The article suggests that the Arapaho orphan story was invented because she was unable to produce any identification for the Screen Actors Guild.
"[5][11] Acquanetta started her career as a model in New York City[3][6] with Harry Conover and John Robert Powers.
[5] In 1947, Acquanetta and "Mexican-Jewish millionaire" Luciano Baschuk had a son, Sergei (variously Sergio), who died of cancer in 1952 at age five,[13][14] after the couple's bitter divorce in 1950,[15] where she lost her suit for half his fortune when no record of their marriage could be produced.
[5] The couple were prominent citizens, donating to the Phoenix Symphony and the construction of Mesa Lutheran Hospital and founding Stagebrush Theatre.
[3] An apocryphal Phoenix legend has Acquanetta, upon learning of her husband's infidelity, filling the interior of his Lincoln Continental convertible with concrete.
Produced by Beth Morrison Projects, the chamber version received its world premiere at the Prototype Festival in Brooklyn, New York, in January 2018.