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Anna Nicole Smith
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Vickie Lynn Marshall (November 28, 1967 – February 8, 2007), better known
under the stage name of Anna Nicole Smith, was an American model and
television personality. She first gained popularity in Playboy, becoming the
1993 Playmate of the Year. She modeled for clothing companies, including
Guess jeans. She starred in her own reality TV show, The Anna Nicole Show.
Born and raised in Texas, Smith dropped out of high school and was married
at the age of 17. Her highly publicized second marriage to oil business
executive and billionaire J. Howard Marshall, 63 years her senior, resulted
in speculation that she married the octogenarian for his money, which she
denied. Following his death, she began a lengthy legal battle over a share
of his estate; her case, Marshall v. Marshall, reached the U.S. Supreme
Court on a question of federal jurisdiction. In the months before her death,
she was the focus of renewed press coverage surrounding the death of her
son, Daniel Smith, and the paternity and custody battle over her daughter
Daniellynn.

Early life
Born Vickie Lynn Hogan in Harris County, Texas, Anna Nicole was the only
child of Donald Eugene Hogan (born July 12, 1947) and Virgie Mae (née Tabers;
born July 12, 1951), who married on February 22, 1967. Her father then left
the family; he and Virgie divorced on November 4, 1969. Virgie's oldest
child, Anna Nicole's half-brother, is David Luther Tacker, Jr. (born 1966).
Anna Nicole was raised by her mother and aunt, Elaine (Todd) Tabers, wife of
Virgie's brother, Melvin Tabers. Virgie's first child was fathered by her
(later) stepbrother Donald Luther Tacker Sr. Virgie's mother Paralee Allman
was married to Donald's father George Tacker.[citation needed]
Virgie, who worked as a law enforcement officer in Houston for 28 years,
subsequently married Donald R. Hart in 1971.[citation needed] Their child
was Donald Ray Hart, Jr. (born 1972).[2] After Virgie married Donald Hart,
Anna Nicole changed her name from Vickie Hogan to Nikki Hart.[3] Virgie and
Donald Hart divorced in 1983. Virgie then married Joe D. Thompson (1987,
divorced 1991), James T. Sanders (1996, died 1996), and James H. Arthur
(2000).
Anna Nicole's father Donald married Wanda Faye Atkinson in 1970 and had the
following children: Donna Hogan (born 1971), Donald Ray Hogan (born 1973),
and Amy Hogan (born 1975). Donald and Wanda were divorced in 1978. Donald
married Carolyn S. Vandver in 1996.
Anna Nicole attended Durkee Elementary School and Aldine Intermediate School
in Houston. When she was in the 9th grade, she was sent to live with her
mother's younger sister, Kay Beall, in Mexia, Texas. At Mexia High School,
Anna Nicole failed her freshman year and later quit school during her
sophomore year.
While working as a waitress at Jim's Krispy Fried Chicken in Mexia, Anna
Nicole met Billy Wayne Smith, who was a cook at the restaurant. The couple
married April 4, 1985 she was 17 and he was 16. The next year, she gave
birth to their son, Daniel Wayne Smith. She and Billy separated in 1987 and
she moved to Houston with one-year-old Daniel. They were officially divorced
February 3, 1993, in Houston.
Initially, Anna Nicole found employment at Wal-Mart, then as a waitress at
Red Lobster. She then became an exotic dancer, and in 1991, began taking
modeling and voice lessons. In October of that year, she saw an ad in the
newspaper to audition for Playboy magazine.
| Playboy and modeling career Anna Nicole Smith Playboy centerfold appearance May 1992 Preceded by Cady Cantrell Succeeded by Angela Melini Playmate of the Year 1993 Preceded by Corinna Harney Succeeded by Jenny McCarthy Born November 28, 1967(1967-11-28) Houston, Texas Died February 8, 2007 (aged 39) Measurements Bust: 36DD (97DD cm) Waist: 26 in (66 cm) Hips: 38 in (97 cm) Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) Weight 160 lb (73 kg/11 st) |
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A major turning point in Anna Nicole Smith's career was in 1992. It was then her career
took off after she was chosen by Hugh Hefner to appear on the cover of the
March 1992 issue of Playboy, where she is listed as Vickie Smith, wearing a
low-cut evening gown. Smith said she planned to be "the next Marilyn
Monroe". Becoming one of Playboy's most popular models, Smith was heavier
and larger than the typical Playboy model. Smith was chosen to be the 1993
Playmate of the Year. By the time of her PMOY pictorial, she had settled on
the name Anna Nicole Smith.
Smith secured a contract to replace supermodel Claudia Schiffer in the Guess
jeans ad campaign in a series of sultry black and white photographs. Guess
capitalized on Smith's strong resemblance to sex symbol Jayne Mansfield and
put her in Jayne-inspired photo sessions. In 1993, before Christmas, she
modeled for the Swedish clothing company Hennes & Mauritz (H&M). She was
dressed in underwear and arranged in seductive poses. She appeared on big
posters in Sweden and Norway.
A photograph of Smith was used by New York magazine on the cover of its
August 22, 1994 issue titled White Trash Nation. In the photo, she appears
squatting in a short skirt and cowboy boots as she eats chips. In October
1994, Smith's lawyer initiated a $5,000,000 lawsuit against the magazine
claiming unauthorized use of her photo and that the article had damaged her
reputation. Her lawyer said that Smith was told she was being photographed
to embody the "all-American-woman look", and that they wanted glamor shots.
He further stated that the picture used was taken for fun during a break.
Marriage to Marshall
While performing at Gigi's, a Houston strip club, in October 1991, Smith met
elderly oil billionaire J. Howard Marshall and they began a relationship.
During their two-year relationship, he reportedly lavished gifts on her and
asked her to marry him several times. She divorced her husband Billy on
February 3, 1993, in Houston. On June 27, 1994, Smith, 26, and Marshall, 89,
married in Houston. This resulted in a great deal of gossip about her
marrying him for his money.[ Though she reportedly never lived with him,
Smith maintained that she loved her husband, and age did not matter to her.
Thirteen months after his marriage to Smith, Marshall died on August 4,
1995, in Houston.
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Inheritance court cases
Within weeks of J. Howard Marshall's death, Smith and her husband's son, E.
Pierce Marshall, battled over her claim for half of her late husband's
US$1.6 billion estate. She temporarily joined forces with J. Howard's other
son, James Howard Marshall III, whom the elder Howard had disowned. Howard
III claimed J. Howard orally promised him a portion of his estate; like
Smith, Howard III was also left out of J. Howard's will. The case has gone
on for more than a decade, producing a highly publicized court battle in
Texas and several judicial decisions that have gone both for and against
Smith in that time.
In 1996, Smith filed for bankruptcy in California as a result of a $850,000
judgment against her for sexual harassment of an employee. As any money
potentially due to her from the Marshall estate was part of her potential
assets, the bankruptcy court involved itself in the matter.
Smith claimed J. Howard orally promised her half of his estate if she
married him. In September 2000, a Los Angeles bankruptcy judge awarded her
$449,754,134. In July 2001, Houston judge Mike Wood affirmed the jury
findings in the probate case by ruling that Smith was entitled to nothing
and ordered Smith to pay over $1 million in fees and expenses to Pierce's
legal team. The conflict between the Texas probate court and California
bankruptcy court judgments forced the matter into federal court.
In March 2002, a federal judge vacated the California bankruptcy court's
ruling and issued a new ruling but reduced the award to $88 million. In
December 2004, a three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
reversed the March 2002 decision, on the reasoning that the federal courts
lacked jurisdiction to overrule this probate decision.
The U.S. Supreme Court decided in September 2005 to hear the appeal of that
decision. The Bush administration subsequently directed the Solicitor
General to intercede on Smith's behalf out of an interest to expand federal
court jurisdiction over state probate disputes. After months of
waiting, Smith and her stepson Pierce learned of the Supreme Court's
decision on May 1, 2006. The justices unanimously decided in favor of Smith;
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote the majority opinion. The decision did not
give Smith a portion of her husband's estate, but affirmed her right to
pursue a share of it in federal court. On June 20, 2006, E. Pierce Marshall
died at age 67 from an "aggressive infection". His widow, Elaine T.
Marshall, now represents his estate. The case has been remanded to the 9th
Circuit to adjudicate the remaining appellate issues not previously
resolved.
Further information: Marshall v. Marshall
After Anna’s death the New York Times reported that the case over the
Marshall fortune “is likely to continue in the name of Ms. Smith’s infant
daughter.”
Film and television career
Smith as Carrie Wisk in SkyscraperAlthough her film appearances in The
Hudsucker Proxy and Naked Gun 33⅓: The Final Insult were highly publicized
in 1994, little was done to further Smith's acting career. Her first
starring role was as Colette Dubois, a retired spy seeking revenge for the
murder of her husband, in the action/thriller To the Limit (1995).
Smith next starred in the action/thriller Skyscraper (1997), which she also
produced, as a helicopter pilot, Carrie Wisk, who lands on a high rise
building and, upon learning it has been taken over by terrorists, becomes
engaged in a deadly fight to save hostages.
Both films, and Smith's performances in them, were critically panned. During
the course of the litigation over her late husband's estate, her career
stalled. Her legal battle, her increasing weight, and her reportedly bizarre
behavior made her regular fodder for late night television comedians.
In 2002, she debuted in her own reality TV series on the E! cable network,
The Anna Nicole Show. The series focused on her personal and private life in
the manner of other reality shows, such as the ratings hit The Osbournes.
One of the recurring guests on the show was interior designer Bobby Trendy
of West Hollywood, CA, who often feuded with lawyer Howard K. Stern.
The debut of the The Anna Nicole Show was the highest rated series on the
network, but critics blasted it and ratings dropped with each successive
week. However, it achieved a cult status among some, particularly college
fraternities. The show was canceled in February 2004 due to "creative
differences," but has retained some life in reruns and on DVD releases.
Smith's next appearance on the big screen was as herself in Wasabi Tuna
(2003), about a group of friends who kidnap her dog, Sugar-Pie, on
Halloween. She appeared as herself again in Be Cool (2005), a crime/comedy
about the film and music industries that stars John Travolta, Uma Thurman
and The Rock. In Illegal Aliens she stars as "Lucy", which she also
produced, a sci-fi/comedy about beautiful space aliens saving the earth from
evil.
A film biography of Smith's life is now in the works. The movie will
document her rise from exotic dancer to her reality show/diet spokesmodel
stardom (from her late teens until her February 2007 death at age 39). Willa
Ford will star as Anna in the film.
Smith as spokesperson
In an interview on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, Smith was asked what her
"Playmate diet" consisted of. She instantly replied, "fried chicken". In
October 2003, she became a spokesperson for TrimSpa, which helped her lose a
reported 69 lb (31 kg).
In November 2004, she appeared at the American Music Awards to introduce a
musical performance and attracted attention because of her slurred speech
and behavior. During her live appearance, she threw her arms up and
exclaimed, "Like my body?". Smith murmured other comments and alluded to
TrimSpa. The incident became comic material for presenters throughout the
rest of the program.
The following day, her appearance was featured in the media. Tabloids
speculated that Smith was under the influence of pills or some other
controlled substance. Her representatives explained that she was in pain due
to a series of grueling workouts.
In March 2005, at the first MTV Australia Video Music Awards in Sydney's
Luna Park, she spoofed Janet Jackson's wardrobe malfunction by pulling down
her dress to reveal both breasts, each covered with the MTV logo.
Smith has also been featured in advertisements for the animal rights group
PETA. Spoofing Marilyn Monroe's "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend" segment
in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, a 2004 ad states "Gentlemen prefer fur-free
blondes." Due to her support of the anti-fur movement, in particular her
criticism of Canadian seal hunting, PETA began a petition in memory of Smith
to the Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper to end the annual tradition.
In another ad the following year, Smith posed with her dogs in a campaign
against Iams dog food for their alleged cruelty to animals, as well as the
manufacturer Procter and Gamble, and sister company Eukanuba.
Personal life
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Birth of daughter
Main article: Dannielynn Birkhead paternity case
Smith announced on June 1, 2006, in a video clip posted on her official
website that she was pregnant. "Let me stop all the rumors," she said, while
floating on an inflatable raft in a swimming pool. "Yes, I am pregnant. I'm
happy, I'm very, very happy about it. Everything's goin' really, really good
and I'll be checking in and out periodically on the web, and I'll let you
see me as I'm growing."
Though her announcement did not provide any details, in an interview with
Larry King on CNN's Larry King Live after her daughter's birth and her son's
death, Smith's longtime personal attorney Howard K. Stern said that he and
Smith had been in a secret relationship for "a very long time" and that, due
to the timing of the pregnancy, he was confident that he was the father of
the baby. Her ex-boyfriend, entertainment photojournalist Larry Birkhead,
steadfastly maintained that he was the baby's father and filed a lawsuit to
establish paternity. Smith's daughter, Dannielynn Hope Marshall Stern, was
born September 7, 2006, at Doctors Hospital in Nassau, Bahamas. The Bahamian
birth certificate recorded the father as Howard K. Stern
A judge in the United States ordered that DNA tests be performed to
determine the biological father of Dannielynn. Following Smith's death,
Debra Opri, the lawyer for Larry Birkhead, asked for an emergency DNA sample
to be taken from the corpse. Smith's lawyer, Ron Rale objected strongly to
this request. The request was denied by a judge, who instead ordered Smith's
body preserved until February 20.
According to a story published in the New York Daily News, Donna Hogan,
Smith's younger half-sister, has said that the model froze the sperm of her
second husband, Marshall, prior to his death. The newspaper said that Hogan
wrote in her unpublished manuscript about her sister, entitled Train Wreck,
that "To her family, she hinted that she had used the old man's frozen
sperm, and would be giving birth to Howard Marshall's child"[dead link]
However, the publisher of Hogan's book described the newspaper's claims as a
hoax. On February 9, 2007, Zsa Zsa Gabor's husband Frédéric Prinz von Anhalt
said that he had had a decade-long affair with Smith and could potentially
be the father of her infant girl, Dannielynn. Alexander Denk, a former
bodyguard for Anna Nicole Smith, reportedly told the tabloid television
program Extra that he had had an affair with his former employer, and that
it was possible he could be Dannielynn's father.
After Smith's death, TMZ.com reported that Smith had been given a
prescription for methadone under a false name while she was in her eighth
month of pregnancy. The Medical Board of California launched a review into
the matter; the prescribing doctor, Sandeep Kapoor, said his treatment was
"sound and appropriate."
On April 10, 2007, a Bahamian judge ruled Larry Birkhead, a former
boyfriend, as the father of Dannielynn. DNA tests had established Birkhead
as the father, with 99.99% certainty. Commenting on the revelation, Birkhead
stated, "I hate to be the one to tell you this but, I told you so. I'm the
father...My baby's going to be coming home pretty soon."[50] Birkhead
subsequently applied for an amended birth certificate listing him as the
father, which paved the way for him to obtain a passport for the baby and
him to leave for the United States. Howard K. Stern did not contest the DNA
results or the ruling. Subsequent to the ruling, Birkhead returned to the
United States with the baby. Virgie Arthur's appeal of the ruling was later
denied and she was ordered to pay costs.
Death of son
Main article: Daniel Wayne Smith
Smith's 20-year-old son, Daniel Smith, died on September 10, 2006 in his
mother's hospital room while visiting her and his newborn sister. After the
coroner labeled the death "reserved," Smith hired forensic pathologist Cyril
Wecht to perform a second autopsy.
His death certificate was issued on September 21, 2006, so that he could be
buried. While Smith remained in the Bahamas with Dannielynn and Stern,
Daniel's family in the United States, including his father, Billy Smith,
gathered with friends on October 7, 2006, in Mexia, Texas, for a memorial
service. Daniel was buried at Lake View Cemetery on New Providence, Bahamas,
on October 19, 2006, almost six weeks after his death. According to Howard
K. Stern, Smith's longtime companion, she was devastated over her son's
death. "Anna and Daniel were inseparable. Daniel was without question the
most important person in Anna’s life," Stern told Circuit Judge Larry
Seidlin during his testimony in the legal battle after the model’s death.
"At Daniel’s funeral, she had them open the coffin and tried to climb
inside. She said that 'if Daniel has to be buried, I want to be buried with
him,'" Stern testified. "She was ready to go down with him."Howard K. Stern
revealed that "Anna saw herself as both mother and father to Daniel. From
the time I met her, everything was for Daniel. I would say that physically,
she died last week, but in a lot of ways, emotionally she died when Daniel
died," he added.
Dr. Wecht announced on Larry King Live that the autopsy he performed showed
that Daniel died from a lethal combination of Zoloft, Lexapro and methadone.
Although he explained that methadone is used in the treatment of heroin and
morphine addiction, Wecht said he had no information to make any conclusion
why Daniel was using the drug. On February 8, 2007, Wecht said on Fox News
that he still had no information about how Daniel obtained methadone.
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Commitment ceremony with Stern
On September 28, 2006, Smith and Howard K. Stern exchanged vows and rings in
an informal commitment ceremony aboard the 41-foot catamaran Margaritaville
off the coast of the Bahamas. She wore a white dress and carried a bouquet
of red roses, while he wore a black dress suit with white shirt. Although
they pledged their love and made a commitment to be there for one another
before a Baptist minister, no marriage certificate was issued and the
ceremony is not legally binding.
After the ceremony, they landed on the island of Sandy Kay where they had a
party and celebrated with champagne and apple cider that had been brought
over for the occasion by sailboat.
Regarding the questionable timing of the ceremony, Smith's attorney in
Nassau, stated, "They needed a little adrenaline boost because things have
been so hectic and devastating in their life recently." The photos of their
ceremony were sold through Getty Images to People Magazine for around
$1,000,000.
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Residency in the Bahamas
Anna Nicole Smith and Howard K. Stern were reportedly staying in the Bahamas
to avoid paternity testing of her daughter in the United States. In late
2006, Smith was granted permanent resident status in the Bahamas by
Immigration Minister Shane Gibson. On February 11, 2007, newspaper
photographs were published showing Smith lying clothed in bed in an embrace
with Gibson. Opposition politicians in the Bahamas accused the minister of
improper behavior. Gibson resigned as a result of the controversy and
claimed that the photos, taken by Stern, were innocent.
The basis of Smith's permanent residency status was the claim that she owned
a $900,000 mansion, which she said was given to her by a former boyfriend,
real estate developer G. Ben Thompson of South Carolina. Thompson asserted
that he loaned Smith the finances to purchase the property, but that she
failed to repay the loan, and was attempting to regain control of the
property. Thompson sued to evict Smith from the property in Bahama Court,
and received a default judgment against her when she failed to respond to
the eviction, or appear in court on November 28, 2006. Ford Shelley,
son-in-law of G. Ben Thompson, claimed that methadone was found in Anna's
bedroom refrigerator while the mansion was being reclaimed. A
photograph provided by TMZ shows a large bottle of methadone along with
vials of injectable cyanocobalamin in her refrigerator.


Death and funeral
Wikinews has related news:
Anna Nicole Smith diesOn February 8, 2007, Smith was found unresponsive in
room 607 at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood, Florida.
Tasma Brighthaupt, a friend of Smith who was a trained emergency nurse
performed CPR for 15 minutes until her husband, Maurice "Big Moe"
Brighthaupt, Smith's friend and bodyguard took over CPR. He had frantically
driven back to the hotel after being notified by his wife of Smith's
condition. According to Seminole Police Chief Charlie Tiger, at 1:38 p.m.
(18:38 UTC) Maurice Brighthaupt, who was also a trained paramedic, called
the hotel front desk from her sixth floor room. The front desk in turn
called security, who then called 911. At 1:45 p.m. the bodyguard
administered CPR until paramedics arrived and she was rushed to Memorial
Regional Hospital at 2:10 p.m and pronounced dead on arrival at 2:49 p.m.
A phone call was released to the public on February 13, 2007 involving
Seminole police and the local 911 operators, saying:
We need assistance to Room 607 at the Hard Rock. It's in reference to a
white female. She's not breathing and not responsive...actually, it's Anna
Nicole Smith.
After Smith's death, various legal battles began regarding her will, the
paternity of her daughter and her final resting place, which resulted in the
delay of her burial. Smith was buried March 2, 2007 at Nassau's Lakeview
Memorial Gardens and Mausoleum in a plot adjacent to her son, Daniel.
Daniel's father reportedly wants his son exhumed and reburied in his home
state of Texas.
After a seven-week investigation led by Broward County Medical Examiner and
Forensic Pathologist Dr. Joshua Perper in combination with the Seminole
police and several independent forensic pathologists and toxicologists, Dr.
Perper announced that Smith died of "combined drug intoxication " with the
sleeping medication chloral hydrate as the "major component." No illegal
drugs were found in her system. The official report states that her death
was not considered to be due to homicide, suicide, or natural causes. The
full investigative report has been made public and can be found online.
Additionally, an official copy of the autopsy report was publicly released
on March 26, 2007 and can be found online.
Ultimately her death was ruled an accidental drug overdose of the sedative
chloral hydrate that became increasingly lethal when combined with other
prescription drugs in her system, specifically 4 benzodiazepines: Klonopin (Clonazepam),
Ativan (Lorazepam), Serax (Oxazepam), and Valium (Diazepam). Furthermore,
she had taken Benadryl (Diphenhydramine) and Topamax (Toprimate), an
anticonvulsant GABA agonist, which likely contributed to the sedative effect
of chloral hydrate and the benzodiazepines. Although the individual levels
of any of the benzodiazepines in her system would not have been sufficient
to cause death, their combination with a high dose of chloral hydrate led to
her overdose. The autopsy report indicates that chloral hydrate was the
"toxic/lethal" drug, but it is difficult to know if chloral hydrate
ingestion would have killed her alone, since Dr. Perper indicated (in the
March 26 press conference) that she had built up a tolerance to the drug and
took more than the average person. He indicated that she took about 3
tablespoons, whereas the normal dosage is between 1 and 2 teaspoons. Despite
rumors of methadone use due to its involvement in her son's death, Dr.
Perper only found methadone in her bile, indicating that it could only have
been ingested 2-3 days prior to her death and was not a contributing factor.
The autopsy report indicates that abscesses of buttocks (presumably from
prior injections of vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) and human growth hormone),
and viral enteritis were contributory causes of death. Tests for influenza A
and B were negative.
It was reported that 8 of the 11 drugs in Anna Nicole Smith's system,
including the chloral hydrate, were prescribed to Howard K. Stern, not Anna
Nicole. Additionally, two of the medicines were written for Alex Katz and
one was written for Anna Nicole's friend and psychiatrist, Dr. Khristine
Eroshevitz. Dr. Perper acknowledged that all 11 prescriptions were written
by Dr. Eroshevitz herself.
Anna Nicole's will, drawn up in April 2001, named her son Daniel as the sole
beneficiary of her estate, specifically excluded other children, and named
Howard K. Stern as the executor. It indicated personal property valued at
$10,000 and real property valued at $1.8 million (with a $1.1 million
mortgage) at the time of death. A petition to probate Smith's will was filed
in Los Angeles County Superior Court. The petition to probate lists Larry
Birkhead as a party with interest to Anna's estate.
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