What To Know
- Larry Birkhead objected to the upcoming Anna Nicole Smith biopic Trust Me, I’m a Doctor.
- Birkhead warned of the emotional distress the film could cause, especially to his and Smith’s daughter Dannielynn.
- The film, based on Dr. Sandeep Kapoor’s 2017 book, focuses on Kapoor’s involvement in Smith’s death.
Larry Birkhead recently spoke out against the upcoming Anna Nicole Smith biopic, Trust Me, I’m a Doctor.
During an interview with Entertainment Tonight published on July 9, the father of Smith’s daughter, Dannielynn Birkhead, 19, made it clear that they are not involved in the production in any way.
“We absolutely object to, you know, any of Anna Nicole’s, my life, my daughter’s life being used in a movie,” he told ET. “And being made characters out of by someone that was a doctor that supposedly that people were supposed to trust.
In 2007, Smith died at 39, following an accidental overdose. The film, starring Abbie Cornish, follows Dr. Sandeep Kapoor’s (Kal Penn) 2017 book, which details the physician’s implication in Smith’s death after her body was found in a hotel room in Hollywood, Florida. Kapoor had prescribed methadone to the Playboy model under a false name.
Birkhead, 53, also told ET, “I recently saw the actress that is portraying Anna. You know, I’m sure she’s probably a nice girl and a great actress. But I don’t think she quite embodied Anna Nicole. And that’s not really an attack on her.”
Additionally, Birkhead pointed out that Smith’s story has been played out on screens “several times” already, including in a Lifetime movie and a Law & Order episode.
He added, “I have yet to see someone who actually embodied the spirit and the looks and the persona of Anna Nicole.”
Birkhead also shared that he warned about the “harm and the emotional distress” the biopic “puts on not just myself but also, most importantly, Dannielynn, and how this could impact her.”
“I have filed a complaint with the California Medical Board over Dr. Kapoor’s participation in this movie,” he revealed. “I’m just going to let the process, you know, play itself out, and see what they have to say about that.”
Trust Me, I’m a Doctor hits theaters on October 16
This story originally appeared on TV Insider
