Carrie Fisher, the brash and witty Hollywood princess who became a galactic princess in
Star Wars and later found acclaim as an author and screenwriter, died on Tuesday after suffering
a heart attack on a flight from London to Los Angeles on Friday. She was 60.
Fisher’s death was confirmed to
Entertainment Weekly and PEOPLE in a statement released by family spokesperson Simon Halls on behalf of Fisher’s daughter, Billie Lourd.
“It is with a very deep sadness that Billie Lourd confirms that her
beloved mother Carrie Fisher passed away at 8:55 this morning,” the
statement read. “She was loved by the world and she will be missed
profoundly. Our entire family thanks you for your thoughts and prayers.”
RELATED: Carrie Fisher’s Life in Photos
Fisher was the daughter of entertainers Debbie Reynolds and Eddie
Fisher, and her early proximity to both the glamor and hypocrisies of
fame gave her a lacerating perspective on show business that she wielded
like a double-edged sword. As cutting as she could be about the
industry, Fisher often saved her harshest words for herself.
That vulnerability became, ironically, a kind of armor. In her public
appearances and writing, she never shied away from either the pain or
the humor that she encountered along her unusual journey from being the
child of celebrities to geekdom goddess to literary novelist.
In her recent memoir of 1977’s
Star Wars,
The Princess Diarist,
she wrote about the difficulties of aging while constantly being
confronted with affection from fans for her younger self. Eroticism
clashed with neuroticism in typical Fisher fashion: “When men
— 50-year-old-plus men down to… well, the age goes pretty low for
statutory comfort — when men approach me to let me know that I was their
first love, let’s just say I have mixed feelings. Why did all these men
find it so easy to be in love with me then and so complex to be in love
with me now?”
She made relentless jokes about her “
gold bikini” in
Return of the Jedi as well as her “
baboon’s ass” hairdo in last year’s return to the character in
The Force Awakens.
Fisher both courted and tormented her Star Wars fans at once enjoying
their adulation and recoiling from it, celebrating their devotion while
also raising a skeptical eyebrow at it. Fisher never bought into the
world’s crush on her, but she never wanted it to go away either.
She was born Oct. 21, 1956, in Beverly Hills, California, but she
never knew a happy home with both parents. She was 2 years old when her
parents divorced and her father married Elizabeth Taylor, and the
break-up reverberated throughout her life and work. “You might say I’m a
product of Hollywood inbreeding,” Fisher wrote in her memoir,
Wishful Drinking. “When two celebrities mate, something like me is the result.”
Around age 12, Fisher started sharing the stage with her mother in a
nightclub act. She started but never finished high school, choosing
instead to join the Broadway musical
Irene. She was 17 when she made her film debut opposite Warren Beatty in the 1975 sexual-revolution dramedy
Shampoo, playing a tennis player who seduces her mother’s hairdresser and lover.
“My two scenes in
Shampoo took only a few days to shoot, and
when they were done, I went back to living at home with my mother and
younger brother, Todd, hoping that I wouldn’t be living there for too
much longer, as any amount of time was way too long for the
now-too-hip-for-words me,” Fisher wrote in
The Princess Diarist.
She went on to study at London’s Central School of Speech and Drama
but never graduated. Two words interrupted her life and then changed it
forever:
Star Wars.
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