Welcome to the very first episode of Champagne and Murder, Please! We’re starting our journey with a haunting case from Chicago in 1956—the tragic disappearance and murder of Barbara and Patricia Grimes. Two sisters, full of life and music, vanished after a night at the movies, sending shockwaves through their community and leaving behind questions that linger to this day. We’ll dive into the timeline, the investigation, the chilling details, and the theories that have swirled around this unsolved case for decades.
And because no story is complete without a toast, our champagne pairing for this episode is the classic Moët & Chandon Imperial Brut—bright, elegant, and timeless, much like the memory of the sisters themselves.
Wikipedia: Murder of the Grimes sisters (overview, timeline, suspects, aftermath) — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_the_Grimes_sisters Wikipedia
Chicago Reader, Tamara Shaffer, “Death and the Maidens” (deep narrative and contemporaneous color) — https://chicagoreader.com/news/death-and-the-maidens/ Chicago Reader
A&E True Crime, “The Mysterious Unsolved Murders of Sisters Barbara and Patricia Grimes” (Bedwell interrogation and release, Glos commentary) — https://www.aetv.com/real-crime/murders-of-barbara-and-patricia-grimes A&E
PEOPLE (Apr. 2025), “2 Sisters Vanished After an Elvis Movie…” (recent retrospective; Schuessler‑Peterson linkage discussed) — https://people.com/grimes-sisters-vanished-elvis-movie-unsolved-murder-11706931 People.com
Michael Kleen, “German Church Road and the Grimes Sisters Tragedy” (discovery details) — https://michaelkleen.com/2021/01/26/german-church-road-and-the-grimes-sisters-tragedy/ M.A. Kleen
Elvis appeals noted in roundups and retrospectives (radio/televised plea Jan. 19, 1957) — example digest: https://www.reddit.com/r/UnresolvedMysteries/comments/1hq4rob/68_years_ago_this_week_the_grimes_sisters_went/ (collates primary references; use as a lead to original coverage) Reddit
(Note: Where possible, consult digitized Chicago Tribune/Sun‑Times archives for primary‑source articles from late Dec. 1956 through Feb. 1957; several are paywalled but are cited within the Wikipedia footnotes and the Chicago Reader piece.)