Martha Hart

From MedBib.com - Medicine & Nature

Martha Joan Hart née Patterson (born on October 31st, 1966)[citation needed] is the widow of professional wrestler Owen Hart.[1]

Contents

Personal life

Hart was born Martha Patterson in 1966, and is the youngest of 11 children. Her mother, Joan, had battled breast cancer before Hart and her sister Virgina were born; her father left her mother when Martha was young. According to her book, she has bachelor's and master's degrees in psychology, and was pursuing a second degree in Sociology. She met her husband, Owen Hart, in 1982, while they were both still in high school. She attended a Stampede Wrestling event with a friend, and met Owen after recognizing him as one of the wrestlers who attended her school for a wrestling practice. She later stated that it was love at first sight and their relationship was a dream come true. They married on July 1, 1989, and had two children together: Oje Edward Hart (born March 5, 1992) and Athena Christie/Christy Hart (born September 23, 1995). Owen died while performing a stunt on May 23, 1999 at the World Wrestling Federation (WWF)'s Over the Edge pay-per-view.

Lawsuits

Three weeks after Owen's death, Hart and the Hart family launched a wrongful death lawsuit against the WWF, which was settled out of court for approximately $18 million on November 2, 2000.[2] She used the funds to establish the Owen Hart Foundation.[3] She has managed the foundation since 1999.[1] Some of the money also went into trust funds for her children, until they were 21.[4] After the lawsuit, Martha separated herself from the majority of the Hart family.[4] She cites Bret, Keith, Alison, Stu, and Helen Hart as the only Hart family members who sided with her during the battle.[4] She criticised those family members who continued to work for the WWF.[4] There is real-life tension between Martha and her sister-in-law Diana Hart-Smith.[1] Martha sued Diana for $19 million and claims that Diana's book, Under the Mat: Inside Wrestling's Greatest Family, is both slanderous and libelous, and had it removed from markets, and everywhere books are sold.[1]

Book

In 2002, she started writing a book entitled Broken Harts: The Life and Death of Owen Hart that was released in 2004, which is about their life together from when they met in High School, and the life they created for their two children.

Owen Hart Foundation

In December 2000,[citation needed] she announced the opening of the Owen Hart Foundation; a Charity to help get college scholarships for children who have special needs. For the first three charity events it was for the YouVille Women's Residence for abused women. Every May, Martha hosts a Charity Foundation with a guest star; in recent years, guest stars have included, Bob Newhart, Neil Sedaka, Paul Anka, Bill Cosby, Howie Mandel, and Jerry Seinfeld. Martha has stated that she started the Owen Hart Foundation because she knew Owen would be happy that he was helping people in his name, especially in the education field.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Greg Oliver (November 20, 2001). "Martha Hart sues Diana over book". SLAM! Wrestling. http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingHarts/nov20_lawsuit-can.html. Retrieved 2007-06-18. 
  2. ^ AP-Reuters (November 9, 2000). "Legal victory bittersweet: Martha Hart". Slam! Wrestling. http://slam.canoe.ca/OwenHart/nov9_hart-ap.html. Retrieved 2007-04-07. 
  3. ^ Chris Gerritsen. "Martha Hart forges ahead with Owen Hart Foundation". http://slam.canoe.ca/OwenHart/mar14_martha-sun.html. Retrieved 2007-04-07. 
  4. ^ a b c d Eric Francis (November 8, 2000). "Hart family feud: With WWF suit settled, dead wrestler's widow lashes out at in-laws". Calgary Sun. http://slam.canoe.ca/OwenHart/nov8_hart-sun.html. Retrieved 2007-06-18. 

References

Books

Articles

Radio

External links

Professional wrestling
portal

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