Happy Days actress Erin Moran spent final days 'broke and homeless after being kicked out of mother-in-law's trailer park house in drunken brawl' before dying of suspected heroin overdose aged 56

  • Child star Erin Moran was found dead aged 56 by EMTs in Indiana on Saturday
  • She shot to fame in her role as Joanie on the popular sitcom Happy Days
  • A source told DailyMail.com that she died of a suspected heroin overdose 
  • It was revealed her final days were tumultuous as she was broke and homeless
  • She had foreclosed on her California home in 2010 and moved to Indiana
  • Moran and her husband Steve Fleischmann lived with his elderly mother 
  • After a drunken brawl, the woman kicked Moran from the trailer home in 2012 
  • Child actor advocate Paul Petersen said his group tried its best to save her

Happy Days actress Erin Moran spent her final days reportedly broke and homeless after she was kicked out of mother-in-law's trailer park house in a drunken brawl.

Moran, who shot to fame playing teenager Joanie Cunningham in the 1970s sitcom Happy Days, died of a suspected heroin overdose at the age of 56 in Indiana on Saturday.

Her fellow co-stars were quick to pay tribute to the actress who spent her final years in an apparent downward spiral after it was reported she had squandered away her money and was without a permanent place to live.

Actor Henry Winkler even tried to help Moran nab a spot on his show Arrested Development as it emerged she had been bouncing around motels after a drunken brawl with her mother-in-law in 2012.

Child actor advocate Paul Petersen commented on the heartbreaking loss and said on Sunday that his team did its best with the actress but she 'ran from the help'.  

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Happy Days actress Erin Moran spent her final days reportedly broke and homeless
She was found dead aged 56 of a suspected herion overdose in Indiana on Saturday afternoon

Happy Days actress Erin Moran spent her final days reportedly broke and homeless. She was found dead at the age of 56, of a suspected heroin overdose, in Indiana on Saturday afternoon

Moran was just 14 when she signed on to play Joanie, the feisty little sister of Richie Cunningham on the popular sitcom 

Moran was just 14 when she signed on to play Joanie, the feisty little sister of Richie Cunningham on the popular sitcom 

Moran was seen looking worse for wear outside a Holiday Inn in fall 2012, after reportedly being kicked out of the trailer she lived in with her husband Steve Fleischmann.

The couple shared the space with Fleischmann's elderly mother after foreclosing on their California home in 2010 and blowing through $65,000 in settlement money, reported The Mercury News

One night, Moran allegedly came home from a night of drinking when Fleischmann's mother decided she had enough and kicked her out of the Indiana trailer park home.

The two stood outside screaming profanities at each other, with the older woman in curlers and nightgown, reported Radar Online.  

'Erin was going out to bars and coming home at all hours of the night, sometimes with her rowdy bar friends, and Steve's mom just couldn't take it anymore,' a source told The National Enquirer years ago.

The publication claimed Erin was 'bouncing' from motel to motel and that Moran was on the verge of a split from her husband, who she married in 1993. 

One of the last times she was seen was in  Facebook photo posted in 2014 (above) 

One of the last times she was seen was in  Facebook photo posted in 2014 (above) 

She had been bouncing around motels after a drunken brawl with her mother-in-law in 2012. Pictured: Moran  living in a trailer park in New Salisbury, Indiana, in 2012

She had been bouncing around motels after a drunken brawl with her mother-in-law in 2012. Pictured: Moran living in a trailer park in New Salisbury, Indiana, in 2012

Moran was kicked out of a trailer home where she was living with her husband Steve Fleischmann and his mother (pictured) after a reported night of drinking 

Moran was kicked out of a trailer home where she was living with her husband Steve Fleischmann and his mother (pictured) after a reported night of drinking 

Her troubles were not ignored by her fellow childhood actors, as advocate Petersen said 'Erin had friends and she knew it' and they 'were actively reaching out to Erin in the last week of her life'.

He wrote on the Facebook page A Minor Consideration and said: 'I am proud of our efforts over the years to help Erin Moran whose troubles were many and complex. Don’t doubt for a moment that we tried…sincerely tried through time and treasure…to give comfort to one of our own.' 

Petersen said her 'troubles were many and complex' and added: 'Abandonment was not the issue. The perversity of human frailty is at the root of this loss, not failure. 

'We did our best with the resources available to us, but it was a very dark room. Some don’t find the light switch in time.'

The defeated comments were Petersen's second remarks about Moran. He had earlier posted on the page that Moran 'ran' from the help that was offered to her.  

The series of unfortunate events reportedly ended in a drug overdose as a source told DailyMail.com that Moran, who lived in a trailer park in New Salisbury, Indiana, died of a suspected heroin overdose.

Her former co-stars including Winkler and Ron Howard were quick to pay tribute to her on Twitter.

Winkler, who played Arthur ‘Fonzie’ Fonzarelli in the show, tweeted just moments after the death was announced: 'OH Erin, now you will finally have the peace you wanted so badly here on earth, Rest In It serenely now, too soon.'  

CHILD ADVOCATE PAUL PETERSEN'S REMARKS ON ERIN MORAN'S DEATH  

We Pulled Our Weight With Erin 

'I am proud of our efforts over the years to help Erin Moran whose troubles were many and complex. Don’t doubt for a moment that we tried…sincerely tried through time and treasure…to give comfort to one of our own.

'At least a half-dozen “formers” were actively reaching out to Erin in the last week of her life. These aren’t publicity photos her friends are posting, but family portraits. From Paris to London, from New York to LA, our members were in there pitching, doing what they could to help. Do not doubt that for a minute.

'Erin had friends and she knew it. Abandonment was not the issue. The perversity of human frailty is at the root of this loss, not failure. We did our best with the resources available to us, but it was a very dark room. Some don’t find the light switch in time.'

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Moran's costar Henry Winkler (right) heard about her troubles and tried to get her on his show Arrested Development. Happy Days was one of the most popular sitcoms of its time and started in 1974 and ran for almost a decade

Moran's costar Henry Winkler (right) heard about her troubles and tried to get her on his show Arrested Development. Happy Days was one of the most popular sitcoms of its time and started in 1974 and ran for almost a decade

Winkler led the tribute to his former Happy Days co-star Erin Moran and said she would 'finally have the peace [she] wanted so badly' 

Winkler led the tribute to his former Happy Days co-star Erin Moran and said she would 'finally have the peace [she] wanted so badly' 

Erin Moran as Joanie Cunningham in 1974
Erin Moran and Scott Baoi in 1981

Moran was remembered by former co-stars and on social media for the feisty and youthful character that she played in Happy Days and Joanie Loves Chachi

Howard, who played Richie Cunningham, tweeted a tribute to his on-screen little sister, saying: 'Such sad sad news. RIP Erin. I'll always choose to remember you on our show making scenes better, getting laughs and lighting up tv screens.'

Scott Baio wrote on Facebook on Sunday: 'May people remember Erin for her contagious smile, warm heart, and animal loving soul. I always hoped she could find peace in her life. God has you now, Erin.'

A Burbank, California native, Moran began acting in TV and movies before she was 10 years old. She was just 14 when she signed on to play Joanie, the feisty little sister of Ron Howard's character Richie Cunningham, on Happy Days.

She became a household name as a result of her performance on the show, which started in 1974 and ran for almost a decade.

She continued the role in 1982 in the short-lived spinoff Joanie Loves Chachi, alongside Scott Baio, until it was canceled the following year. 

More of her former co-stars commented after hearing about her tragic death. Anson Williams, who played Warren 'Potsie' Weber on the show told ABC 7: 'Erin was a person who made everyone around her feel better. She truly cared about others first, a true angel. I will miss her so much... she is in God's hands'. 

Don Most, who starred alongside Moran as Ralph Malph on the hit sitcom, said: 'She was a wonderful, sweet, caring, talented young woman... A very painful loss.'

After Joanie Loves Chachi, Moran's career essentially stalled, with the exception of several television guest spots, and an appearance in the 2007 independent comedy feature Not Another B Movie.

Howard also tweeted a tribute to his on-screen little sister, saying: 'Such sad sad news. RIP Erin. I'll always choose to remember you on our show making scenes better, getting laughs and lighting up tv screens'

Howard also tweeted a tribute to his on-screen little sister, saying: 'Such sad sad news. RIP Erin. I'll always choose to remember you on our show making scenes better, getting laughs and lighting up tv screens'

1979 Erin Moran
Erin Moran in a shot for Happy Days

Moran continued her sitcom role in 1982 in the short-lived spinoff Joanie Loves Chachi, alongside Scott Baio, until its cancellation the following year

Moran is pictured bottom left with the rest of the Happy Days cast. She shot to fame in that role throughout the 70s and 80s before her career essentially stalled 

Moran is pictured bottom left with the rest of the Happy Days cast. She shot to fame in that role throughout the 70s and 80s before her career essentially stalled 

Moran and her husband were understood to be living off a dwindling sum of money which was the result of a payout springing from a lawsuit filed by several Happy Days cast members in April 2011.

The actress and three of her Happy Days co-stars, Don Most, Anson Williams and Marion Ross, plus the estate of Tom Bosley, who died in 2010, filed a $10 million breach-of-contract lawsuit against CBS, which owns the show.

The suit claimed cast members had not been paid for merchandising revenues owed under their contracts.

In July 2012, the actors settled their lawsuit with CBS. Each received a payment of $65,000 and a promise by CBS to continue honoring the terms of their contracts.   

HOW THE US IS THE WORST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD FOR HEROIN AND OPIATE ABUSE 

Opioids are a type of narcotic pain medication that act on the nervous system to relieve pain.

Continued use and abuse can lead to physical dependence and withdrawal symptoms. They come in tablets, capsules or liquid.

Opioid drugs work by binding to opioid receptors in the brain, spinal cord and other areas of the body. They reduce the sending of pain messages to the brain and lessen feelings of pain.

The US is now the worst country in the world for the abuse of heroin and opiates, according to a report published by the International Narcotics Control Board. 

It found that Americans are being prescribed opioids much more frequently than citizens in any other country and concluded US citizens, despite making up only five per cent of the global population, are consuming more than 99 per cent of the world's supply of hydrocodone 

In 2015, more than 33,000 people - or 78 every single day - fatally overdosed on opioids, including prescription drugs and heroin. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, no other year on record has seen a higher number. Nearly half of the deaths involved a prescription opioid.  

Last month President Trump launched a commission to address the epidemic, tapping up New Jersey Governor Chris Christie to help with it. President Trump described opioid abuse as a 'crippling problem' in the country.

'This is a total epidemic,' he said. 'And I think it's almost untalked about compared to the severity that we're witnessing.' 

 Some types of opioids include:

  • Codeine
  • Oxycodone
  • Fentanyl

One of the reasons why your doctor needs to manage pain medication so closely is that they can potentially cause side effects, such as constipation, drowsiness, nausea and vomiting.

Tolerance 

After taking opioid pain medication for a while, you might find that you need more and more of the drug to achieve the same effect in reducing pain.

Dependence 

When you use opioid medication over an extended period of time, your body can become so used to the drug that, if you abruptly stop taking it, you experience withdrawal symptoms such as:

  • Diarrhea, nausea and vomiting
  • Muscle pain
  • Anxiety
  • Irritability 

Addiction 

People who are addicted to opioids compulsively seek out the pain medications. They typically have behaviors that lead to negative consequences in their personal lives or workplace.

If you are having a problem with addiction, you might need to see an addiction specialist.

Overdose 

Opioids affect the part of the brain that controls breathing, and large doses can slow breathing to the point where it is fatal.

Additionally, mixing the drugs with other medications can create a reaction that sends you into cardiac arrest.

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