Los Angeles Times

Final ‘show’ for Hollywood duo

Fans at Forest Lawn honor iconic mother-daughter duo

- By Rosanna Xia rosanna.xia@latimes.com

Hundreds pay tribute to Carrie Fisher and her mother, Debbie Reynolds, at Forest Lawn.

Under clear blue skies, hundreds of fans made the pilgrimage Saturday to Forest Lawn Memorial ParkHollyw­ood Hills’ Hall of Liberty to pay tribute to actress Carrie Fisher and her mother, Debbie Reynolds.

“These were my girls,” Todd Fisher, who organized the public memorial with his wife, told those who had gathered to honor the memory of his famous sister and mother.

Fisher shared some family stories with the audience and noted Reynold’s lifelong love affair with show business, drawing laughs and tears from the audience.

“This entire thing I’m calling a show, not a memorial, because my mother… liked shows and parties,” he said. “So this show was really designed for you to be in our living room, as if we were all a big family, celebratin­g two amazing women.”

In the hours before the ceremony, hundreds of fans formed a long line outside the pavilion with many wearing wristbands that said “Debbie and Carrie forever in our hearts” and clutching programs imprinted with the quote, “Don’t be afraid of death, be afraid of an un-lived life.”

Some wore elegant dresses and suits while others donned “Star Wars” attire in tribute to Carrie Fisher. They shared opinions of their favorite movies and their admiration for the two women who struck them as ”genuinely lovely,” inspiring and “unapologet­ically themselves.”

For the 1,200 or so who got a seat inside the hall, the ceremony was a cherished slice of Hollywood history. Crystal Jackson drove from Arizona with her daughter Heather, and her 4-year-old and 2-year-old granddaugh­ters, “to share this experience with so many other people who loved Debbie and Carrie, too.”

“It feels like we’re here to mourn — and to celebrate — a family member today. I mean, we all grew up with them,” Heather Jackson said, looking around at all of those gathered in the hall. “We idolize them. Their relationsh­ip is like what my mother and I have.”

“I hope they know how much they are loved,” Kenneth Parkhurst, 43, said. He had driven down from Orangevale in the Sacramento area and arrived at the cemetery by 7 a.m. to ensure that he had a seat for the 1 p.m. ceremony.

Donning a black “Star Wars” cap, Parkhurst had patiently waited in line all morning, flipping through Fisher’s most recent book, “The Princess Diarist.”

“She was more than just our princess, she was our ambassador,” he said. “She would make you feel included in whatever you saw her in. You weren’t just entertaine­d, she made you feel like part of the club.”

Fisher, 60, an actress and writer who starred as Princess Leia in the original “Star Wars” trilogy, died Dec. 27 after suffering a medical emergency days earlier aboard a flight from London.

Reynolds, 84, whose singing and dancing in “Singin’ in the Rain” and other musicals turned her into America’s sweetheart and an iconic box office star for years, died the following day.

Todd Fisher told media outlets at the time that his mother was under stress over the death of her daughter and suffered a stroke at her home.

Close friends and family held a private funeral in January. Organizing a public ceremony for their many fans, Fisher said, was in keeping with how both women embraced the people who supported and adored them.

Saturday’s memorial opened with a color guard and included a mournful R2D2 robot, video segments commemorat­ing both women’s accomplish­ments and philanthro­py, dance tributes by the Debbie Reynolds Studio as well as a performanc­e by the Gay Men’s Chorus of Los Angeles.

There was also music by “Star Wars” composer John Williams, and a new song written in honor of Fisher by British singer James Blunt that played over family photo montages. Many cried openly as the new song closed on this line: “I’m here to let you know / I’m here to let you go.”

Allison Zahigian, 25, a filmmaker from Thousand Oaks, and her friend Kylie McMillan, 22, who flew in from Seattle, reminisced about growing up with “Singin’ in the Rain,” “Halloweent­own” and all the books Fisher penned in her raw and honest style.

“She taught me to be unapologet­ically myself. And Debbie...,” Zahigian said, looking down wistfully, “another woman who taught me that being normal is overrated.”

After the service, both women joined other fans in a reflective walk to the Forest Lawn’s Courts of Remembranc­e, where Fisher and Reynolds were laid to rest next to each other.

 ?? Photograph­s by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? THE GAY Men’s Chorus of Los Angeles sings at a memorial for “Star Wars” actress and author Carrie Fisher and her mother, Hollywood icon Debbie Reynolds, at Forest Lawn Memorial Park-Hollywood Hills.
Photograph­s by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times THE GAY Men’s Chorus of Los Angeles sings at a memorial for “Star Wars” actress and author Carrie Fisher and her mother, Hollywood icon Debbie Reynolds, at Forest Lawn Memorial Park-Hollywood Hills.
 ??  ?? TODD FISHER, hugging R2-D2, called the service for his mother and sister a celebratio­n of “two amazing women,” who died in December a day apart.
TODD FISHER, hugging R2-D2, called the service for his mother and sister a celebratio­n of “two amazing women,” who died in December a day apart.

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