Carrie Fisher's Tragic Death Blamed on 'Star Wars' Sequels, "She Practically Killed Herself"

Comments for Carrie Fisher’s Tragic Death Blamed on ‘Star Wars’ Sequels, “She Practically Killed Herself”

A woman with two side buns in her hair, wearing a white robe, holds a futuristic-looking gun in 'Star Wars: A New Hope.'

Credit: Lucasfilm

4 Comments

  1. Laoise Donnelly

    Lovely woman and talented star. Corporate America usually operated by men still treat women like commodities who must look younger, more attractive, more talented, etc. in order to
    get the plum roles while men receive little regard for these same requirements.

    1. Walt

      Yes because there are so many flabby balding men in leading rolls – its just so obvious that what you claim is true.

  2. Walt

    Perhaps partly true BUT “who was open about her past drug use – had cocaine and traces of heroin, other opiates, and MDMA in her system when she died”. Of course that had NOTHING to do with it.

  3. PLeiaLucas

    I’m sorry, but James Blunt and author Chloe James are wrong. NO, STAR WARS SEQUELS DID NOT KILL CARRIE, and she would NOT agree. Carrie adored being Princess Leia. I adored Carrie ever since she was a toddler. Carrie’s adult career was VERY FULL with all kinds of authoring, live events, film and TV commitments, well beyond Star Wars. However, it was getting traumatized in covert programs during her childhood while watching her family/loved ones suffer that broke her.
    – CARRIE – WE LOVE YOU! –

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