Larry Flynt dead at 78: Controversial publisher who founded Hustler has died of heart failure
BREAKING NEWS: Larry Flynt dead at 78: Controversial publisher who founded Hustler and launched a porn empire has died in LA of heart failure
- Flynt died on Wednesday morning in Los Angeles, TMZ said
- He was best known for his pornography publishing empire and Hustler
- Flynt became a First Amendment crusader and fought multiple legal battles
- In February 1988 he won a landmark Supreme Court case on freedom of speech
- Flynt has published a spoof Campari ad mocking televangelist Jerry Falwell
- Falwell sued but the Supreme Court ruled that satire and parody was protected
- He ran for president in 1984 as a Republican but said he was a libertarian
- In October 2017 he offered a $10m reward for evidence to impeachment Trump
- Flynt was married five times, and married his current wife Elizabeth in 1998
Larry Flynt, the porn publisher behind Hustler magazine, has died at the age of 78.
He died on Wednesday morning of heart failure, TMZ said.
His brother Jimmy Flynt confirmed the death but did not cite a specific cause.
Flynt, born in Kentucky, had been in a wheelchair since 1978, when white supremacist serial killer Joseph Paul Franklin attempted to kill him as he left court in Georgia.
Franklin shot him and left him paralyzed, in retaliation for Hustler publishing images of interracial sex.
A self-described ‘smut-peddler’ who transformed his Mid West strip clubs into the multi-million dollar Hustler empire, Flynt was passionate about personal freedoms.
His life was made into a 1996 film, The People vs Larry Flynt, starring Woody Harrelson, Edward Norton and Courtney Love, which chronicled his rise to fame and his clashes with religious institutions and the law.
Larry Flynt, pictured in March 2009, died on Wednesday morning of heart failure
Flynt is seen in November 2004, celebrating his 62nd birthday at The Hustler Club in Paris
Flynt and his fifth wife, Elizabeth Berrios, are pictured at the Oxford Union in February 2014
Flynt was married five times, and had five children – his daughter Lisa Flynt-Fugate died in a car crash in Ohio in October 2014, at the age of 47.
He married Elizabeth Berrios, his former nurse, in 1998.
In 2013 he told The Hollywood Reporter he was estranged from four of his five children, because he claimed they just wanted his money and were not prepared to show an interest in running his business.
It was unclear if they had reconciled at the time of his death.
Flynt told the magazine that he maintains a special place in his heart for his fourth wife Althea, who was bisexual and died of AIDS in 1987.
‘Althea was the love of my life,’ said Flynt.
The pair met when the 17-year-old runaway started dancing in one of his clubs.
They married in 1976 and remained married until her death in 1987.
In the 1996 film, Althea was played by Courtney Love.
Flynt is pictured at home in Los Angeles in March 1979
Flynt was born into poverty in Magoffin County, Kentucky – the oldest of three children born to a sharecropper and a housewife.
At 15 he joined the army, having forged his birth certificate.
He was honorably discharged, and became for a brief time a bootlegger before enlisting in the navy in July 1960.
Discharged at the age of 22, Flynt took $1,800 from his savings and bought his mother’s bar in Dayton, Ohio. With the profits he launched several more, and then the Hustler Club, featuring nude hostess dancers.
When recession pushed his string of Ohio-based strip clubs toward bankruptcy in 1974, Flynt turned what had been a black-and-white newsletter into the most sexually explicit magazine in the United States.
The publication’s August 1975 issue of nude photos of Jackie Kennedy Onassis brought attention and dramatically increased sales for Hustler.
In the late ’80s, televangelist Jerry Falwell sued Flynt for libel and the emotional distress caused by a Hustler cartoon that implied Falwell’s first sexual encounter was with his mother. He won in a lower court.
But on February 24, 1988, the Supreme Court deemed that if a public figure could receive damages for distress, any kind of satire or parody would be impossible.
The case, Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, is now taught in law schools.