The Scotsman

Christophe­r Lawford

Kennedy clan member who beat drug addiction

- AMIE TSANG New York Times 2018. Distribute­d by NYT Syndicatio­n Service.

Christophe­r Kennedy Lawford, author, actor, and activist. Born: 29 March 1955, Santa Monica, United States. Died: 5 September 2018, Vancouver, Canada, aged 63.

Christophe­r Kennedy Lawford, the actor born into political and Hollywood nobility who turned his recovery from drug addiction into a career as a public health advocate and bestsellin­g author, died on Tuesday in Vancouver, British Columbia. He was 63 and had homes in Los Angeles and Hawaii.

The cause was a heart attack, his family said.

Lawford, whose mother was Patricia Kennedy, a sister of John F Kennedy, and whose father was Peter Lawford, the British-born actor and member of the Rat Pack, began acting in the late 1980s and had parts in television programmes like Frasier and The OC, as well as in films including Terminator 3.

He struggled with drug addiction from a young age, describing in his books how he was “a cutting-edge pharmaceut­ical engineer” by the age of 13.

Lawford wrote several books that described his efforts to recover from drug addiction, including Symptoms of Withdrawal, Moments of Clarity and Recover to Live. He described how despite his pedigree and his problems, he never received as much attention as his cousins, saying he was a “second-string Kennedy”.

Lawford spent the last two decades traveling around the US speaking about his experience with drug addiction and was able to change people’s perception­s of the illness, said his cousin Patrick Kennedy, the former Rhode Island congressma­n who also struggled with drug addiction and wrote about it. Lawford was also a public health campaigner, working with the United Nations, the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse and Addiction, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy and the World Health Organisati­on.

Discussion­s about recovery often centre on jail and healthcare, but Lawford managed to convey a more positive aspect, Kennedy said. “Chris was one of those people who had a way of telling stories that lifted people’s perception­s and judgments of those who suffer from the disease of addiction.”

Lawford also made a significan­t difference to Kennedy’s own struggles with addiction, he said.

“I wouldn’t be where I am in life if it weren’t for him,” he said, explaining that Lawford was the one person who was able to understand what it was like to deal with an addiction problem in a family like theirs. “I am a better person because of Chris,” Kennedy added. “And a lot of people can say the same as I can today because of what he contribute­d to their lives.”

Lawford had been a member of California’s Public Health Advisory Committee since 2009. He was named a Goodwill Ambassador on Drug Dependence Treatment and Care by the UN in 2011.

He also worked as a public advocacy consultant to Caron Treatment Centres, which runs rehabilita­tion programmes. “He was always unflinchin­gly honest about his story,” Doug Tieman, the body’s president and chief executive, said.

Christophe­r Kennedy Lawford, who was born in Santa Monica, California, on 29 March 1955, held a bachelor’s degree from Tufts University, a law degree from Boston College Law School and a master’s certificat­ion in clinical psychology from Harvard Medical School.

Lawford, who was married and divorced three times, is survived by his children David, Savannah and Matthew; and his sisters Sydney Lawford Mckelvy, Victoria Pender and Robin Lawford.

“Chris had a way of telling stories that lifted people’s judgments of those who suffer from the disease of addiction”

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