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On May 27, 1994, Limbaugh married Marta Fitzgerald, a 35-year-old aerobics instructor whom he met on the online service CompuServe in 1990. [236] They married at the house of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, who officiated. [238] The couple separated on June 11, 2004. [47] Limbaugh announced his divorce on the air.
In 1967, she divorced her husband and married Clinton Grover Smith. [1] In her later years, Fitzgerald criticized biographers' depictions of her parents' marriage. [3] In the wake of Nancy Milford's biography of her mother, [26] partisan scholars of Zelda frequently depicted Scott Fitzgerald as a domineering husband who drove his wife insane. [3]
From 1968 to 1976, Marta was married to fellow TV actor Brick Huston, who died in 2018. [6] In 1983, People magazine reported that Marta and actor David Soul had an "open relationship". [7] The article explained, "All through the Starsky and Hutch years David and Lynne lived together but spent time with other people." Soul died seven days ...
Richard M. Cohen, a journalist and longtime husband of Meredith Vieira, has died after living with multiple sclerosis for more than 50 years and surviving two bouts of colon cancer. He was 76.
Jean Rather, an artist and wife of the longtime CBS news anchor Dan Rather, has died. She was 89. The news was announced by her family in a statement posted on social media. “Today is the ...
The wife of a Texas news anchor who died suddenly is thanking those who have shown their support after her husband’s death. Kris Radcliffe “died unexpectedly” at the age of 51 on Wednesday ...
Zelda Sayre was born in Montgomery, Alabama, on July 24, 1900, the youngest of six children. [1] Her parents were Episcopalians. [29] Her mother, Minerva Buckner "Minnie" Machen, named her daughter after the Roma heroine in a novel, presumably Jane Howard's "Zelda: A Tale of the Massachusetts Colony" (1866) or Robert Edward Francillon's "Zelda's Fortune" (1874). [30]
Martha Elizabeth Thomas "Mattie" Fitzgerald [1] [2] (August 5, 1894 – January 23, 1981) [1] was an educator and politician from South Carolina. She was the first woman elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives in a general election.