In the familiar images that circulated after her June 1994 death, Nicole Brown Simpson appears frozen in place. She’s a statuesque blonde with a tense smile, silently escorting her famous husband O.J.
Simpson. She’s the breezy California beauty behind the wheel of her white Ferrari. And she’s the sombre woman, with telling bruises and a black eye, in the stark Polaroids locked away in a bank vault.
Thirty years later, Nicole’s three sisters want her remembered for more than those static images or the violent way she died. (Nicole faced abuse from her former husband for years before her 1994 murder – which Simpson was later found liable for.) They fear the vibrant person they knew has been lost in the chaos of Simpson’s murder trial, the questions it raised about race in America, and the headlines spawned by his recent death.
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Photo: Lifetime/AP “It’s seeing her move. It’s hearing her talk, seeing her,” youngest sister Tanya Brown told us of the joy she felt watching video clips of Nicole in a new Lifetime documentary. “[She’s] someone who .
