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Carmen Electra suits bold wrestling
Natalie
Finn
LOS ANGELES—Carmen Electra has the Naked Women’s Wrestling League up
against the highly stylized ropes.
As tantalizing as that might sound, what it actually means is that the
former Baywatch babe is suing the NWWL for breach of contract,
negligence and unfair business practices, claiming that she was never
paid her agreed-upon price for a handful of live event appearances.
(View the complaint.) According to documents filed Wednesday in Los
Angeles Superior Court, Electra was supposed to receive $400,000 and a
cut of the proceeds from DVD sales and pay-per-view fees for four
hosting appearances and her company, Electra Blue, has to date only been
paid $100,000.
They entered into the deal on Jan. 26, 2004, per the complaint.
Meanwhile, Toronto-based NWWL Productions president Howard Mann said in
a statement released to E! News that he entered into no such agreement
with the erstwhile Playboy Playmate, calling her lawsuit “malicious and
highly damaging.” “I feel her claims are nothing more than a desperate
cry for attention,” Mann said. “Carmen’s financial issues are simply not
my concern...I am currently engaging California counsel to actively
defend my position, and I will be seeking damages for defamation,
slander and malicious persecution.”
Electra has also accused the NWWL and several other companies and
individuals, including Erotic Wrestling Productions, Full Speed
Productions and Virtcom Enterprises, of unlawfully trading on her good
name to promote the league, whether by referring to it as “Carmen
Electra’s NWWL” or stating “Carmen Electra Presents NWWL.”
The 35-year-old actress’ suit also states that the plaintiffs used her
“name, voice, image, likeness and/or attributes” without her consent for
the covers of such illustrious DVD titles as Operation Naked Storm, Bush
vs. Hussein, Tag Team Dream and Twin Peaks. Electra, who famously
spoofed herself in Scary Movie and wants to prevent further damage to
her value as a “sought-after spokesperson and commercial actress,” is
seeking at least $3.3 million in damages, plus attorneys’ fees,
according to the suit.
Her list of allegations also includes violation of statutory and
common-law right of publicity, breach of guaranty, federal unfair
competition, quantum meruit (Latin for “pay me what you promised even if
it wasn’t carved in stone”), open book account and unjust enrichment. |