hockeyfan1 said:Looks like financial problems also plagued him:
...the actor recently confided to a family friend that he had ?serious money troubles,? and was worried about his family?s financial security.
According to a family friend who had spoken to Williams recently, ?All he could talk about were serious money troubles".
There was also frustration that Robin expressed at having to take television and movie roles he didn?t want to take, but had to for the paycheck,? the source said...
In addition, Williams revealed in a Parade Magazine interview last year, that he took a role on the now-defunct CBS show The Crazy Ones because he needed the paycheck.
?The idea of having a steady job is appealing,? Williams told the magazine. ?There are bills to pay. My life has downsized, in a good way.?
"I'm selling the ranch up in Napa", he said of his $35 million Villa Sorriso. "I just can't afford it anymore."
It is revealed that he wasn't excited about reprising his role for Mrs. Doubtfire 2.
I enjoyed him in Mork & Mindy at the time, and some of his movies such as Jumangi, Mrs. Doubtfire, etc. A great and gifted 'natural' talent who will no doubt be missed. Sad and terrible news to read and hear about on someone who made the world laugh except himself.
http://radaronline.com/exclusives/2014/08/robin-williams-had-serious-money-troubles-in-months-before-his-death-claims-friend-was-the-pressure-too-much/
I think that report is nonsense. His publicist knocked it down:
Robin Williams? Rep Knocks Down Reports of Money Troubles
This alone squashes a bunch of the rumor for me:
Forbes valued two of his properties at $36 mil less $7.x mil in mortgages. He could have easily picked up $20 mil cash with additional mortgages of those properties if he needed cash. He was selling one of them to lower maintenance costs but he could have easily opted for a mortgage.
Robin's brother, who he was close to and had businesses in vineyards, passed away a few years ago. Robin's estate had olive oil and vineyard production contracts but without his brother, maybe Robin lost interest or lacked the desire to have someone else manage that aspect of maintaining the 600+ acre property. Beyond maintenance costs, that probably was an emotional factor in his desire to sell the property.
Robin was well inside the top 10 grossing film actors of all time (between #4 and #8, $5.x billion). He could very comfortably retire on the residuals from that alone - ignoring his stand up concerts, his DVDs, etc.
He was a relentless philanthropist. Charities would put on a show planning to charge $100 a head for a thousand people. Robin would add his name and then they could get $300-400 per ticket. So if he needed cash, he could do a stand up show for 5,000 people himself at $200 per head and grab close to $1 mil in a 90 minute evening because his production costs were close to zilch.
In 2009, after he'd paid out $30 mil combined to his two ex-wives in divorce settlements, brought on by heart trouble, he set up trusts for his three kids (youngest is 23). His comedy tour around that time probably paid for it grossing $45 mil roughly.
Since the beginning of 2013, aside from the $4 mil for his TV show, he's done about 10 other films and completed a comedy tour with David Steinberg. Over the last couple of years with residuals, he probably was paid like Kessel or Crosby.
With a net worth estimated between $50-$130 mil, ex-wives, kids and house paid for, no known major business expenses and that recent income, I really doubt money was big problem for him. Quite possibly, it was the least of his problems.