In an excerpt from her upcoming memoir, Anne Heche wrote about what it was like for her to date Ellen DeGeneres.
03.09.2022 - 11:47 / ok.co.uk
Anne Heche was reportedly trapped inside her burning car for at least 40 minutes before being rescued by firefighters after she had crashed into a house last month. The late Hollywood actress, 53, was left in a coma after the collision in the Mar Vista neighbourhood of Los Angeles on 5 August, which left her Mini Cooper "engulfed in flames", a representative confirmed at the time.
The Emmy Award-winner's life support was switched off on 14 August after she had been pronounced brain dead, with a coroner finding that she had died due to inhalation of smoke and burn injuries. Now it has been reported that first responders couldn't get to Anne, who dated chat show host Ellen DeGeneres between 1997 and 2000, to begin treating her for around 45 minutes after the crash.
Citing records and radio communications recordings obtained from the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD), NBC News reported that firefighters couldn't reach Anne's car for at least 20 minutes after arriving at the scene. It then took at least another 20 minutes to pull it out of the burning building with a tow truck and rescue Anne, who was taken to hospital in a critical condition.The LAFD had previously confirmed to the PA news agency that the vehicle had travelled 30ft into the home.
LAFD Deputy Chief Richard Fields told NBC: "Given the heavy fire and smoke conditions, it wasn't that you could clearly see into the vehicle or clearly be able to access it. "Heavy smoke conditions, heavy fire conditions makes it very difficult for us to just see each other on the inside of a working structure fire." It was reported that the person who lived at the property, who escaped without injury, was treated by medics at the scene in the meantime.The deputy chief said Anne
.In an excerpt from her upcoming memoir, Anne Heche wrote about what it was like for her to date Ellen DeGeneres.
Anne Heche died, the 53-year-old actress was ready to tell the world the whole story of the Hollywood hate she endured during her relationship with Ellen DeGeneres in the late 1990s. Heche, who passed away in Los Angeles on Aug. 11 following a tragic car crash, detailed the discriminatory backlash she faced as half of Tinseltown’s first publicly gay couple in her forthcoming memoir “Call Me Anne,” the Associated Press reported. In the book, to be released in January by independent publisher Start, Heche grapples with the uncertainty of how to label her sexuality at the time, when she felt she didn’t identify as a lesbian or a straight woman. “I was labeled ‘outrageous’ because I fell in love with a woman.
This sounds verrry complicated!
A new wrinkle. Anne Heche‘s ex-boyfriend James Tupper claimed that the late actress left him her estate after she died without a will.
Anne Heche‘s family is at odds over the execution of her estate after the actress died without a will. In a new legal filing obtained by ET, James Tupper — Anne’s ex and the father of her 13-year-old son, Atlas Heche Tupper — objects to a request from Anne’s eldest son, 20-year-old Homer Heche Laffoon — whom Anne shared with her ex-husband Coley Laffoon — to be placed in charge of her estate.
Anne Heche's family is at odds over the execution of her estate after the actress died without a will. In a new legal filing obtained by ET, James Tupper — Anne's ex and the father of her 13-year-old son, Atlas Heche Tupper — objects to a request from Anne's eldest son, 20-year-old Homer Heche Laffoon — whom Anne shared with her ex-husband Coley Laffoon -- to be placed in charge of her estate. James asks the court instead to appoint a neutral third party private professional fiduciary or, alternately, himself as executor of her estate. In the new docs, filed Thursday in Los Angeles, James claims that Anne made her intentions clear in a personal email on Jan.
Anne Heche was planning on opening up about her relationship with Elle DeGeneres in the late 1990s.
The AP, Heche worked on the memoir over the past year, detailing honest reflections on her late 1990s relationship with comedian Ellen DeGeneres. “Call Me Anne” is also a sequel to the actress’s 2001 work, “Call Me Crazy.”The forthcoming book, scheduled for publication by Start Publishing, will arrive less than a year after Heche’s death on Aug. 14 after she was involved in a Los Angeles car crash at the age of 53.“I was labeled ‘outrageous’ because I fell in love with a woman,” Heche wrote.
Anne Heche was trapped in a blazing home for 45 minutes after the car crash that left her in a coma. Records emerged on Friday (02. 09.
New information on the case of Anne Heche‘s tragic death has been revealed.
Anne Heche inside her scorched Mini Cooper until 24 minutes after they arrived at the scene, and it took at least another 20 minutes before firefighters could extract her from the vehicle.The harrowing details have come to light after NBC4 Los Angeles obtained the Los Angeles Fire Department's records and time-stamped recordings of radio communications, which also showed there was initial confusion as to whether there was more than one patient after Heche plowed her car into the 738-square-foot, two-story home in the Mar Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles.According to the news station, «heavy fire and smoke conditions» made it impossible to determine whether someone was trapped inside the vehicle. What's more, fire officials say determining whether someone was trapped in the vehicle made it more difficult by the fact that Heche was not even in the driver's seat.The recordings show that firefighters arrived at the scene at 11:01 a.m., and dispatchers had informed firefighters, within seconds upon arrival, that a person was trapped in the car. Once inside the home, firefighters treated a woman in the home, who turned out to be the tenant, and not Heche.
Anne Heche’s 20-year-old son Homer Laffoon just lost his mother, but he has had to step up to the plate and deal with legal matters. It was revealed Thursday his mother died without a will. Heche died tragically in Los Angeles on August 1 after crashing into a home.
Anne Heche died in August and reportedly had not established a final will and testament before she passed away, as her eldest son, Homer Laffoon, seeks to establish guardianship over his mother's estate. Laffoon, 20, filed the paperwork in Los Angeles Superior Court Wednesday, according to Page Six, and is requesting to be named the administrator of her estate, which has an "unknown" value and will need to undergo forensic accounting to establish its worth. In addition, Homer, whom Heche shared with ex-husband Coley Laffoon, requested to be appointed "guardian ad litem" over his 13-year-old brother, Atlas Tupper, from Heche's decade-long partnership with James Tupper, and "waive a bond that would be owed." The next hearing is scheduled for Oct.
In the weeks following Anne Heche’s tragic August 12 death, her family has been left with an enormous hole in their hearts. Now, they are working to make sure her estate gets properly handled.
Anne Heche’s oldest son has found the perfect place for his mother to live on for eternity.
Trace Adkins "enjoyed every minute" of his time working with the late Anne Heche. Adkins spoke about having the opportunity to work alongside Heche for the film "13 Minutes." According to her IMDb, it was one of Heche's final projects released before her death. "My time with Anne was way too short," Adkins told Fox News Digital.
Anne Heche’s car crashed through a wall and stopped around 10 feet inside a Los Angeles home, a distressing 911 call has revealed. A neighbour gave authorities details of the actress’ accident in an appeal for help to police obtained by CNN. The outlet says the caller told a dispatcher a car had just gone through their neighbour's house, travelling at such a speed it ended up in the second room.
Anne Heche’s official cause of death was revealed.
Anne Heche crashed her blue Mini Cooper into a home a little before 11 a.m. PT on Friday, Aug.