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asearchi Tags g Fallen B Armsabbateggio Dsearchtsearchn Tags % Dating W2ie 9C Fallenslut %22 Tags Csearch%Dsearche White d Tags r (1991); and most notably, in a featured role in
1990's Invisible Maniac, in which she plays Vicky, a cheerleader murdered by a crazed
high-school physics teacher while showering in a girls locker room. Ironically, considering her
sexy image, one of her costars in Legal Tender was ultraconservative talkshow host Morton Downey
Jr., with whom she cavorts topless in a bubble-bath scene.
Widely reported to love partying and nightclubbing, the actress allegedly had affairs with celebrities like keyboardist-singer Gregg Allman, guitarist Slash of Guns N' Roses, former Motley Crue singer Vince Neil, British post punk rocker Billy Idol, and actorcomedian Pauly Shore. (She also reportedly angered Guns N' Roses leader Axl Rose by commenting unfavorably on his sexual skills to a British tabloid; Rose has said they may never have met.) Most recently she had reportedly been dating Danny Boy, member of the IrishAmerican rap group House of Pain, in whose video of "On Point" she appears as a ringside spectator at a boxing match. (Through representatives, all but Idol and Danny Boy declined to discuss their alleged experiences with the actress. As of this writing, Danny Boy was in Europe on tour with House of Pain and unavailable for comment, and Idol was incapacitated, having just been admitted, according to televised reports, to St. Joseph's Hospital in Burbank, Califomia-the same facility where Shannon Wilsey died on July 11-for emergency treatment of a suspected drug overdose.)
In her public role as the sex siren Savannah, Shannon Wilsey created a character that put her on top of the erotic entertainment industry and gave her the visibility to win entrance to the tightly guarded circles of mainstream American celebrity. Following her death, however, most of her reputed former lovers appeared reluctant to discuss-or even acknowledge-any connection with the actress. Only one-Pauly Shore-remained a friend. (A very dear friend, apparently; Shore was reportedly at Shannon's bedside when she died.) As events were to show, being Savannah brought Shannon no more than fleeting fame, and later, rejection, self-hatred, and desolation. What, then, went so wrong in such a young life? Perhaps part of the answer may be found in the past.
Mike and Pamela Wilsey married as teenagers, and Shannon, their only child together, was born October 9, 1970, in Laguna Beach, California, a suburban seaside community south of Los Angeles between Newport Beach and San Clemente. Her parents say Shannon was a precocious child who showed early talents for dancing and drawing: "When she was two years old, or less than two," says Mike Wilsey, 43, a self-employed plumber in Ventura, California, "her mom and I, we'd get our stereo, [and] we'd play music. She'd just start dancing, you know, doing this cute little Indian dance. We'd just play [our] song over and over just to watch her dance." Pam, 41, who says art was her daughter's favorite school subject, remembers finding a sketch that Shannon did when she was three and remarking how skillful it was for a child that young. "She was extremely smart," Pam says with quiet pride.
The Wilseys divorced acrimoniously when Shannon was only two, and she didn't see her father again for more than 10 years. "Me and her onginal mother had a lot of serious problems," Wilsey admits, explaining that for years he erroneously believed that Shannon was not his child. "I had a lot of remorse because I used that-being angry with her mother-and she suffered the consequences of my own selfishness. A man should love a child no matter what. I did, but reservedly," Wilsey sighs.
Although her second husband, Joe Longoria, accepted Shannon, raising her as his own, Pam believes the prolonged absence of her natural father hurt Shannon terribly. "I think that was confusing for her as she got older, knowing that there was someone out there that was her real, biological father, that didn't have anything to do with her," she recalls. "I'm sure that hurt her a lot."
Mike Wilsey regretfully agrees. "I wasn't here for her during most of her young years. I left her alone, and I think she grew up with a hole in her heart."
Despite the pain of her parents' split, Pamela Longoria says that Shannon grew up a happy girl who earned straight A's in school and loved to mother Joe Longoria's four children along with the additional three siblings Pam and Joe had together. "She loved to grow flowers. She loved playing dolls and dressing up, and [to] play house and play school. She always wanted to be the teacher. She always said that when she was grown up that she was gonna be an airline stewardess," Pamela Longoria remembers. Although the Longorias struggled to raise their eight children on Joe's salary as a grocery clerk, Pamela insists that Shannon's childhood was satisfactory, despite published reports to the contrary in the wake of her suicide.
"Everything I'm reading so far is just destroying me because there's so [many] lies being printed about her," Pamela said last summer. "In The Los Angeles Times, it [said] she had an unhappy childhood and that she was molested as a child, which is not true. I always told her I loved her no matter what she was doing for a living. We never shunned her or nothing because of what she was, I mean, what her occupation was. I mean, we loved her unconditionally. And she knew it."
By 1987, Shannon had developed into a self-willed young woman of striking beauty, with piercing blue eyes and a worldly, confident manner that belied her youth. By this time she had reestablished a relationship, albeit a difficult one, with the father from whom she had been separated for so long, moving from Texas to live with him and his second wife and family for a short time before a conflict between his authority and her forceful free spirit led her to move in with her great-grandparents, in Mission Viejo, where she attended high school and was a cheerleader. "She had a hardtime accepting orders from anybody, even when she was little. Very determined and strong-willed. When she set her mind to do something, you could prettv much consider it was gonna be done.
What Shannon wanted to do was to meet the rock and roll heroes she idolized, and become part of their glamorous, fast-paced lifestyle. "She loved music, she loved rock stars," says her father. "That's what she wanted to do-marry a rock star. I figured that was what would happen."
Shannon dropped out of high school and began haunting rock venues around southem Califomia, hoping to meet her favorite musi cians. It's not hard to imagine dressing-room a doors opening for such an attractive young woman, and one evening Shannon found herself admitted backstage at a Gregg Allman Band concert. The legendarv whiskey-voiced singer, then almost 25 years her senior, took a liking to the fresh-faced California girl, then 16 or 17. Within a short time, he had asked her to join him on tour, reportedly sending a limousine to pick her up at home.
"It was an intimate relationship, and she traveled [with Allman] on and off, for a couple years," confirms Kirk West, longtime road manager for the Allman Brothers Band. In 1987, West says, Shannon appeared in a Gregg Allman Band video, "Can't Keep Runnin"', as one of a group of cowgirls, and in 1989, in a bit part in a video of the Allman Brothers' classic, "Statesboro Blues."
By the time either of her parents heard of the underage Shannon's liaison with Gregg Allman, she was already on the road with him and would remain so for months at a time, although she occasionally visited her mother in Texas. She would not see her father again until just before she turned 18. Kirk West insists that no one in the Allman organization was aware that Shannon was a minor. "She told everybody she was 18," he says. "I mean, everybody knew she was young, but she told everybody she was 18."
At first, Pam Longoria says, she was proud that her daughter had acquired a famous boyfriend. But later she became enraged at what she says Shannon told her about Allman. Not only had he introduced the girl to heroin, Longoria charges, but he had also fathered a child with her, for which he allegedly refused to take responsibility. (Longoria says her daughter later miscarried.)
While acknowledging Gregg Allman's widely reported past drug problems, including heroin use, Kirk West is adamant that by 1987, the singer was off hard drugs. "I was on the road a good bit during 1987, '88, '89," West says. "Gregg was not doing heroin. I mean, I have sat in rooms with Gregg when people that had [heroin] came in; he'd send them away. I mean, you get in that kind of position, people want to be your 'friend,' want to turn you on, and I have sat there personally and watched him turn those people away. "
As to the charge that Allman fathered Shannon's child, West says, "None of us ever heard about that." He added that he had checked with members of the band and road crew on tour in the late 1980s, and none recalled any paternity claims by Shannon against Gregg Allman.
West and the Allman's chief manager, Bert Holman, both described Allman as too distraught about Shannon's suicide to answer questions about their relationship. However, Pam Longoria remains angry at Allman, saying that his breakup with Shannon in 1989 was a crushing disappointment that hardened her daughter. "She was a completely normal person until she got hooked up with Gregg Allman," Longoria Longoria says. kArmsabbateggio Fallenslut I White Dating Fallen Slut Szh Tags Videos Fallen Slut Savannah: FALLEN ANGEL The Two Faces of a Sex Stard Fallen oArmsabbateggio Fallenslut I White Dating Fallen Slut Szh Tags Videos Fallen Slut Savannah: FALLEN ANGEL The Two Faces of a Sex Starl Fallen Slut Public