Debbie Reynolds dead, actress once known as "America's Sweetheart" was 84!
Debbie Reynolds, known in the 1950s as “America’s Sweetheart” and
later as a show biz trooper and “triple threat” dancer, singer and
actress, died Wednesday, one day after her own daughter’s death. She was
84.
Her son, Todd Fisher, said Reynolds died Wednesday, a day after her daughter, Carrie Fisher who was 60. “She’s now with Carrie and we’re all heartbroken,” Fisher said from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where his mother was taken by ambulance earlier Wednesday.
Reynolds
had a long career in Hollywood that spanned over four decades, with her
first starring role in “Singin’ in the Rain” at age 19. She starred in
dozens of films in the 1950s and ‘60s, and eventually had her own
short-lived sitcom, “The Debbie Reynolds Show.”
Her personal life, though, also dominated headlines -- her
highly-publicized breakup in 1958 with husband Eddie Fisher (who left
for her for Elizabeth Taylor) has been called the Pitt/Aniston/Jolie
scandal of its time. And later in life, her daughter frequently wrote
about their lives, with Reynolds saying in a 2010 interview that “there is nothing [Carrie] keeps to herself.” She was born Mary Frances Reynolds in El Paso, Texas – giving her the
languid drawl that would help define her image as the ideal American
wife. Reynolds moved to Burbank at age 7, where she was a model Girl
Scout. At age 16, she entered a Miss Burbank beauty pageant contest to
win a free blouse and skirt, and won – which landed her a contract with the Warner Brothers for $65 a week.
Reynolds landed the starring role in “Singin’ in the Rain” without
any formal dance training – and opposite dancing legend Gene Kelly, who
was 20 years her senior. She told CBS Sunday Morning in 2013 that they danced for “10, 12 hours every day – there were no days off.”
As
she old CBS News’ Mo Rocca in 2013, her “heart hurt” as she wondered if
she could keep up. “Could you keep up? Were you going to fail?”
Reynolds described how she felt. “And Gene Kelly kind of scared me,
because he was the boss, and he was brilliant, and he was a wonderful
teacher. He had to teach me. And to be given a little kitty cat, and
expect it to be a lion, it didn’t happen overnight. I had to work, work,
work without question.”
Similar to her character Kathy Selden,
“Singin’ in the Rain” propelled Reynolds to Hollywood stardom. She
appeared in over a dozen films in the 1950s -- including “The Tender
Trap” and “Tammy and the Bachelor”-- and her personal life also
dominated headlines. She married singer Eddie Fisher in 1955, with
daughter Carrie born in 1956 and son Todd followed in 1958. The family
had become bona fide Hollywood royalty.
But it was short-lived. Reynolds had been longtime friends with
Hollywood siren, Elizabeth Taylor. Reynolds described the early days of
their friendship to CBS Sunday Morning, saying “”Elizabeth was really a
gal, you know? She was a dame… She was funny. She was really a bawdy
broad. And I loved being with her. We had a lot of fun together.”
Reynolds
and Fisher were close friends with actress Taylor and her husband, Mike
Todd, and Fisher rushed to Taylor’s side when Todd died in a plane
crash. Fisher eventually left Reynolds, and the breakup was front-page
news --Reynolds beoming the public face of the wronged wife. Taylor and Fisher married, but the marriage ended in divorce in 1964,
after Taylor had an affair with actor Richard Burton. Reynolds said she
had predicted that breakup.
“’You’ll last a year and a half,’” she said she told Fisher. “’And
she’ll throw you out as soon as she meets somebody really funny.’ …
Elizabeth liked men that were really terrifically funny. He laughed --
of course, he thought it was not true. I said to him, you know, ‘It’s
just ridiculous, can’t break up a marriage for this affair you’re having
with Elizabeth because she’s never going to keep you there with her,
because you’re not enough for her. You’re just not enough.’
He laughed
-- of course, he thought it was not true. But he found out when she
threw him out that it WAS true. She DID throw him out.” Reynolds, though, eventually forgave Taylor and wrote in her memoir that “In the long run, Elizabeth did me a favor.” “She had her good side,” Reynolds has said of Taylor. “At least once she got over her sex drive.”
Reynolds
rebounded from the breakup, starring in over a dozen films in the
1960s, including “The Singing Nun,” “How the West Was Won” and “The
Unsinkable Molly Brown.” She headlined her own sitcom, “The Debbie
Reynolds Show,” but it only lasted one season.
Her personal life, though, was still in turmoil. She married shoe
designer Harry Karl in 1960 and then real-estate developer Richard
Hamlett in 1984. Both ended in divorce, and both left her financially
ruined. After the 1996 breakup with Hamlett, she was forced to auction off her vast Hollywood memorabilia, including Laurel and Hardy’s car, a restored chariot from “Ben Hur” and a guitar from “The Sound of Music.” In 2000, Debbie said that she “won’t even date … I can’t afford it.” Reynolds
continued acting through the 2000s, including a recurring role on “Will
and Grace” and the award-winning HBO film “Behind the Candelabra.”
Although her daughter’s semi-autobiographical book “Postcards from
the Edge” seemed to portray a fraught relationship between Reynolds and
her daughter, Carrie Fisher told The New York Timesin 2010 that she “loved being her daughter.” Reynolds eventually bought a house that shared a driveway with Carrie Fisher. Reynolds’ granddaughter, Billie Lourd, is also an actress.
Carrie Fisher, who openly spoke about her struggles with mental illness, wrote that her mother taught her how to “sur-thrive.” “You
know, I’m not a person that cries a lot,” Reynolds told CBS Sunday
Morning in 2013. “The only reason that I get emotional is, it’s so
wonderful that I can’t believe that I have this life and live in this
country so great, that I always well up. You know, there’s a huge
feeling inside that just pops forward.
“What is it people say? I
cry at a good steak. Well, I don’t cry at a good steak. But I sure do
cry for all the lucky things I’ve had happen to me.”
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