Mary Jo Scoffs at Joey and Amy's Second Shot at Love
May 17, 2007 — -- Fifteen years ago, Mary Jo Buttafuoco was shot in the face outside her Long Island home by Amy Fisher, the 17-year-old lover of her husband, Joey.
Now going by her birth name, Mary Jo Connery has moved on. She lives in California with her fiancé, Stu Tendler, where they run a small business that designs party posters.
"It's really like an old dream," Connery said in an exclusive interview with "Good Morning America" that airs Friday. "When I look back now, it was a nightmare. I can't believe I survived it. I can't believe I raised a family through it."
Watch "Good Morning America" on Friday for the full interview.
Joey Buttafuoco and Fisher, however, seem ready to stroll down memory lane and take another shot at love.
The duo had dinner together Wednesday night in Port Jefferson, N.Y., where the date was taped and will be shown tonight on "The Insider."
As for the continued fascination with Buttafuoco and Fisher, Connery said, "Why do we like train wrecks? Why do we like to watch? Why do we slow down when we go past an accident scene? It's the nature of the beast, I guess."
Both Buttafuoco, 53, and Fisher, 32, have been served with divorce papers from their current spouses.
Recent reports suggest that the former lovers are in talks to produce a TV reality show.
Connery said she's not surprised. Her ex-husband's motivation, she said, is simple.
"One word: money. Money," she said. "Joe has lost everything. He doesn't have a business; he's been in jail more times than I can count. He has nothing. There's nothing in his life, and he's hit rock bottom, and so this is what he does."
The Buttafuocos and Fisher, dubbed the "Long Island Lolita," all gained instant notoriety after the shooting on May 19, 1992, and the details of the affair became public.
Joey served time in jail for statutory rape, and Fisher served seven years for the assault.Mary Jo, meanwhile, almost died, and she still deals with lingering physical problems from the shooting, including nerve damage and blurred vision in her right eye.