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Viv NicholsonVivian (Viv) Nicholson (born 1936) became a public figure in Britain overnight in 1961 when she won 152,000 (equivalent to about 3 million today) on the football pools. A mother of four in her second marriage, having previously lived in near-poverty in the industrial Yorkshire town of Castleford, she announced that she was going to "spend, spend, spend", and she did indeed rapidly go on an extravagant spending spree. As such she became an icon for a new kind of self-confident Northern woman some two years before Julie Christie's appearance in "Billy Liar", and was popular tabloid fodder for some years. By her own admission, however, she found it hard to cope with the psychological effects of the money she had won, and went through bouts of alcoholism and depression. She also felt alienated from most people in Castleford, who in turn could no longer relate to her, and developed an ever greater sense of isolation when she was living in a bungalow in a much more affluent area. After her husband Keith was killed in a car crash, her fortune rapidly dwindled to nothing. She had, indeed, spent, spent and spent; the banks and the tax creditors both deemed her bankrupt and declared that all her money, and everything she had acquired with it, belonged not to her but to Keith's estate. She was to make many attempts to regain both her public profile and her lost wealth, such as recording a single (entitled "Spend Spend Spend", written by her brother) and appearing in a strip club singing "Big Spender", but none succeeded. Viv Nicholson did win a six-year legal battle to gain 20,000 from Keith's estate, but rapidly spent it all. After relocating to Malta she was rapidly deported back to Britain for assaulting a policeman, amid a storm of tabloid publicity, and she had to go into a mental home to escape from her third husband, who brutally abused her during the four days they lived together (the marriage lasted only thirteen weeks). After opening a short-lived boutique she ended up penniless, and by 1976 claimed that she could not even afford to bury her fourth husband, who had died (and with whom she had broken up three years earlier). She also had a number of run-ins with the police, and attempted on one occasion to commit suicide. Naturally, the yellow press loved every moment - for them, Viv Nicholson's story had taken on the proportions of a real-life soap opera that no British television company (at least in that era) would have dared to produce. In 1977 she co-wrote the book "Spend Spend Spend" with Stephen Smith, recounting her turbulent life; this led to a BBC "Play For Today" the same year, in which she was played by Susan Littler. It ends with the line that, however unhappy much of her life may have been before she won the pools, her days of industrial squalour were still "the best times I ever had". Having gone through five husbands, Viv Nicholson still lives in Castleford where she is a Jehovah's Witness. Viv Nicholson's name has remained in the public eye in recent decades notably through the admiration of Morrissey, who used her image on the cover of The Smiths' 1984 single "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now", and through the stage musical "Spend Spend Spend" in which Barbara Dickson played her older self, looking back on her life, and Rachel Lescovac played her as a younger woman. On July 24, 2004 BBC Four repeated the 1977 production of "Spend Spend Spend" as part of a tribute to its writer, Jack Rosenthal.
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