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Reports: Zsa Zsa Gabor Dead At 99

Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor attends the taping of 'The Phil Donaue Show' on January 13, 1994 at Rockefeller Center in New York City. (Photo by Ron Galella, Ltd./WireImage)

Zsa Zsa Gabor, the 99-year-old former beauty queen and actress, died Sunday in Los Angeles, according to multiple reports from outlets including TMZ, Variety and CBS in Los Angeles.

She was ahead of her time. In the Hollywood Golden Age, Gabor, or simply Zsa Zsa to most, was perhaps the first celebutante.

If there had been no Zsa Zsa, there probably would be no Paris Hilton.

Gabor had been in ill health since being hospitalized after a fall in July 2010. She had hip replacement surgery afterward but returned to the hospital several times for treatment of swelling and clots. Most of her right leg had been amputated because of gangrene.

Although after her television careerGabor had become a punchline or a caricature, known for her run-in with a Beverly Hills cop or for her many marriages, it wasn’t always that way. Gabor was of a time when “socialite” was not yet a term of derision.

Despite a spotty film career, she became a staple on TV. She often appeared as herself and spoofed her active social life with a quip and a “darlink” that became her signature term of endearment.

She was born Sari Gabor in Budapest, Hungary in 1917, the middle of three sisters. Magda and Eva also were actresses and socialites; Eva starred on TV’s Green Acres. Eva Gabor died in 1995 and Magda in 1997.

Zsa Zsa competed in the 1936 Miss Hungary pageant but, her mother’s biography she said, was disqualified for being underage.

She made her film debut in the musical Lovely to Look At (1952) opposite Red Skelton, Kathryn Grayson and Howard Keel. Fittingly for someone who became famous just for being herself, Gabor’s character’s name was Zsa Zsa.

That same year, she also had a part in We’re Not Married! with Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire and starred in Moulin Rouge with José Ferrer. Garbor later appeared opposite onetime husband George Sanders in Death of a Scoundel (1956) and had a small role in Orson Welles’ Touch of Evil (1958). Memorably, she played Talleah. in the B-movie Queen of Outer Space (1958).

Beginning in the 1950s through the 1980s, Gabor was a frequent guest on television, in series as diverse as Playhouse 90 and the Colgate Comedy Hour to F Troop and Batman, as well as countless appearances on variety and talk shows.

She was glamorous, quick-witted and not afraid to make fun of herself or her nine marriages (including to Conrad Hilton, Paris Hilton’s great-grandfather),. seven divorces and one annulment. Sample joke: “A man in love is incomplete until he has married — then he’s finished.” Or, touting her housekeeping abilities, she noted that despite her divorces, she manages to keep the house.

Gabor made headlines and jump-started her career in 1989 after an altercation with a police officer. She slapped the officer after being stopped for a driving violation and was arrested on charges of assault.

She was fined and sentenced to three days in jail after failing to complete the terms of her probation. A civil suit was settled out of court in 1991. The incident resulted in an unauthorized documentary, The People Vs. Zsa Zsa Gabor (1991). That same year, she memorably spoofed the incident in The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear.

In later years, Gabor appeared as herself in such movies as The Beverly Hillbillies (1993) and A Very Brady Sequel (1996).

But legal troubles kept her name in the headlines. In June 2005, she and her husband, Prince Frederic von Anhalt, sued Gabor’s only child, Francesca Hilton, accusing her of larceny and fraud.

Despite a tepid movie career, a tumultuous personal life and sometimes public legal wrangling, Gabor remained a celebrity for decades, a singular personality known by one name. That was Zsa Zsa, dahlink.

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