Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Carrie Fisher was secretly one of Hollywood's best script doctors

begin quote from:

Carrie Fisher was secretly one of Hollywood's best script doctors

New York Daily News - ‎3 minutes ago‎
EXCLUSIVE: Selena Gomez Beats Out Taylor Swift and Beyonce for Most Popular Instagram User of 2016! Donald Trump: NAFTA Is One Lane Highway Into Mexico.
Star Wars' Carrie Fisher Dead at 60
'Devastated' Mark Hamill, Star Wars Alums and More Stars React to Carrie Fisher's Death
Iconic Star Wars Actress Carrie Fisher Dies at 60: 'She Was Loved by the World and She Will Be Missed Profoundly'
Movies|Carrie Fisher, Child of Hollywood and 'Star Wars' Royalty, Dies at 60
Tina Fey Remembers Carrie Fishers Legendary 30 Rock Performance and Razor-Sharp Wit
Carrie Fisher
Subscribe

Carrie Fisher was more than just an actress — she was one of Hollywood’s best script doctors 

Autoplay: On | Off
Carrie Fisher’s talent extended far, far beyond portraying Princess Leia — the witty writer was also the creative mind behind some of Hollywood's popular films.
The celebrated actress — who rose to fame as Princess Leia in the 1977 hit "Star Wars: A New Hope" — was also known as one of Hollywood's best script doctors as she would examine screenplays for any needed fixes.
Fisher, who died on Tuesday at 60, made monumental changes to the dialogue of popular '90s films like "Hook," "Lethal Weapon 3," "Sister Act," and "The Wedding Singer."
Carrie Fisher, famous actress and talented writer, died on Tuesday at 60.

Carrie Fisher, famous actress and talented writer, died on Tuesday at 60.

(REX/Shutterstock/REX/Shutterstock)
She was ultimately one of the most sought after script fixers in the business at the time, according to The Independent.
‘Star Wars’ icon Carrie Fisher dead at 60
Her success revamping the film "Hook," which starred Robin Williams, helped her land gigs as a script doctor for the aforementioned movies, as well as "Outbreak."
�TriStar Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Robin Williams in the 1991 film “Hook,” which was adjusted at the hand of Carrie Fisher.

(©TriStar Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection/©TriStar Pictures/Courtesy Ever)
Fisher was even brought on to take a look at the "Star Wars" prequels after exhibiting her skills.
Her work making adjustments to famous scripts all began when she improved her own dialogue in the "Star Wars" films.
An early version of her "Empire Strikes Back" script shows Fisher's handwritten notes with changes to her own lines. She also crosses out portions of Han Solo's lines that she didn't deem were needed.
Carrie Fisher wanted Leia to grow old with Solo
Back in 2008, the star told Newsweek she gave up on script doctoring after the nature of the business changed.
"I haven't done it for a few years. I did it for many years, and then younger people came to do it and I started to do new things. It was a long, very lucrative episode of my life. But it's complicated to do that," she explained.
"Now in order to get a rewrite job, you have to submit your notes for your ideas on how to fix the script. So they can get all the notes from all the different writers, keep the notes and not hire you. That's free work and that's what I always call life-wasting events," she added, showcasing her witty sense of humor.
SEPT. 14, 1990 FILE PHOTO

Carrie Fisher in Beverly Hills, Calif. in 1990 — around the time she found success as one of Hollywood’s best script doctors.

(Julie Markes/ASSOCIATED PRESS)
The actress was no stranger to taking her talents to paper.
She also penned the novels, “Postcards from the Edge,” “The Best Awful,” “Surrender the Pink,” and “Delusions of Grandma” before deciding memoirs were the way to go.
In 2008, she wrote “Wishful Drinking,” followed by “Shockaholic” in 2011. Most recently, she published the memoir “The Princess Diarist,” which detailed her on-screen affair with co-star Harrison Ford.
Fisher died on Tuesday after having suffered a heart attack on an airplane days prior while traveling from promoting the latest memoir.
Tags:
carrie fisher
 

No comments: