New York Daily News

BELOVED PRINCESS

Tributes go into hyperdrive for ‘Star Wars’ icon Inspiring life of actress, writer — and rebel

- BY ETHAN SACKS

Despite mental illness & drug woes, star thrived

BEING KNOWN as Princess Leia didn’t always feel like a fairy tale come true for Carrie Fisher.

When George Lucas cast her for the part in “Star Wars,” Fisher was just 19 years old — and she would eventually feel that the blockbuste­r cast a Death Starsized shadow over the rest of her career.

The progeny of two wellknown celebritie­s — singer Eddie Fisher and MGM musical queen Debbie Reynolds — knew full well the expectatio­ns that came with following her famous parents into showbiz.

She was so self conscious filming her first scene that she couldn’t help but adopt a British accent to mimic her on-screen foil, the English actor Peter Cushing.

That affect disappeare­d during production. Her unease, however, didn’t, especially after the movie shattered all records when it opened in 1977.

Those first takes — part of her audition for the role that would make her famous — lives on to this day on YouTube.

Fisher — best remembered as the tough and feisty Princess Leia in the original “Star Wars,” died Tuesday at age 60. Fisher had suffered a heart attack last Friday on a flight from London to Los Angeles and had been hospitaliz­ed in Los Angeles.

Fisher leaves behind a daughter, 24-year-old Billie Lourd, with talent agent Bryan Lourd.

The actress was also briefly married to singer Paul Simon in the mid 1980s. The song “Hearts and Bones” was written about their relationsh­ip. The Simon song “Graceland” is also thought to be about seeking solace from the end of their relationsh­ip.

While Fisher appeared in dozens of other movies — she will forever be remembered as the iconic “Star Wars” character.

“I can’t do anything else,” Fisher told the Daily News in 2015. “No she’s me and I’m her, a Moebius striptease. I was cast for a reason and look, but then I wasn’t cast a lot as anything else. I’m really associated as this character.

“So when people think of me they think of me as me and her together,” she added.

Fisher would later lament that she wished Leia was more like the female heroes of the current era — the one with her own lightsaber like Daisy Ridley’s Rey in “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” instead of the one stuffed into a gold bikini for male fans to ogle.

Maybe it was the pressures of superstard­om thrust on her petite shoulders. Or maybe it was just the ready availabili­ty of cocaine in Hollywood in the era — but she later admitted during the sequel, “The Empire Strikes Back,” she snorted enough coke to fill the snowy planet of Hoth.

For a long time that drug use threatened to eclipse her body of work — all the way through a 2005 night of debauchery ending with Republican lobbyist R. Gregory Stevens dying of an overdose in her home.

She also struggled after being diagnosed with bipolar disorder at the age of 29.

Over time, she became comfortabl­e speaking publicly about her mental state, an inspiratio­n to many, less famous people struggling with the same condition, even if the medication sometimes made her slur her words a bit. In recent years, her therapy dog, Gary, a ubiquitous presence wherever she went, became a star in his own right.

But there was much more going on between those two iconic hair-buns: Fisher emerged from the fog of her worst drug addled days to become an accomplish­ed writer. Her 1987 novel, “Postcards From the Edge,” loosely inspired by her own relationsh­ip with her showbiz mother, won critical acclaim and inspired a film starring Meryl Streep three years later.

She played supporting roles in a number of memorable movies at the end of that decade — including “When Harry Met Sally” (1989), “The ’Burbs” (1989) and “Soapdish” (1991) — but she really shined off screen.

Fisher found a second career as far away from the marquee as possible, as a highly in demand script doctor whose acerbic wit helped add needed zing to movies like “Hook” (1991), “Sister Act” (1992) and “The Wedding Singer” (1998).

By the time she got the chance to reprise Princess Leia in last year’s “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” Fisher had found a new sense of comfort in that galaxy far, far away.

“The thing I remember most vividly (from my first day on the set): I was in my trailer. Harrison’s got a particular way his boots sound when he walks,” Fisher told The News last year.

“So I heard that sound and his voice, ‘Carrie, are you there?’ That was something. It takes you back.”

Earlier this year, in her just-released memoir, “The Princess Diarist,” Fisher revealed that she knocked boots with the married Ford during the production of the original “Star Wars.”

The notoriousl­y gruff Ford probably wasn’t as amused by the revelation as the rest of us. That, however, was Fisher at her best — hilarious, infuriatin­g, and slightly off kilter.

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 ??  ?? Carrie Fisher, with Mark Hamill and Harrison Ford, captivated audiences in “Star Wars” and “Return of the Jedi” (below). Bottom inset, as intense ingenue at “Star Wars” audition.
Carrie Fisher, with Mark Hamill and Harrison Ford, captivated audiences in “Star Wars” and “Return of the Jedi” (below). Bottom inset, as intense ingenue at “Star Wars” audition.
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 ??  ?? Carrie Fisher had more on her list of credits than “Star Wars.” At left, she starred in “Shampoo,” (above) in “The Blues Brothers,” and (top) “When Harry Met Sally.”
Carrie Fisher had more on her list of credits than “Star Wars.” At left, she starred in “Shampoo,” (above) in “The Blues Brothers,” and (top) “When Harry Met Sally.”

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