Just sad. She's had documented serious mental and drug-abuse issues for awhile now. The prostitution was not long to follow. Her mom tried her best to help her and then she died so tragically. Now add that trauma to the mix.
Put down the cameras and put her under a 5150 before it's too late.
i mean, jesus can we get an update that at least has some links that talk about her schizophrenia? if i read one more comment about her being a skanky crack whore, blahdelbahblah... srsly? she may or may not be on drugs, but how can gawker have multiple posts that go on and on about jett travolta's autism and not at least mention the impact of schizophrenia on maia campbell?
here i'll even help. here's an interview her mom did with tavis smiley in '05 - [www.pbs.org] a commenter below has already posted the link to the blackweb2.0 story. That's not including the fact that bebe moore campbell addresses it in her own work: "Campbell's next work seemed an abrupt shift from her previous efforts. The illustrated children's story Sometimes My Mommy Gets Angry provided soothing words for young readers with a family member suffering from bipolar disorder. The story is told through the voice of a young girl, who has a loving grandparent to explain difficult ideas to her and suggest coping strategies. Campbell confessed in some media interviews that bipolar disorder had been an issue in her own family, an admission repeated, albeit in anonymous form, in similar publicity interviews for her next book, 72 Hour Hold, the story of a mother struggling to help her 18-year-old daughter, a victim of bipolar disorder. The novel won praise from Ariel Swartley in Los Angeles Magazine, who commended the author for her "ability to blend ingredients that literature has long considered to be hopelessly at odds: practical information and poetry, stump speech and darn good yarn."
Campbell's second children's book, Stompin' at the Savoy, appeared in 2006. Sadly, that work would be the last to appear in her lifetime; diagnosed with brain cancer in early 2006, she died at the age of 56 on November 27, 2006, in Los Angeles. In one of the last interviews she gave, she discussed her family's experiences with mental illness, and the solace she found in support groups. "We don't want to talk about it," she explained to Kenneth Meeks of Black Enterprise, of her involvement in the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, whose Inglewood, California, chapter she co-founded. "I didn't want to talk about it, either. I went into denial. I was ashamed. I was very stigmatized by this illness that had no business in my family."
One time, Regis was doing a jaywalking-type thing and he approached one of the stars from Meredith Baxter's The Faculty sitcom. You could tell that the actress really wanted him to recognize her. After all, the show had just finished it's first and only half-season, but he just kept-on with the bit.
@Magister: I respectfully withdraw my (poor) snark about an actress nobody knows, from a sitcom that few people watched. Based upon other comments, the young lady in the video has some real problems and though I thought it unfair to ridicule an unknown with little future in the business, I think it's probably doubly worse because it's beyond her control.
She has a mental illness, and her mother the wonderful author Bebe Moore Campbell had her put on a 72-hour hold, but she died of cancer soon after. She is on drugs but her mental illness is the real issue here .
says phew, I thought you were talking about Maia BREWTON for a second who I loved dearly in Adventures In Babysitting and Parker Lewis Can't Lose. Where is she now? A lesbian Yale graduate with twins!
@IamnotStarJones: Thanks for providing the link- what a sad story. I only wish that Gawker took the extra 5 minutes to read up on her and provide the full story for us.
Apparently, her mother Bebe Moore Campbell, wrote a fictionalized book dealing with this struggle- 72 Hour Hold.
I think there's something else going on here besides drug use. I volunteer at a halfway house on the Lower East Side and encounter homeless guys on drugs (mostly crack or smack) all the time and her demeanour is completely different.
I'm guessing she's bipolar aggravated by drug use.
09/04/09
Put down the cameras and put her under a 5150 before it's too late.
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here i'll even help. here's an interview her mom did with tavis smiley in '05 - [www.pbs.org] a commenter below has already posted the link to the blackweb2.0 story. That's not including the fact that bebe moore campbell addresses it in her own work: "Campbell's next work seemed an abrupt shift from her previous efforts. The illustrated children's story Sometimes My Mommy Gets Angry provided soothing words for young readers with a family member suffering from bipolar disorder. The story is told through the voice of a young girl, who has a loving grandparent to explain difficult ideas to her and suggest coping strategies. Campbell confessed in some media interviews that bipolar disorder had been an issue in her own family, an admission repeated, albeit in anonymous form, in similar publicity interviews for her next book, 72 Hour Hold, the story of a mother struggling to help her 18-year-old daughter, a victim of bipolar disorder. The novel won praise from Ariel Swartley in Los Angeles Magazine, who commended the author for her "ability to blend ingredients that literature has long considered to be hopelessly at odds: practical information and poetry, stump speech and darn good yarn."
Campbell's second children's book, Stompin' at the Savoy, appeared in 2006. Sadly, that work would be the last to appear in her lifetime; diagnosed with brain cancer in early 2006, she died at the age of 56 on November 27, 2006, in Los Angeles. In one of the last interviews she gave, she discussed her family's experiences with mental illness, and the solace she found in support groups. "We don't want to talk about it," she explained to Kenneth Meeks of Black Enterprise, of her involvement in the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, whose Inglewood, California, chapter she co-founded. "I didn't want to talk about it, either. I went into denial. I was ashamed. I was very stigmatized by this illness that had no business in my family."
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[www.imdb.com]
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Apparently, her mother Bebe Moore Campbell, wrote a fictionalized book dealing with this struggle- 72 Hour Hold.
[www.amazon.com]
After her mothers death (brain cancer), understandably Maia's mental health only worsened.
09/03/09
I'm guessing she's bipolar aggravated by drug use.
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