Amanda Bynes filed court filings Wednesday to terminate her conservatorship. Can she get out of it like Britney Spears did hers?  

The former actress, 35, petitioned the Ventura County Superior Court in California to terminate both the conservatorship of her person and estate, as reported by Page Six.

Bynes also submitted a capacity statement on Tuesday, since California requires all conservatorship proceedings to include updated documents from the conservatee's physician, psychologist, or religious healing practitioner. 

March 22 is the date of the hearing. 

"Amanda wishes to terminate her conservatorship. She believes her condition is improved and protection of the court is no longer necessary," her attorney David A. Esquibas said. 

In August 2013, the Nickelodeon alum was placed in conservatorship, granting her  mother, Lynn Bynes, legal control over her personal, medical, and financial affairs. 

Amanda, aged 27, was placed on an involuntary psychiatric detention following an incident in which she reportedly started a small fire in a stranger's property. 

In November 2014, one month after a second 5150 detention, the "She's the Man" actor tweeted that she had been diagnosed with bipolar illness. 

Amanda has been in and out of mental health facilities in recent years while simultaneously battling addiction. 

She declared in November 2018 that she had been clean for four years, only to enter treatment two months later following a "stress-related relapse." 

Amanda has also accomplished several things along the road. She graduated from the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising in Los Angeles in June 2019 and married Paul Michael in February 2020 after meeting at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. 

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In September 2021, Esquibias, the former child star's lawyer, told Page Six that she was "doing incredibly well, aside from anxiety and trauma," and that her conservatorship could be removed anytime it became "no longer convenient." 

Some analysts in the past have compared the two conservatorships and determined the "Free Britney" movement could be successful while the "Free Amanda Bynes" movement would not be for many reasons. 

According to Howard Breuer, the CEO of Newsroom PR, Amanda Bynes had her own strong following, despite probably not as big as Britney Spears. But no one can really deny they have not heard of her. She was a prominent child star, even during her teens. However, it is not their respective popularity that can get them out of conservatorship. 

Whereas Spears' prolonged success as a music artist and mother has prompted doubts about whether the conservatorship was still warranted, Breuer argued that rare glimpses into Bynes' life have done the opposite. 

"You don't see Amanda Bynes having her s--- together at that level," Breuer said. "What do we know about her? She meditates, she goes to SoulCycle, she has a face tat to match her nose piercing, and she has ongoing mental health issues... you want to talk about perception, she does a better job of playing the role of someone who needed a conservatorship, not just at the time but also over the years,'' he added. 

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