USA TODAY US Edition

‘Superman’s Margot Kidder

Actress who played Lois Lane dies at 69.

- Maria Puente

Margot Kidder, the vivacious actress who played Lois Lane opposite Christophe­r Reeve in the Superman movies and then waged a public battle with bipolar disorder, has died, her manager, Camilla Fluxman Pines, confirmed to USA TODAY. She was 69.

Fluxman Pines told USA TODAY that Kidman “died peacefully in her sleep Sunday.” She did not give the cause of death.

Margaret Ruth “Margot” Kidder, born in Yellowknif­e in Canada’s Northwest Territorie­s in October 1948, was Canadian and American, an actress and activist.

She started out in the 1960s in lowbudget Canadian films and TV series, then hit the big time in 1978 with her role as reporter Lois Lane in Superman, reprising the role in three sequels.

But her IMDb page is groaning with more than 130 credits as an actress before and after her Superman role.

She was aware from an early age, according to her diaries, that she suffered from constant mood swings, and she tried to kill herself as early as age 14. By the time she became a movie star, she had sunk into the throes of paranoia and what she would learn was bipolar disorder, a condition characteri­zed by “up” and “down” phases in which the patient experience­s periods of elation or mania followed by bouts of severe depression.

In April 1996, she disappeare­d and ended up living on the street for a period of days. A search was launched after she was reported missing when she failed to board an airplane.

Kidder eventually was found “dirty, frightened and paranoid,” hiding in the bushes of a suburban backyard in Glendale, Calif., police said at the time. She was taken to a psychiatri­c hospital for observatio­n.

“If anything unfortunat­e happened to Margot, my heart goes out to her,” Reeve said in a statement then. “She is a dear friend who has always been there for me, and I would do anything to help her.” (Reeve later was paralyzed in a riding accident and died in 2004.)

At the time of her disappeara­nce, Kidder had been working on an autobiogra­phy, but her laptop was infected with a virus, causing her to lose three years’ work. When the files could not be retrieved, she fell into a manic state.

When she was taken to Olive View Medical Center, the caps on her teeth were knocked out, the result of a rape attempt.

Kidder later started advocating for mental health awareness. In 2007, she said she had not had a manic episode in 11 years, and she credited her health to alternativ­e medicine through nutritiona­l supplement­s.

Kidder is survived by her daughter, Maggie McGuane, with her first husband, American novelist Thomas McGuane, and two grandchild­ren from her daughter’s marriage to novelist Walter Kirn.

Kidder was married to actor John Heard in 1979 for six days and to French film director Philippe de Broca from 1983 to 1984.

Colin Zeman, a spokesman for the Franzen-Davis Funeral Home in Livingston, near Bozeman, Mont., said funeral arrangemen­ts were pending.

 ?? GILBERT CARRASQUIL­LO/FILMMAGIC ?? Margot Kidder spent years promoting mental health awareness. She died Sunday.
GILBERT CARRASQUIL­LO/FILMMAGIC Margot Kidder spent years promoting mental health awareness. She died Sunday.

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