Alana Stewart

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Alana Stewart

 Alana Stewart
Alana Stewart

American actress and former model. She has also used her maiden name ,Alana Stewart 
Alana Stewart

Alana Stewart

Alana Stewart

Alana Stewart

Alana Stewart

Alana Stewart

got its mitts on a copy of Farrah's will -- final date, August 2007 -- and it reveals that she also did not get her final wish: to die at home, on June 25, 2009. Instead she died at St. John's hospital in Santa Monica.

 In addition to leaving the majority of her estate to Redmond, the docs reveal Farrah left $500,000 to her nephew Greg Walls, $500,000 to her father, James, and $100,000 to ex-lover Greg Lott.

 Ryan O'Neal and Alana Hamilton Stewart, heavily involved in her documentary, were not named. Alana filmed much of Farrah's final documentary and wants to release a Part Two. Ryan told the media that Farrah agreed to marry him in her final daysAs for Lott, he's been telling anyone who will listen that he was Farrah's secret boyfriend. He told a British newspaper he last spoke to her April 9 and says that Ryan banned him from seeing her.

Lott dated Farrah in the '60s when she was at the University of Texas at Austin, and they reportedly rekindled their relationship 11 years ago, according to some soWho will be the first to cash in on the death of Farrah Fawcett? Less than a week after the brave icon's funeral, her close friend Alana Stewart is first out of the gate and well ahead of the pack with a book based on the Farrah's cancer journey journal that was supposed to be the basis for her cancer documentary.
celebrity ex-wife's book is being rush-released to take advantage of the worldwide outpouring of love and publicity for Farrah.

The title is set to be pblished on August 25th, the two-month anniversary of Farrah's death.
Alana Stewart accompanied Farrah through much of her cancer battle, traveling with her to German cancer clinics and running the video camera as Farrah documented the cutting edge treatments that gave her hope and extended her life by years after doctors in the States told her there was nothing more they could do. Working with her longtime confidante and producer Craig Nevius, Farrah shaped the footage into a "cancer journal" that explored the question of why lifesaving treataments are not available in America and beyond the reach of most all but the very richFarrah sold the project to NBC. When her condition took a turn for the worse and she began to fade from consciousness, her longtime on-and-off lover Ryan O'Neal took control of her affairs, forced Nevius off the project and, with the help of producers from NBC Dateline commandeered the recutting of the documentary into a maudlin, morbid entertainment called "Farrah's Story" (a reference to his 1970 film, Love Story).

Alana Stewart reportedly held up the project, demanding a producer's credit and a fat payoff, before the special aired.It has become a hot topic among the GOP Presidential candidates, with Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann lashing out at Texas Gov. Rick Perry over his 2007 executive order that required Texas schoolgirls to receive vaccinations against the sexually transmitted HPV virus.

"To have innocent little 12-year-old girls be forced to have a government injection through an executive order is just flat out wrong," she said during last Monday’s deba

The mandatory vaccine, which protects against some strains of the human papilloma virus, a contributing factor to some strains of cervical cancer, was provided at no cost to those who were not covered by insurance and included an opt-out provision for parents. The National Cancer Institute states that the FDA-approved vaccines are highly effective in preventing infections with HPV types 16 and 18, two high-risk HPVs that cause about 70 percent of cervical and anal cancers.

However, actress/producer Alana Stewart, who is President of the Farrah Fawcett Foundation which seeks to provide funding for alternative cancer research, seems to be siding with Bachmann on the issue.

“I can only speak for myself, but it’s a very scary thing, and anything to do with underage children should be up to parents, not the government,” Stewart told FOX411’s Pop Tarts column at the "Give Back Hollywood's Farrah Fawcett Foundation Pre-Emmy Cancer Benefit. "I do think it is a good thing for parents to research because it is growing, and I think anything that can be done to prevent it is a good thing.”



Alana Stewart