Carla Renée Nicoletti(1971-1998)
Carla Renée Nicoletti was born as a baby girl in the summer of 1971 to a loving Christian family in the United States of America. She was known in Missouri for her striking beauty, her unique voice, and her artistic personality. Her family and friends were proud of her unyielding willpower and believed that she was destined to do great things in life.
Meeting her expectations, Nicoletti earned a 4.0 grade point average in college and soon became one of the most valuable students at the Conservatory of Music at the University of Missouri-Kansas City during the 1990s. Throughout the decade, she had a small career of modeling, acting, and singing. In the 1993 television film, Dead Before Dawn, she served as an uncredited actress in the secretary role of Robert Edelman. Her successes were often told in newspapers throughout the Kansas City area.
In her mid-twenties, Nicoletti fell to her bloodline of mental illness. She suffered from several nervous breakdowns and became a patient in psychiatric hospitals (one being Truman Medical Center). Mental illness had long been a part of her family's history as her two aunts from her mother's side had lived most of their lives in an asylum (Glore Psychiatric Museum) in St. Joseph, Missouri, after being threatened by their likely schizophrenic father. Nicoletti's mind consequently became increasingly plagued with schizophrenic symptoms, and her life came to a sudden tragedy in the winter of 1998. She was survived by her separated parents, grandmother, brothers, nephews, aunts, and stepmother.
Meeting her expectations, Nicoletti earned a 4.0 grade point average in college and soon became one of the most valuable students at the Conservatory of Music at the University of Missouri-Kansas City during the 1990s. Throughout the decade, she had a small career of modeling, acting, and singing. In the 1993 television film, Dead Before Dawn, she served as an uncredited actress in the secretary role of Robert Edelman. Her successes were often told in newspapers throughout the Kansas City area.
In her mid-twenties, Nicoletti fell to her bloodline of mental illness. She suffered from several nervous breakdowns and became a patient in psychiatric hospitals (one being Truman Medical Center). Mental illness had long been a part of her family's history as her two aunts from her mother's side had lived most of their lives in an asylum (Glore Psychiatric Museum) in St. Joseph, Missouri, after being threatened by their likely schizophrenic father. Nicoletti's mind consequently became increasingly plagued with schizophrenic symptoms, and her life came to a sudden tragedy in the winter of 1998. She was survived by her separated parents, grandmother, brothers, nephews, aunts, and stepmother.