Thirty-four years ago, Hollywood royalty and everyday life collided in one of the industry’s most surprising romances. On October 6, 1991, Elizabeth Taylor married construction worker Larry Fortensky at Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch—her eighth and final wedding. Their love story began in 1988 at the Betty Ford Clinic, where the 56-year-old star and the 36-year-old blue-collar worker bonded during treatment. Taylor affectionately called him “Larry the Lion,” drawn to his grounded, protective nature. He admired her warmth more than her fame.
Their connection blossomed after rehab. Elizabeth sent limos to pick him up, and Larry saw a world of luxury he had only imagined. Yet their relationship remained genuine and down-to-earth—snow angels in Switzerland, Harley rides on the Pacific Coast, and biker bar burgers mixed with mansion life and private chefs.
The wedding was a spectacle: over 200 celebrity guests, paparazzi helicopters, and even a parachuting photographer. Inside, Michael Jackson danced while stars like Liza Minnelli and Eddie Murphy celebrated the unlikely couple. But fame and simplicity eventually clashed. Elizabeth wanted Larry by her side at all times; he longed to keep working and stay grounded. Constant cameras and her declining health strained the marriage, leading to their 1996 divorce.

Still, affection endured. Elizabeth quietly helped Larry during financial and health struggles, and they stayed in touch until her final days. Elizabeth Taylor died in 2011; Larry Fortensky in 2016. Their brief union remains one of Hollywood’s most unconventional love stories—proof that even fairy tales can be real, however imperfect.