She married a billionaire 63 years her senior, fought for his fortune for 20 years, and died without a penny—but her story isn’t what you think.
This photograph shows Anna Nicole Smith, 26, with her new husband J. Howard Marshall II, 89, shortly after their wedding on June 27, 1994. The image shocked America. The tabloids went wild. Everyone had an opinion.
“Gold digger.” “Trophy wife.” “He bought her.” The judgment was swift and merciless.
But what if the truth was more complicated than a headline?
Anna Nicole Smith wasn’t born into privilege. Born Vickie Lynn Hogan in a small Texas town, she grew up in poverty, married at 17, had a son at 18, worked at Walmart, then at a fried chicken restaurant. When that wasn’t enough to support her baby, she became a dancer at a strip club in Houston.
That’s where she met J. Howard Marshall II in 1991. He was a regular customer. She was 23; he was 86. He was an oil tycoon worth over a billion dollars. She was struggling to survive.
What developed between them wasn’t simple. By all accounts—from people who knew them both—Marshall genuinely loved Anna. He showered her with gifts, yes, but also with attention, affection, and devotion. He proposed multiple times before she finally said yes in 1994.
“She made me feel young again,” he told reporters. Friends said they’d never seen him happier.
Anna insisted she loved him too. “I loved him for who he was as a person,” she said. Whether you believe that depends on your own cynicism or optimism about human nature.
Thirteen months after their wedding, J. Howard Marshall II died at age 90.
Then the real story began.
Marshall’s will left virtually everything to his son, E. Pierce Marshall. Anna claimed Marshall had promised her half his estate—approximately $800 million. She said there had been a trust set up for her that his son conspired to hide.
Pierce insisted his father never intended to leave Anna anything substantial, that she’d already received millions in gifts during the marriage and knew what to expect.
What followed was one of the most Byzantine legal battles in American history. The case bounced between Texas state courts, California federal courts, and bankruptcy courts. It involved allegations of forgery, fraud, and tortious interference. Legal scholars wrote papers about it. Law students studied it.
In 2006, the case reached the United States Supreme Court. In a stunning 9-0 decision, the Court ruled in Anna Nicole’s favor on a procedural issue, sending the case back to lower courts.
She finally won something. After 11 years of fighting, maybe she’d see justice.
On February 8, 2007, Anna Nicole Smith died of an accidental drug overdose at age 39. She was found in a Florida hotel room. Just five months earlier, her 20-year-old son Daniel had died under similar circumstances. She never recovered from that loss.
Anna died without ever receiving a penny from the Marshall estate.
But the legal battle didn’t die with her. Her estate—fighting on behalf of her infant daughter Dannielynn—continued the case for another seven years. E. Pierce Marshall died in 2006, so his estate was fighting her estate. Both principals were gone, but the lawyers kept going.
In 2014—twenty years after the marriage that started it all—the legal saga finally ended. The final ruling: Anna Nicole Smith’s estate would receive nothing. Zero. After two Supreme Court cases, countless appeals, and legal fees in the millions, her daughter inherited none of the Marshall fortune.
The easy narrative is that Anna was a gold digger who got what she deserved. The opposite narrative is that she was a young woman exploited by everyone around her—by Marshall, by his family, by the media, by the system.
The truth, as always, is probably somewhere in between.
What we know for certain: Anna Nicole Smith grew up poor, sought a way out, found fame and attention but never stability. She lost her son, lost her legal battle, lost her life at 39. She became a punchline, a cautionary tale, a symbol of American excess and exploitation.
J. Howard Marshall got companionship in his final years, whether genuine or purchased. His son protected the family fortune. The lawyers got rich. The tabloids got content.
And a little girl named Dannielynn, who never knew her mother, inherited nothing but a complicated legacy.
This photograph shows two people whose lives intersected in ways that fascinated and disgusted America in equal measure. Whatever their motivations, whatever the truth of their relationship, both of them are gone now—and the fortune remains with the Marshall family, untouched by the woman who fought for it until her death.
Sometimes nobody wins. Sometimes the lawyers win. Sometimes the truth is just sad.