Amanda Bynes wants to be free.
On Feb. 23, the "Hairspray" actress filed paperwork at the Ventura County Superior Court in California to end her conservatorship, which she's been under since August 2013.
A hearing is set for March 22, Page Six reported.
The new request is interesting, as TMZ reported in September 2021 that a judge continued the conservatorship until at least March 2023.
According to TMZ, Amanda's parents are in full support of the conservatorship ending, too, believing she's made significant progress.
For the past nine years, the Nickelodeon alum's mother, Lynn Bynes, has had legal control of Amanda's personal, medical and financial affairs. The conservatorship came after a lengthy series of bizarre behavior.
In 2013, Amanda was placed on an involuntary psychiatric hold after setting off a small fire on a neighbor's driveway and dousing her dog in gasoline. A stay in a psychiatric hospital followed. Then, in October 2014, she found herself in a treatment center after lashing out against her father on social media and being busted for shoplifting and DUI.
Also in 2014, she was kicked out of fashion school for odd behavior, with other students accusing her of attending classes with sunglasses on while high on marijuana, paying others to finish her homework, and blatantly cheating off of classmates during tests. In November 2014 she tweeted that she was "diagnosed bi – polar and manic depressive."
Along the way, she began online feuds and wrote odd Twitter messages.
In the years since, Amanda has largely cleaned up her life. She was allowed to return to fashion school in 2015, and she's now a graduate of the Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising in Los Angeles.
In November 2018, she said she's been sober for four years, but she returned to treatment two months later after what was reported to be a "stress-related relapse." Last year, she got engaged to Paul Michael, who met in Alcoholics Anonymous. She's also apparently dabbling in rap, as evidenced by several YouTube videos.
The fact that Amanda wants to end her conservatorship — as Britney Spears famously did — isn't a surprise. Her lawyer told Page Six last fall that the conservatorship was "no longer convenient," and it was stressed that Amanda is "doing really well, besides anxiety and trauma."