Lethbridge Herald

Author, actor dies at 63

KENNEDY SCION CHRISTOPHE­R LAWFORD DIES IN VANCOUVER

- Michelle R. Smith and Andrew Dalton

Author and actor Christophe­r Kennedy Lawford, who was born into political and Hollywood royalty, sank into substance abuse and addiction and rose to become a wellknown advocate for sobriety and recovery, has died.

Lawford died of a heart attack Tuesday in Vancouver, his cousin, former U.S. Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy, told The Associated Press. He was 63.

Lawford was in Vancouver living with his girlfriend and working to open a recovery centre. He had been doing very strenuous hot yoga and “the transition must have been too much for him,” Kennedy said.

Lawford was the only son and oldest child of Patricia Kennedy — sister of John, Robert and Ted Kennedy — and Peter Lawford — the English actor and socialite who was a member of Frank Sinatra’s “Rat Pack.”

“I was given wealth, power and fame when I drew my first breath,” Lawford wrote in his 2005 book, “Symptoms of Withdrawal: A Memoir of Snapshots and Redemption,” the first of several books he wrote about his substance struggles.

He wrote that his parents got telegrams predicting big things for him from Bing Crosby and Dean Martin and said he once got a lesson in doing “The Twist” from Marilyn Monroe. The cover of his books shows him sitting poolside as a child with his uncle and soon-to-be-president John F. Kennedy looming behind him.

He spent his youth frolicking with Hollywood stars on one coast and rubbing shoulders with political stars on the other, living between libertine Los Angeles and the hypercompe­titive Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port, Massachuse­tts, where he was a bigbrother figure to John F. Kennedy Jr.

“You can’t get much more fawned over than being a Kennedy male,” Lawford wrote.

His life with drugs began with LSD while at boarding school at age 14. In the years before, he had experience­d the assassinat­ions of his two uncles and his parents’ divorce in 1966.

Lawford leapt into deeper substance abuse in the drug-heavy culture of 1970s Hollywood, where his father also abused drugs and alcohol as his career faded. Peter Lawford died in 1984. Patricia Kennedy died in 2006.

In his memoir, Christophe­r Lawford told tales of mugging women for money, panhandlin­g in Grand Central Station and getting arrested twice for drug possession before getting sober at 30.

“There are many days when I wish I could take back and use my youth more appropriat­ely,” Lawford told The Associated Press in 2005. “But all of that got me here. I can’t ask for some of my life to be changed and still extract the understand­ing and the life that I have today.”

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