More details have emerged on that recent incident between “Breakfast Club” star Anthony Michael Hall and girlfriend Diana Falzone

According to the police report, Hall “bit his girlfriend’s forehead” and “pushed, shoved and spit at” her during the 2 a.m. fight in her apartment on Nov. 10.
The following morning at 3 a.m., the Brat Packer returned “intoxicated” and repeatedly banged on her door before he was escorted out by officers.
We reported earlier this month that Sirius Radio host and columnist Falzone, who dated Hall for a year before recently ending the relationship, obtained a temporary restraining order to keep him away from her.
On Nov. 17, Hall went to the Midtown North precinct house, where he was quizzed by detectives, but he’s not under investigation. Hall has previously admitted he suffers from bipolar disorder and was a big drinker before going sober in the ’90s. His rep didn’t get back to us.
(source)
Bi-Polar Breakfast Clubber Anthony Michael Hall Flipped Out On His Girlfriend

“Breakfast Club” star Anthony Michael Hall has been ordered to stay away from his ex-girlfriend Diana Falzone after he allegedly stalked her and attacked her in her New York apartment.
Sirius Radio host Falzone has obtained a temporary restraining order against Hall, a member of the famous 1980s Brat Pack, after claiming he tried to kick down her front door last week.
The order means Hall, 41, who suffers from bipolar disorder, must “refrain from assault, stalking, harassment . . . menacing, reckless endangerment . . . intimidation” of dark-haired Falzone, who had dated him for a year.
Sources said that Falzone, a relationship columnist for the Huffington Post, filed a police complaint last Tuesday, alleging Hall attempted to kick down her door during an early-hours visit. When she finally let him in, he allegedly bashed her head against the wall. She was granted a temporary restraining order in Manhattan Family Court on Thursday, and Hall — who is about to star as a campus bully in the NBC comedy “Community” — is expected to appear at a hearing next week.
Hall, who became known as the ultimate geek after his role in the ’80s classic “Weird Science,” has admitted in the past he started drinking at just 13. As the youngest “Saturday Night Live” regular at 17, he confessed, “I sometimes got in fights and punched people in the face and got drunk.” Hall later claimed he became sober in 1990.
In 2003, Hall was sued by an insurance firm that alleged he did not disclose his bipolar disorder two years earlier while taping the USA cable series “Dead Zone,” didn’t take his medication, and had a psychotic episode that put him in a Vancouver hospital. The lawsuit claimed he had suffered an episode of “bipolar affective disorder depression with psychotic features.” He was discharged from the hospital a day later.
A spokesman for Hall said he was not aware of the temporary restraining order, but insisted, “All of the allegations are erroneous and will be addressed accordingly.”













