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Annie DukeFame & Fortune: Poker champ Annie Duke
Bored and broke until fate dealt her a new hand

Annie Duke is the world's most successful female poker player.

So, now that television has given poker players celebrity status, Duke gets mobbed wherever she goes. She probably could have done anything she wanted with her life: She's a graduate of St. Paul's School, has a degree from Columbia University in English and psychology, and has nearly completed her doctorate at the University of Pennsylvania in psycholinguistics.

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But, it's the "nearly completed" that changed Duke's life. In her recently released autobiography, she is candid about the recurring panic attacks, depression and other disorders that made her leave school and marry a man she had never dated.

Her then-husband was a recipient of a small trust fund from the Duke tobacco family. He was content to live off his $10,000 annual stipend in a Montana shotgun shack. Annie found herself bored and broke. Her brother, world class poker player Howard Lederer, taught her the game and she soon was winning against the local cowboys gambling away their retirement checks.

Next, Howard staked her in some Las Vegas games and a legend was born.

In 2004 Duke won her first World Series of Poker bracelet. That year, she also won $2 million in the No-Limit Texas Hold 'Em Tournament broadcast on ESPN.

Duke consults for a lot of those celebrities you see playing poker on TV, such as Ben Affleck and Matt Damon. NBC made a pilot based on her life, starring Janeane Garofalo, but it did not make the fall lineup. Duke has a production company that has created a horror film, two game shows for the Game Show Network and other projects. Duke is also the mother of four young children.

Bankrate: How many tournaments do you play in a year?

Annie Duke: This fall, my tournament playing has been very sparse. I just got back from playing in Aruba. I also won $110,000 in the World Series Poker Tournament. I'm playing at the Bellagio soon for a $15,000 tournament. I only play 15 percent to 33 percent of the games that my peers do; I balance it with being with my four kids. I turned down playing in a tournament in Monte Carlo this year -- it was on Thanksgiving Day -- so I could help with my kid's carnival.

Bankrate: Do you ever still play in a pickup casino game?

Annie Duke: Very, very occasionally. For the first eight or nine years I played, that's mainly what I played. The tournaments didn't have enough money to pique my interest.

Bankrate: What specific advantages have your degrees in psychology given you in poker-playing?

Annie Duke: I have a very deep understanding of probability and statistics.

 
 
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