Audio released of Carrie Fisher emergency call1:04
In a new audio recording, the pilot of the plane carrying Star Wars actress Carrie Fisher speaks with air traffic control about her medical emergency as the aircraft approaches Los Angeles for landing.
Star Wars actress suffers massive heart attack mid-flight
HOLLYWOOD star Carrie Fisher is reportedly stable after suffering a massive heart attack on a jetliner on Friday, emergency workers and a witness said.
The 60-year-old Star Wars actress was flying from London to Los Angeles when she suffered cardiac arrest, and was given cardiopulmonary resuscitation by an emergency responder on board.
Fisher collapsed 15 minutes before the plane landed at LAX, according to celebrity news website TMZ, and was rushed to a nearby hospital.
Carrie Fisher
Fisher’s brother, Todd Fisher, told The Associated Press that she was “out of emergency” and stabilised at a Los Angeles hospital on Friday afternoon. He said he could not discuss any other details about what happened.
In a subsequent interview he said many details about her condition or what caused the medical emergency are unknown, and much of what had been reported was speculation.
“We have to wait and be patient,” he said. “We have so little information ourselves.”
Fisher’s publicists and representatives for her mother, Debbie Reynolds and daughter Billie Lourd did not immediately return calls from the AP - although Lourd was reported to have rished to UCLA Medical Center in the company of Fisher’s beloved french bulldog, Gary.
Star Wars co-stars Mark Hamill, Billy Dee Williams and Peter Mayhew shared their best wishes on social media, along with many other stars.
as if 2016 couldn't get any worse... sending all our love to @carrieffisher
— Mark Hamill (@HamillHimself) December 23, 2016
Sending my love. Please recover @carrieffisher
— Billy Dee Williams (@realbdw) December 24, 2016
Thoughts and prayers for our friend and everyone's favorite princess right now.. @carrieffisher
— Peter Mayhew (@TheWookieeRoars) December 23, 2016
I ask everyone to stop for a moment and send special thoughts to @carrieffisher.
— William Shatner (@WilliamShatner) December 23, 2016
#CarrieFisher's had a heart attack; hope and pray she recovers soon. Quick witted, hilarious on paper and in person, and just plain beloved.
— Bette Midler (@BetteMidler) December 23, 2016
Dear 2016, don't you dare take Carrie Fisher pic.twitter.com/VyYVseG9lA
— David 🕸 (@RogueNoOne) December 23, 2016
Many messages on social media referenced the abnormally high number of celebrity deaths to have taken place during 2016, with a plea that Fisher was not added to their number. Star Wars fans mourned the loss of Kenny Baker, who played R2-D2 in the franchise, in August this year.
The Los Angeles Times said Fisher’s condition was critical, quoting an unnamed source who said the actress was “in a lot of distress on the flight.”
The American actress has talked and written frequently about her years of drug addiction and mental illness.
The Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) did not refer to the actress by name but confirmed it had responded to an alert just after midday over “a patient on an inbound flight in cardiac arrest.”
“LAFD firefighter paramedics were standing by and provided immediate advanced life support and aggressively treated and transported the patient to a local hospital,” spokesman Erik Scott told AFP.
Fisher was catapulted to worldwide stardom as the rebel warrior Princess Leia in the original Star Wars trilogy, which has been a cultural phenomenon since the release of the films from 1977 to 1983.
Steeped in Hollywood excess from an early age, she was the product of the four-year marriage of movie star Debbie Reynolds, best-known for her role in Singin’ In The Rain and singer Eddie Fisher.
The relationship, and the happy home in Beverly Hills, came to an end when Fisher left Reynolds for her close friend, the actress Elizabeth Taylor.
Fisher is also known for her searingly honest semi-autobiographical novels, including her best-selling debut Postcards from the Edge which she turned into a film of the same name in 1990.
She has given various interviews over the years about her diagnosis of bipolar disorder and addiction to prescription drugs and cocaine, which she admitted using on the set of The Empire Strikes Back (1980).
She has also discussed being treated with electroconvulsive therapy, in which small electric currents are passed through the brain, to trigger brief seizures.
Writer and actress Anna Akana, who said she was on board Fisher’s flight, described the midair drama in a series of tweets, voicing her “shock and sadness.” “Don’t know how else to process this but Carrie Fisher stopped breathing on the flight home. Hope she’s gonna be OK,” she said.
“So many thanks to the United flight crew who jumped into action, and the awesome doctor and nurse passengers who helped Feel weird even tweeting about it but I JUST finished her book and was fangirling out over seeing her dog Gary in person.”
Fisher’s famous Star Wars character features as part of the storyline to spin-off Rogue One which is currently riding high in box offices around the globe, although the actress is understood not to have been involved in the production.
It was only in November that Fisher shocked Star Wars fans with the revelation that she hooked up with co-star Harrison Ford during the film, but that he was a “bad kisser” and no so hot in bed.
But Fisher says she let it slide because “he was really handsome.”
In her tome The Princess Diarist, the actress recalls how she first met the then-34-year-old Ford on the London set of the 1977 blockbuster classic when she was just 19.
While Fisher has hinted in the past that the pair may have fooled around, she gets down and dirty in the book, revealing that he allegedly got her drunk and seduced her during filming, part of which took place in Tunisia.
Originally published as Movie star’s massive heart attack