Entertainment & Living

Take a peek at HBO’s new Candy Montgomery show ‘Love & Death’

Elizabeth Olsen plays Candy Montgomery in Love & Death on HBO Max, which debuts on April 27.
Elizabeth Olsen plays Candy Montgomery in Love & Death on HBO Max, which debuts on April 27. Courtesy: HBO Max

A peek into a new television show about Candace “Candy” Montgomery, the Dallas-area woman who was accused of killing her friend Betty Gore with an ax in 1980, can be seen in a newly released trailer.

HBO Max’s “Love & Death” premieres on April 27 and its log line reads, “Two churchgoing couples enjoy small town family life in Texas — until somebody picks up an axe”.

The HBO Max limited series is the second adaption of the Montgomery case in less than a year. Hulu’s “Candy” starring Jessica Biel in the titular role, first made its way to the small screen in May 2022.

Elizabeth Olsen is now stepping into the role of Montgomery, alongside Dallas-born actor Jesse Plemons who plays Allan Gore. Lily Rabe and Patrick Fugit fill in the rest of the core cast as Betty Gore and Pat Montgomery, respectively.

The limited series is based on the book “Evidence of Love: A True Story of Passion and Death in the Suburbs” by Jim Atkinson and Joe Bob Briggs, and a series of Texas Monthly articles. “Love & Death” was created by David E. Kelly and directed by Lesli Linka Glatter.

Elizabeth Olsen plays Candy Montgomery in Love & Death on HBO Max, which is set to debut in 2022.
Elizabeth Olsen plays Candy Montgomery in Love & Death on HBO Max, which is set to debut in 2022. Courtesy: HBO Max

What happened in the Montgomery case?

Gore, 30, was a school teacher and friends with Montgomery. The two had met through church and they both sang in the same choir. Gore had two children, the youngest a year old, at the time of her death.

Montgomery had an affair with Gore’s husband, Allan, a year before the killing.

On June 13, 1980, a Friday, Montgomery stopped by Betty Gore’s Wylie home to pick up a swimsuit for Gore’s daughter, who was set to spend the day with Montgomery. While at the house, Gore confronted Montgomery about the affair with her husband. Later that day, Gore was found dead with 41 axe wounds in a blood-spattered utility room.

After she was accused of the murder, Montgomery turned herself in to Collin County Sheriff’s deputies and was held on a $100,000 bond. Four months after the killing, an eight-day trial was held in McKinney to determine if Montgomery had murdered Gore.

Montgomery pleaded self-defense and her lawyer argued that Gore had grabbed a 3-foot ax from the garage and approached Montgomery with it. Montgomery’s lawyer also brought in a Houston psychiatrist who said Montgomery had suffered from a “dissociative reaction” and was unaware of how many times she struck Gore.

A jury acquitted Montgomery of murder charges on Oct. 29, 1980. One juror said the number of times Gore was struck had no bearing on their verdict, which accepted the self-defense claim.

This story was originally published February 17, 2023 at 8:37 AM.

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Brayden Garcia
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Brayden Garcia is a service journalism reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He is part of a team of local journalists who answer reader questions and write about life in North Texas. Brayden mainly writes about weather and all things Taylor Sheridan-related.
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