15 Celebrities Who Made Fortunes and Went Bankrupt
Money
is a funny thing. One minute, you've got a pocket full of the stuff;
the next, you can barely gather enough for a pre-made sandwich from the
bus station's vending machine.
READ: The Highest-Paid Personalities on TV
Then again, maybe that problem is specific to us — although it sure
doesn't seem like it. We've heard enough frightening financial anecdotes
to know that celebrities are susceptible to the very same money woes.
Except when
they go broke, they go broke in a much bigger way.
We can learn a lot from the following 15 celebrities and their tales
of financial woe. At the very least, the probably know where the
cheapest bus station sandwiches can be found.
Reuters
Reuters
Burt Reynolds
In 1996,
Burt Reynolds filed for Chapter 11 after a failed restaurant venture and a costly divorce from Loni Anderson put him in debt.
Reuters
Reuters
Larry King
In the early- to mid-1970s, newspaper editor and radio personality
Larry King
had amassed $352,000 in debt after publicly being accused of grand
larceny by a former business partner. He filed for bankruptcy in 1978,
which, coincidentally, was the very same year he was offered his
eponymous show.
Reuters
Mark Twain
Samuel Clemens
(aka Mark Twain) made a nice chunk of change as a writer. But after a
few bad investments — most notably, the Paige typesetting machine —
Clemens was deep in debt. With the help of a friend, he assigned his
copyrights to his wife and rid himself of his publishing house before
declaring personal bankruptcy in 1894.
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Reuters
Wayne Newton
In the 1983 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records,
Wayne Newton
was listed the highest paid entertainer in the world. Within a decade,
Newton had amassed $20 million in debt following a slew of bad
investments and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1992.
Reuters
Dionne Warwick
In mid-2013,
Dionne Warwick
filed for bankruptcy after accruing more than $10 million in unpaid
taxes. "Due to several consecutive years (the late '80s through the
mid-'90s) of negligent and gross financial mismanagement, Dionne Warwick
has realized the current necessity to file personal bankruptcy," her
publicist wrote in a statement.
READ: Billy Ray Cyrus Duets With Dionne Warwick
Reuters
Meat Loaf
Marvin Lee Aday, better known as
Meat Loaf, declared bankruptcy in the mid-1980s, around the same time that a former songwriting partner brought a lawsuit against him.
Reuters
Janice Dickinson
In 2013, former model Janice
Dickinson was reportedly over a million dollars in debt — half of which
was owed to the government. She confirmed to
RadarOnline
that she has filed for bankruptcy in April, saying, "I had some
trouble, so yes, it is true … I am upset and taking every step to pay
everyone back and I feel terrible about it."
READ: The World's Highest Paid Supermodels Earned HOW Much?!?
Reuters
Warren Sapp
Former NFL player
Warren Sapp
filed for bankruptcy in 2012. According to his court documents, he owed
more than $6.7 million to creditors, but only had $6.45 million in
assets (including $6,500 in Air Jordans and a $1,200 lion-skin rug).
Reuters
Ulysses S. Grant
After leaving office, President
Ulysses S. Grant
settled down in New York and invested his money into a Wall Street firm
(which happened to count his son Buck as one of its owners). The firm's
other partner, however, wasn't as trustworthy and embezzled much of its
investors' money, leading it to declare bankruptcy. Grant did the same
soon after.
READ: Presidents and Their Favorite TV Shows
Reuters
Toni Braxton
Toni Braxton
has filed for bankruptcy twice: once in 2010 and again in 2013 (the
singer claimed to owe around $50 million during her first bankruptcy).
Just six months after her latest filing, however, Braxton purchased a $3
million home in a gated community in Calabasas, California.
Reuters
Reuters
Mickey Rooney
At its peak,
Mickey Rooney
once estimated his personal fortune at about $12 million. His
popularity eventually began to dwindle, however, and by 1962, he listed
the value of his assets at
only $500 when he filed for bankruptcy.
Reuters
Sinbad
Sinbad
first filed for bankruptcy in 2009, then again in 2013. The second time
around, he owed around $11 million ($8 million in back taxes), but
claims he didn't live outside of his means. "I didn't buy Bentleys. I
didn't live large. I invested in me. I invested in a lot of other
people. I would not change it; I would not go back," he told Oprah in a
2013 interview.