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Actress-writer Carrie Fisher dies
Carrie Fisher, known to the world as Princess Leia of “Star Wars,” died Tuesday at age 60, four days after falling ill aboard an airline flight.
Actress and writer Carrie Fisher, who rose to global fame as trailblazing intergalactic heroine Princess Leia in the “Star Wars” franchise and went on to establish herself as an author and screenwriter with an acerbic comic flair, has died.
Fisher suffered a heart attack Friday while on a flight to Los Angeles from London, where she had been filming the third season of the Amazon comedy series “Catastrophe.” Upon landing, she was rushed to UCLA Medical Center, but after three days in intensive care, she died, AP confirmed. She was 60 years old.
From the moment she first stepped onto the screen in 1977’s “Star Wars,” the character of Leia Organa — whip smart, wryly funny and fearless enough to stand up to the likes of Darth Vader without batting an eye, with an instantly iconic set of buns on either side of her head — inspired generations of young girls to be bold, while inspiring crushes in generations of young boys.
Decades later, when Fisher returned to the role in last year’s “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” she reflected on her status as a new kind role model in the pop culture landscape. “I remember the first time, it was weird to me was when someone wanted to thank me because they’d become a lawyer because of me,” Fisher said. “The main thing they said is that they identified with me. I felt like that was somebody that could be heroic without being a superhero and be relatable.”
Fisher’s off-screen life was more messy, marked by bouts of drug abuse, a complicated family history and struggles with mental illness, all of which she would use as material for lacerating comedy in her numerous works of fiction and nonfiction.
Born into Hollywood royalty on Oct. 21, 1956, to singer Eddie Fisher and actress Debbie Reynolds, who divorced when she was 2, Fisher rocketed to fame when director George Lucas cast her as Leia in his space opera while she was still a teen. She reprised the role in 1980’s “The Empire Strikes Back” and 1983’s “Return of the Jedi.”
Fisher continued to act on occasion in films, such as Woody Allen’s “Hannah and Her Sisters” and the romantic comedy “When Harry Met Sally…” But the shadow of “Star Wars” was not easy to escape, and it wasn’t until Fisher turned to writing with the semi-autobiographical 1987 novel, “Postcards From the Edge,” that she began to define herself outside of the role of Princess Leia.
In “Postcards from the Edge,” Fisher satirized her own acting career, her offscreen struggle with drug abuse and bipolar disorder and her sometimes stormy relationship with her mother. (The bond between Fisher and Reynolds is explored in of an upcoming HBO documentary, “Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds.”) “Postcards From the Edge” was adapted for the big screen by director Mike Nichols in 1990 and went on to launch an entirely new career for Fisher as a bestselling author and screenwriter.
She also earned steady work as one of the film industry’s most in-demand script doctors. At the time of her death, Fisher was on tour promoting her recently published book, “The Princess Diarist.”
Fisher was briefly married to singer Paul Simon in the early 1980s and had a daughter, Billie Catherine Lourd, from a later relationship with talent agent Bryan Lourd.
Fisher had been confirmed to return to the role of Leia in the next installment in the franchise, “Episode VIII,” due in theaters December 2017. The film finished shooting this summer, but plot details, including what part Leia plays in it, have been kept tightly under wraps.
Besides her daughter and mother, Fisher is survived by her brother, Todd Fisher.