Penticton Herald

Star Wars princess Carrie Fisher dies at 60

Actress & author fell ill Friday during flight

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NEW YORK — No one could make us laugh through the pain like Carrie Fisher.

The daughter of Hollywood stars Eddie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds, and a survivor of early fame, drug addiction and bipolar disorder, she wrote with unsentimen­tal wit and understand­ing about her private struggles and about an industry she was raised in but stood apart from.

Fisher, known to the world as Princess Leia in the Star Wars movies, died Tuesday at age 60, four days after falling ill aboard an airline flight. Media reports said the actress had a heart attack.

“I do believe you’re only as sick as your secrets. If that’s true, I’m just really healthy,” she said in a 2009 interview with The Associated Press.

The public fell in love with her twice: as Princess Leia and as the wry truth-teller of such books as Postcards From the Edge, Wishful Drinking and The Princess Diarist, in which she revealed having an intense affair with Star Wars co-star Harrison Ford.

Fisher told plenty of secrets about others — about her parents’ breakup when she was two, about being advised by Warren Beatty on wearing a bra in Shampoo, and about arguing with then-husband Paul Simon about whether it was better to be a man or a woman.

Asked by NPR recently why she wrote about her fling with Ford, who was 15 years older and married, Fisher joked that she could hold back no longer because he had refused to die: “I kept calling and saying, ‘When are you going to die because I want to tell the story?”’

But she was toughest on herself and unafraid to turn trauma into humour. She became the most knowable of celebritie­s, with a great and generous gift for bringing us into her unusual life.

“One of the therapists came in to admit me and asked how long I had been a drug addict,” she wrote in Postcards, her autobiogra­phical novel that became a movie of the same name. “I said I didn’t think I was a drug addict because I didn’t take any one drug. ‘Then you’re a drugs addict,’ she said. She asked if I had deliberate­ly tried to kill myself. I was insulted by the question. I guess when you find yourself having overdosed, it’s a good indicator that your life isn’t working.”

She is survived by her mother; her daughter, Billie Lourd, from a relationsh­ip with talent agent Bryan Lourd; her brother, actor-filmmaker Todd Fisher; and her half-sisters, actresses Joely and Tricia Leigh Fisher. Her father died in 2010.

Born and raised in Beverly Hills, Carrie Fisher was a bookish child who had difficult relationsh­ips with both parents. In a celebrity breakup that made headlines everywhere in 1958, Eddie Fisher left his family for Elizabeth Taylor.

Carrie Fisher went into the family business early — too early, she would later say. She was performing on stage by age 12 and appeared with Reynolds in the 1973 Broadway revival Irene. She was still a teenager when she made her feature film debut in Shampoo in 1975.

Even after Star Wars, Fisher would speak often of feeling overshadow­ed by her mother and about the need to break away, a conflict dramatized in Postcards From the Edge.

Mother and daughter were estranged for years but reconciled later in life and came to admire each other’s talent and determinat­ion. Bright Lights: Starring Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher, an HBO documentar­y, is scheduled for release in 2017.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Harrison Ford, from left, Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill are shown in a scene from the 1977 movie Star Wars. Fisher, who played Princess Leia in the original trilogy and the 2015 reboot, died Tuesday at the age of 60.
The Associated Press Harrison Ford, from left, Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill are shown in a scene from the 1977 movie Star Wars. Fisher, who played Princess Leia in the original trilogy and the 2015 reboot, died Tuesday at the age of 60.

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