December 20, 2016

LOS ANGELES -- Zsa Zsa Gabor, the jet-setting Hungarian actress who made a career out of multiple marriages, conspicuous wealth and jaded wisdom about the glamorous life, has died. She was 99. The middle and most famous of the sisters Gabor died Sunday of a heart attack at her Los Angeles home, husband Frederic von Anhalt said...

By Hillel Italie ~ Associated Press
FILE - In a July 14, 1955 file photo, Zsa Zsa Gabor arrives at London Airport from Paris, in a Crimson dress and a straw hat. Gabor died Sunday, Dec. 18, 2016, of a heart attack at her Bel-Air home, her husband, Prince Frederic von Anhalt, said. She was 99. (AP Photo)
FILE - In a July 14, 1955 file photo, Zsa Zsa Gabor arrives at London Airport from Paris, in a Crimson dress and a straw hat. Gabor died Sunday, Dec. 18, 2016, of a heart attack at her Bel-Air home, her husband, Prince Frederic von Anhalt, said. She was 99. (AP Photo)

LOS ANGELES -- Zsa Zsa Gabor, the jet-setting Hungarian actress who made a career out of multiple marriages, conspicuous wealth and jaded wisdom about the glamorous life, has died. She was 99.

The middle and most famous of the sisters Gabor died Sunday of a heart attack at her Los Angeles home, husband Frederic von Anhalt said.

"We tried everything, but her heart just stopped, and that was it," he said. "Even the ambulance tried very hard to get her back, but there was no way."

Gabor had been hospitalized repeatedly since she broke her right hip in July 2010 after a fall at her Bel-Air home.

She had to use a wheelchair after being partly paralyzed in a 2002 car accident and suffering a stroke in 2005.

Zsa Zsa Gabor gestures as she leaves the Beverly Hills courtroom where judge Charles Rubin ruled she violated her probation May 1, 1990. At right is her husband, Frederick von Anhalt.
Zsa Zsa Gabor gestures as she leaves the Beverly Hills courtroom where judge Charles Rubin ruled she violated her probation May 1, 1990. At right is her husband, Frederick von Anhalt.Kevork Djansezian ~ Associated Press

Most of her right leg was amputated in January 2011 because of gangrene, and the left leg also was threatened.

Von Anhalt duly reported her misfortunes to the media.

The great aunt of Paris Hilton and a spiritual matriarch to the Kardashians and other tabloid favorites, she was the original hall-of-mirrors celebrity, famous for being famous for being famous.

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Starting in the 1940s, Gabor rose from beauty queen to millionaire's wife to minor television personality to minor film actress to major public character.

With no special talent, no hit TV series such as her sister Eva's "Green Acres," Zsa Zsa still was a long-running hit just being Zsa Zsa -- her accent drenched in diamonds, her name synonymous with frivolity and camp as she winked and carried on about men, dahling, and the droll burdens of the idle rich.

She was like popcorn for the public and, for sociologists, the seeming fulfillment of the mindless future imagined in Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World," a creation made possible by mass, electronic media; her words and image transcribed and beamed into theaters and living rooms, on the internet and the shelves of newsstands and supermarket checkout lines.

Her secret, in part, was being in on the joke, once saying about a 1956 TV role, "I play a fabulously rich woman who has just bought her fifth husband; she is very unhappy. I won't tell you who it's supposed to be."

Ever game for a laugh, Gabor spoofed her image in a videotaped segment on David Letterman's "Late Show," which had the two stars driving from one fast-food restaurant to another, sipping sodas and digging into burgers as if they were slabs of wedding cake.

She was in the spotlight for a dustup from the late 20th century: "The slap heard 'round the world."

In June 1989, Gabor smacked police officer Paul Kramer on a Beverly Hills street after he pulled over her Rolls-Royce Corniche convertible for a traffic violation.

She was convicted of misdemeanor battery on a police officer, driving without a driver's license and having an open container of alcohol in the car.

She served three days in jail, performed community service at a woman's shelter and paid $13,000 in fines and restitution.

When she was freed, she said the jailers were kind, but "at first I was petrified. They even took my makeup away."

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