So often associated with her iconic role as Princess Leia in George's Lucas' Star Wars franchise, few fans likely take the time to distinguish the differences between Leia and Carrie Fisher herself. After the show last Thursday, she ceased to be Princess Leia for me. Now she's simply, Carrie Fisher -- comedienne, author, businesswoman and a star of the stage.
We all know Fisher is funny. She has a knack for nailing her lines in one episode stints on hit TV shows like Sex and the City and 30 Rock. But there's no real way of preparing yourself for her refreshing, hilarious, brutally honest and self-deprecating account of her own life story.
And what a bizarre, and often tragic, life she's led! As Fisher herself said at one point, "If I didn't make it (my life) funny, it would just be true. And I couldn't have that."
Fisher structures her show as a series of vignettes -- starting with the sudden death of her close friend, Gregory R. Stevens, in 2005. She woke up to find his corpse lying in the bed next to her. Watching her relate the story full of emotion and humour is fascinating to witness. (You can check out her blog entry on the subject at her official website).
Hollywood Inbreeding 101. |
She discusses everything from her broken home to her father's countless marriages and affairs -- most famously with Elizabeth Taylor, her mother's best friend at the time. When Taylor's husband, Mike Todd, died in a plane crash, her father Eddie immediately ran to support Taylor. "Daddy rushed to her side, than he worked his way around to her front and finally wound up comforting her with his penis."
But what is clear from Fisher's show is that, despite her often strained relations with members of her family, she's a woman who loves them dearly. Whether she's recounting the time her aging father accidentally ate his hearing aids or about how her mother insists on stating her own name every time she calls on the phone ("Hello, dear. It's your mother ...Debbie."), Fisher tells her life stories in such a hilariously candid and touching manner. When gushing about her 19-year-old daughter, Billie, Fisher memorably exclaims that "she's the best thing to ever come out of my body."
Unlike many celebrity memoirs Fisher is not asking her audience for sympathy. She openly blames herself for her own mistakes, saying it would be lazy to blame Hollywood and her broken home for her woes -- and, besides, her brother turned out to lead a perfectly normal and happy life; a rare exception for someone descended from Hollywood royalty.
She will quite openly talk about her bi-polar diagnosis and ECT treatments although she's a little more restrained in her delivery -- as Toronto Star theatre critic Richard Ouzounian wrote: "despite the jokes, quips, the gal-pal merriment, there is something seriously life-threatening underneath."
However, her energy is contagious and, if nothing else, drives home her overriding theme that life is what you make it. If only we were all brave enough to laugh at our faults and failures.
Oh, I was watching it on one of the HBO channels and I was just floored by what she was saying. My favorite segment, aside from the Hollywood 101 part where she says to her daughter and one of Liz Taylor's grandsons that they're related by scandal, is the stuff relating to Star Wars. The fact that she admits that she's a Pez dispenser and eventually become of all things, a sex doll. The idea of someone telling Carrie Fisher to go fuck herself and now she has a reason to. I bet she's still mad that George Lucas is making money off of her likeness. Can't she at least get a cut from all of that stuff?
ReplyDelete"Related by scandal", yeah I remember that line! She had so many great lines that it's hard to remember them all! I'll have to watch the HBO special just to remind myself.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I was shocked when she revealed that George Lucas owns the rights to her likeness. But she was only 19 in the first Star Wars film so she was probably too young and naive to truly understand all the stuff she was assigning and agreeing to. If it's a legal document than it's unlikely she can get any cut from it. Damn that Lucas!
Funny isn't it? With the Stars Wars franchise only Harrison Ford went on to really forge a big career. But he had been around a while before hane but SW certainly helped propel him further. Alec Guinness was of course already WELL established!
ReplyDeleteBut really everyone else faded away. Mark Hamill literally went into obscurity after SW.
I never realised Fisher was under such constraints with her Leia role. In fact before reading your post I never knew much about her. I certainly knew of the booze but little else, not even knowing she'd been on TV recently with 30 Rock and Sex & City.
Harrison Ford was around but not a big name yet, but he was definitely the only real breakout star of the series.
ReplyDeleteMark Hamill does a lot of voice over work. He's The Joker in Batman The Animated Series. He's a pretty funny guy, too. I follow him on Twitter and he seems perfectly content with just being a regular joe who does some voice work.
Carrie Fisher has always been around. She's written three books (one of which was adapted into the Meryl Streep film, Postcards from the Edge) and, as I mentioned, she's done guest work. But, like Hamill, she's kind of done her own thing. Absolutely hilarious woman. I wish her well.
I couldn't believe it because I was in my local library today and quite literarly stumbled across one of her novels!
ReplyDeleteBut even more incredible was the fact that your number one Marlon Brando, wrote a novel as well! It's called Fan-Tan. Funny thing is that the bio I read recently made no mention of it.
I think with Hamill that he has had to do his own thing because after Stars Wars no-one picked him up and helped his career forward. That is what I've read but it could be wrong and maybe Hamill really did want to be an regular joe.
Yeah, Fan Tan wasn't a very big success. I don't know much about it. He wrote his own autobiography, though (Songs My Mother Taught Me) but it has been out of print for years.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure Hamill wished he could have done more mainstream work but he seems really low key so I think, in his case, it worked out for the best.