Star Wars’ Carrie Fisher Dies at 60

December 28 10:11 2016

It turned out, tragically, to be her last.

Fisher, known best for her role as Princess Leia Organa in Star Wars, suffered what was described by witnesses as a massive heart attack on a plane from London to Los Angeles on December 23.

Her first novel, 1987’s “Postcards from the Edge“, was a semi-autobiographical account of a drug-addicted actress in Hollywood.

Fisher, who was just 60 when she died, made Leia a household name when she first played her in A New Hope in 1977 and reprised her role as the heroic Princess for Episode VII: The Force Awakens in 2015. After the plane landed in California, Fisher was spotted being rushed to the hospital and reports suggested that she was in critical condition.

“I found these three diaries and I was a little saddened by them”. She brought her character back, and in the last one, she was an older person.

In 2011 at a costume convention, Mrs Glasgow won a prize for the Princess Leia costume she was wearing.

“I had no idea it would cause such a sensation”. How lucky we all are to have known her, and how bad that we have to say goodbye’. I’m in a business where the only thing that matters is weight and appearance.

British actor John Boyega, who plays Finn, tweeted: “My heart is heavy but I’m grateful that I got to know her. She was obviously busy but she wanted to spend some time talking with fans”. She will also star in upcoming movie “Star Wars: Episode VIII”, which wrapped earlier this year. She told People Magazine: “It was Han and Leia during the week, and Carrie and Harrison during the weekend”. “That is going to be in the Daily Mail tomorrow”.

“RIP Carrie Fisher, you’ll always have the best buns in the galaxy”, the tweet read. But her fans weren’t the only ones who loved Fisher.

“She will be missed profoundly”, she said. “I discovered recently and it moves me”.

News reports on Saturday said Fisher had just finished filming the third season of the Amazon comedy television series Catastrophe, which is set in London and written by Irishwoman Sharon Horgan and comedian Rob Delaney.

Sure it sounds strange but it was the '70s

Star Wars’ Carrie Fisher Dies at 60
 
 
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