The Press

Kennedy scion an actor and writer whose memoir told of years of drug addiction

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Christophe­r Lawford, who has died of a heart attack aged 63, was an actor, author and member of the Kennedy clan who wrote a memoir about his years of drug addiction and subsequent recovery, and later promoted efforts to help people attain sobriety.

He acted in dozens of films and television shows, including New Zealand director Roger Donaldson’s 2005 movie The World’s Fastest Indian, starring Anthony Hopkins as motorcycli­ng record-setter Burt Munro.

Lawford’s parents were Peter Lawford and Patricia Kennedy Lawford, who was the sister of United States president John F Kennedy, and senators

Robert and

Edward

Kennedy. His father, a popular film actor in the

1940s and 1950s, was a member of the ‘‘Rat Pack’’ with Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr. Lawford grew up in Hollywood, surrounded by glamour, fame and temptation.

‘‘I was given wealth, power and fame when I drew my first breath,’’ he wrote in his bestsellin­g 2005 memoir, Symptoms of Withdrawal.

In the book, he wrote that Marilyn Monroe taught him how to dance the twist. He sat on Sinatra’s knee and recalled that Judy Garland came to his family’s house to play poker.

He also wrote that he once received a gift of scrimshaw – a carved whale’s tooth – from president Kennedy at the Kennedy family’s winter home in Palm Beach, Florida. He acted as something of an older brother to the president’s only son, John F Kennedy Jr.

Christophe­r Kennedy Lawford was born in Santa Monica, California. He was 8 when John F Kennedy was assassinat­ed in 1963, and

13 when Robert Kennedy was killed five years later.

Both of Lawford’s parents struggled with addiction, before and after their divorce in

1966, and he said he began using drugs in his early teens. He was addicted to heroin for a time and in 1980 was arrested in Colorado for impersonat­ing a doctor in an effort to obtain prescripti­on drugs.

‘‘Opiates were my drug of choice,’’ he wrote in his memoir, ‘‘but whatever changed my consciousn­ess was my friend.’’

In spite of his heavy drug use, Lawford graduated in 1977 from Tufts University in Massachuse­tts and in 1983 received a law degree from Boston College.

His father died in 1984 at age 61, after years of drug and alcohol abuse. The same year, Lawford’s 28-year-old cousin David Kennedy, one of Robert Kennedy’s sons, died of a drug overdose. The two were particular­ly close.

Lawford gave credit to his aunt Joan Kennedy – Teddy Kennedy’s first wife – for introducin­g him to an addiction treatment programme in 1986.

‘‘Joan did for me what no doctor, therapist, priest, or guru could do,’’ he said in 2006. ‘‘She brought me to a church basement full of a diverse group of apparent losers who would teach me how to live without drugs and alcohol a day at a time, and a whole lot more.’’

In the late 1980s, Lawford – who bore a striking resemblanc­e to his father – embarked on an acting career. He had roles in the TV soap operas All My Children and General Hospital, and in films including The Russia House, a 1990 spy thriller with Sean Connery and Michelle Pfeiffer, and Oliver Stone’s 1991 rock-music film The Doors.

He also played a naval officer in Thirteen Days, a 2000 film about the Cuban missile crisis, the real-life drama in which John F Kennedy averted a nuclear war with the Soviet Union in 1962.

In addition to his 2005 memoir, Lawford published other books on addiction and recovery, as well as a book on hepatitis C, which he acquired through intravenou­s drug use. ‘‘There are many days when I wish I could take back and use my youth more appropriat­ely,’’ he said. ‘‘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.’’

He studied counsellin­g at Harvard University and lectured on addiction at Harvard, Columbia University and other college campuses, and was a spokesman for the Caron Foundation, a nationwide drug and alcohol rehabilita­tion network.

Lawford’s marriages to Jeannie Olsson and actress Lana Antonova ended in divorce. Survivors include his wife since 2014, Mercedes Miller, a yoga instructor; three children from his first marriage; and three sisters.

Lawford said his childhood taught him not to have any illusions about the lives and troubles of Hollywood stars.

‘‘We can re-create the days when Frank, Dean, Sammy and my dad were together,’’ he said in 2005. ‘‘But they all ended up dysfunctio­nal, messed-up guys. And they once had everything. Money. Good looks. Success. Yet at the end, they were miserable, miserable men alone, angry, drinking. So what’s that all about?’’ – Washington Post

Christophe­r Lawford Actor b March 29, 1955 d September 4, 2018

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 ??  ?? Christophe­r Lawford as friendly biker Jim Moffet in The World’s Fastest Indian, and on set with the film’s star, Anthony Hopkins.
Christophe­r Lawford as friendly biker Jim Moffet in The World’s Fastest Indian, and on set with the film’s star, Anthony Hopkins.

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