Tribute: Carrie Fisher

Tribute: Carrie Fisher

Posted on December 27, 2016 at 3:55 pm

Copyright Lucas Films 1980

We mourn the loss of Carrie Fisher, who has died of a heart attack at age 60.

Her first two movie roles were in films that have becomes icon of their eras: “Shampoo” and the original “Star Wars,” now known as “A New Hope.”  In both, she wore white. Other than that, they had little in common, introducing us to a performer with confidence and range.  She has said that George Lucas gave her little direction as she had to watch a green screen that would some day have an image of her planet being destroyed.  All he said was, “Look over there.” But, still a teenager, she instantly conveyed the fierce resolve that made Princess Leia a heroine to lift the hearts of boys and girls around the world and across the generations.  She even survived one of the worst hairstyles in the history of movies.

She also survived a Hollywood childhood of chaos in the public eye.  Her parents, Debbie Reynolds (who also became a movie superstar while still in her teens, when she made “Singin’ in the Rain”) and pop star Eddie Fisher were considered America’s sweethearts, until Fisher left Reynolds for the just-widowed Elizabeth Taylor (who would leave him for then-married Richard Burton).  Fisher explored her relationship with her mother and her recovery from drug abuse in Postcards from the Edge, first a novel and then a movie starring Meryl Streep and Shirley MacLaine, and her relationship with singer Paul Simon, including a brief marriage, in Surrender the Pink.

She was an uncredited script doctor for many films, including “The Empire Strikes Back.”

Copyright 1980 Lucas Film

If the heroine of a romantic comedy (or her sarcastic best friend) has a witty quip, more than likely that was written by Carrie Fisher. She reportedly sharpened up the dialog on “Sister Act,” “The Wedding Singer,” “Lethal Weapon 3,” and “Hook.”  Perhaps her most apt role was as the quippy best friend in Nora Ephron’s When Harry Met Sally. Slate has a lovely tribute to that role.

I was lucky enough to see her one-woman show, “Wishful Drinking,” based on her memoir. I loved the story she told about what happened when her mother found out she had dropped LSD. “So, she called Cary Grant,” Fisher said with a dry edge. “As one does.” And no one could bring down the house with one syllable the way she did in describing some of the people on her very complicated family tree. She would assign them their legal relationship and then pause for just a beat to add, “ish.”

Fisher was fearless about her failures and challenges, from her struggles with bi-polar disorder and drugs to personal upheaval. She was a devoted mother to her Billie Lourd, who is following in the family tradition by appearing on the television series “Scream Queens.”

Like fans everywhere, I sighed with happiness to see Han Solo and Leia embrace in “The Force Awakens” last year. And like fans everywhere, I wept to hear that she left us today. The Force was strong with that one. May her memory be a blessing.

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Tribute: Zsa Zsa Gabor

Posted on December 18, 2016 at 7:17 pm

We mourn the loss of one of the 20th century’s most glamorous figures, Zsa Zsa Gabor, who went from teenage Hungarian beauty queen to much-married movie star and died today at age 99.

Long before social media and personal brands, she was a master of self-promotion, including perpetuating and mocking her own image. She said, “I am a marvelous housekeeper. Every time I leave a man I keep his house.” Her nine husbands included hotel magnate Conrad Hilton, actor George Sanders, and the one who survives her, Frédéric Prinz von Anhalt, who paid a princess to adopt him when he was in his 30’s so he could (arguably) gain a title and who claimed to be the father of Anna Nicole Smith’s child (he was not). He was more than 20 years her junior.

In later years, her sister Eva Gabor was better known because she starred in the popular television series “Green Acres.” But Zsa Zsa had a lead role in “Moulin Rouge,” directed by John Huston and also appeared in “Gigi” as the subject of the song, “She’s Not Thinking of Me.”

May her memory be a blessing.

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Tribute: Florence Henderson

Posted on November 25, 2016 at 9:19 am

We mourn the loss of singer/actress Florence Henderson, the iconic Carol, mother of three very lovely girls (the youngest one in curls), who married Mike Brady, father of three boys, and created television’s most beloved blended family. Her shag haircut and unquenchable cheer were a highlight of the Brady home, which became a home for kids who watched it in reruns after school. It is still running, almost half a century since its premiere in 1969.

She was a talented singer who toured as Maria in “The Sound of Music” and the title role in the stage production of “Fanny,” and she starred in a legendary movie musical flop, “The Song of Norway.”

She was much more game than her sugary image, with a raunchy appearance on the Friar’s roast for Jerry Stiller and participation in “Dancing With the Stars.” May her memory be a blessing.

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Tribute: Robert Vaughn

Posted on November 12, 2016 at 8:00 am

We mourn the loss of actor Robert Vaughn, whose silky charm made him the perfect choice to play the role of the second most famous spy character created by Ian Fleming: Napoleon Solo on the 1960’s television series “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.”

He was also one of the original “Magnificent Seven,” the one with a Southern accent and a drinking problem.

He also appeared in “Bullitt” and “The Towering Inferno,” and played the villain in “Superman III.”

May his memory be a blessing.

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