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The Da Vinci victim: obsessed art expert took deadly overdose

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PUSSS...@aol.com

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Mar 17, 2007, 11:11:47 AM3/17/07
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A painter fascinated with best-selling conspiracy thriller The Da
Vinci Code committed suicide after becoming convinced she was the
subject of a real-life murder plot.

Caroline Eldridge, 38, moved to Italy to pursue her interest in
Leonardo Da Vinci, but her mind became "muddled" by the mysteries
surrounding his work, her father said.

Caroline Eldridge, a Da Vinci scholar and artist, who killed herself
after becoming obsessed with the mysteries surrounding the artist and
the best-selling novel The Da Vinci Code

She suffered paranoid delusions that she and her family were in danger
"because of the knowledge that she had" of Leonardo after working on
an exhibition about his paintings.

After repeatedly telling her family, "I'm not going to let them take
me alive," she took an overdose of paracetamol.

The Da Vinci Code, which has sold more than 60 million copies, centres
on a sinister plot by Catholic organisation Opus Dei to kill the
book's hero Robert Langdon before he discovers, via clues in Da
Vinci's paintings, that Christ was married to Mary Magdalene and had a
son.

Her parents believe her mind became muddled

On Friday Caroline's father, retired headmaster Roger Eldridge, said:
"She was particularly interested in Da Vinci's interpretation of
perspective, and because of that interest she had read The Da Vinci
Code.

"The nature of the illness that she had would create fear, and the
Code itself, I think it did create a muddle in her mind in terms of
fears.

"She was very fearful for her own safety and she felt that because of
the work she had been doing and because of the knowledge that she had,
she had put us in danger.

"She had put herself under tremendous pressure with work and I think
that pressure and stress was to blame for the paranoia."

Ms Elridge, a graduate of the Wimbledon College of Art, worked for
years as a costume designer for the English National Opera on
productions including The Magic Flute and Medea, and later went
freelance.

But her passion in life was painting, and during a trip to Venice to
stay with a friend in 2004 she got a job working on a six-month
exhibition about Leonardo.

One of the visitors was Professor Rocco Sinisgalli, a Renaissance art
specialist from the University of Rome, who struck up a conversation
with Caroline and asked her if she could help him translate a book he
was writing about the artist Leone Battista Alberti.

She agreed to do it in return for the chance to attend the professor's
lectures on art, and moved to Rome where she found work designing
costumes for an opera festival.

While there she continued to study Leonardo, and had a particular
interest in his famous Vitruvian Man drawing, which features on the
cover of The Da Vinci Code. A dying murder victim in the Dan Brown
novel also arranges his body in the shape of the drawing as a complex
clue for investigators.

Prof Sinisgalli later dedicated a book on Vitruvian Man "To the
painter Caroline Eldridge" and sent her parents a copy with a note
saying Caroline "had always shown a deep interest in this particular
drawing and in Leonardo himself".

Ms Elridge, who had no history of mental illness other than a brief
battle with anorexia as a teenager, had what her father described as a
"paranoid attack" whilst in Rome, and he flew to Italy to bring her
home.

"She was working long hours, designing costumes and trying to get the
book translation finished, and she rang us in a state of considerable
panic and we realised that she wasn't well," said Mr Eldridge.

"I was in Rome by 10am the next day.

"She was very distressed and fearful for her own safety. She was so
frightened that she wouldn't get on the plane, but I managed to bring
her home in the end."

Actors Tom Hanks and Audrey Tautou in a scene from the movie based on
the novel

Mr Eldridge and his wife Susan referred her to a doctor and she was
sectioned under the Mental Health Act and sent to a psychiatric unit
at Wotton Lawn hospital in Gloucester.

A month later she was discharged and went to live with her parents in
the Cotswold village of Edgeworth, near Cirencester.

But Mr Eldridge said his daughter's paranoia continued. "She was
receiving care in the community but because her fears were so real to
her she didn't accept she was ill so she didn't really engage with the
help that was being offered to her.

"She said she was putting us in danger and said on more than one
occasion: 'I'm not going to let them take me alive.'"

On May 25 last year, whilst staying with friends, Caroline complained
of feeling unwell and later admitted she had taken an overdose.

She was taken to Cheltenham General Hospital but died of multiple
organ failure on May 31.

At an inquest last week Gloucestershire coroner Alan Crickmore said:
"I am driven to the conclusion that it was her intention that she
brought about her death, but when she did that she was beginning to
suffer from a paranoid episode."

He recorded a verdict of suicide while the balance of Caroline's mind
was disturbed.
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