?
Debbie Harry didn't need to make up stories for fame
A story told on multiple occasions
It's her story, and this is how she tells it
Who will take it to the big screen?
Blondie

n 1974, a rock band destined to make history was born: Blondie, a group fronted by the one-and-only Debbie Harry, who became the image of the band.

The band that almost never was

However, the story could have been quite different if a year earlier, Debbie Harry hadn't escaped from the person who would become one of the most famous serial killers of the 20th century: Ted Bundy.

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The quintessential serial killer

For those not familiar with Ted Bundy, it's suffice to say that he confessed to 30 homicides in seven different states, between 1974 and 1978.

Sentenced to death

After a complex trial, the serial killer was sentenced to die in the electric chair, and the sentence was carried out on January 24, 1989, at Raiford Prison, Florida, USA.

An unexpected revelation

Ten months later, US media published an interview that would stun the world. The way Deborah Harry tells the story is absolutely terrifying.

Unforgettable experiences

The story was told in the first person by the singer herself, who narrated the encounter she had with Ted Bundy a year before he began his killing spree.

It happened in New York

Debbie Harry sets the scene on a street in the Lower East Side, in the Village of New York, on a dark night, while she was waiting for a taxi.

"He was very persistent"

“A little white car pulls up, and the guy offers me a ride. So I just continued to try and flag a cab down. But he was very persistent, and he asked me where I was going. It was only a couple of blocks away, and he said, ‘well I'll give you a ride," said the singer, according to Dazed.

A sketchy car

She described how she first got suspicious of the situation. Even though it was a hot summer night, the windows were closed. From there, things got worse.

Foto: Unsplash - Benjamin Disinger

Worst fears confirmed

She then began to panic after she realised that there was no door handle either and the car had been stripped down. He noticed her panic.

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Her only goal: get out of the car!

At this point, she says she was frantically trying to get out of the car. She noticed a hole where the radio and glove compartment should have been and said that she thurst her arm out of the window to open the door up from inside. Then, he made a move that might have saved her life.

She managed to open the door and jump out of the car when he made a sharp turn

“As soon as he saw that, he tried to turn the corner really fast, and I spun out of the car and landed in the middle of the street," she said.

She didn't say anything for years

When the events took place, in the summer of 1973, Debbie Harry was a mostly unknown musician. Everything was quite different in November 1989 when she remembered the story and shared it with the world.

Was it really Ted Bundy?

But how did she know it had been Ted Bundy? “It was right after his execution that I read about him,” she said. “I hadn’t thought about that incident in years. The whole description of how he operated and what he looked like and the kind of car he drove and the time frame he was doing that in that area of the country fit exactly. I said, ‘My God, it was him.’”

Debbie Harry didn't need to make up stories for fame

Some have said Debbie Harry used that story to gain notoriety, but the truth is that, by that time, she was already a superstar and needed no extra publicity. Some say the story has been debunked since Bundy wasn't operating in New York at the time or killing women until 1974.

A story told on multiple occasions

Since then, she has recounted this story on several occasions, in interviews and, not least, in her autobiography: 'Face It.'

It's her story, and this is how she tells it

And for those who doubt her story, Debbie Harry says in her autobiography that she couldn't care less what they think, because she knows what happened.

Debbie Harry: amazing photos of the Blondie singer, then and now

Who will take it to the big screen?

Was it really Ted Bundy who invited Debbie Harry into his car that summer of 1973? We may never know, but no one should doubt that, sooner or later, Hollywood will turn this story into a movie. Or at least they should take some inspiration....

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