| January 23, 2008 Autopsy to be performed on Heath Ledger
|
NEW YORK (AP) - Heath Ledger, the talented 28-year-old actor who
gravitated toward dark, brooding roles that defied his leading-man
looks, was found dead Tuesday in a Manhattan apartment, face-down
and naked at the foot of his bed with prescription sleeping pills
nearby, police said.
There was no obvious indication that the Australian-born Ledger
had committed suicide, NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said.
Ledger had an appointment for a massage at the SoHo apartment
that is believed to be the home of the "Brokeback Mountain"
actor, Browne said. The massage therapist and a housekeeper found
his naked body in the bed at about 3:30 p.m. They tried to revive
him, but he was already dead.
"We are all deeply saddened and shocked by this accident,"
Ledger's publicist, Mara Buxbaum, said in a statement Tuesday
night. "This is an extremely difficult time for his loved ones and
we are asking the media to please respect the family's privacy and
avoid speculation until the facts are known."
Outside the building on an upscale street, paparazzi and gawkers
gathered, and several police officers put up barricades to control
the crowd of about 300. Onlookers craned their necks as officers
brought out a black body bag on a gurney, took it across the
sidewalk and put it into a white medical examiner's office van.
As the door opened, bystanders snapped pictures with camera
phones, rolled video, and said, "He's coming out!"
An autopsy
was planned for Wednesday, medical examiner's office
spokeswoman Ellen Borakove said.
While not a marquee movie star, Ledger was an award-winning
actor who chose his roles carefully rather than cashing in on
big-money parts. He was nominated for an Oscar for his performance
as a gay cowboy in "Brokeback Mountain," where he met Michelle
Williams, who played his wife in the film. The two had a daughter,
now 2-year-old Matilda, and lived together in Brooklyn until they
split up last year.
It was a shocking and unforeseen conclusion for one of
Hollywood's bright young stars. Though his leading man looks
propelled him to early stardom in films like "10 Things I Hate
About You" and "A Knight's Tale," his career took a notable turn
toward dramatic and brooding roles with 2001's "Monster's Ball."
"I had such great hope for him," said Mel Gibson, who played
Ledger's vengeful father in "The Patriot," in a statement. "He
was just taking off and to lose his life at such a young age is a
tragic loss."
Ledger eschewed Hollywood glitz in favor of a bohemian life in
Brooklyn, where he was one of the borough's most famous residents.
"Brokeback" would be his breakthrough role, establishing him as
one of his generation's finest talents and an actor willing to take
risks.
Ledger began to gravitate more toward independent fare,
including Lasse Hallstrom's "Casanova" and Terry Gilliam's "The
Brothers Grimm," both released in 2005. His 2006 film "Candy"
now seems destined to have an especially haunting quality: In a
particularly realistic performance, Ledger played a poet wrestling
with a heroin addiction along with his girlfriend, played by Abbie
Cornish.
But Ledger's most recent choices were arguably the boldest yet:
He costarred in "I'm Not There," in which he played one of the
many incarnations of Bob Dylan - as did Cate Blanchett, whose
performance in that film earned an Oscar nomination Tuesday for
best supporting actress.
And in what may be his final finished performance, Ledger proved
that he wouldn't be intimidated by taking on a character as iconic
as Jack Nicholson's Joker. Ledger's version of the "Batman"
villain, glimpsed in early teaser trailers, made it clear that his
Joker would be more depraved and dark.
Curiosity about Ledger's final performance will likely stoke
further interest in the summer blockbuster. "Dark Knight"
director Christopher Nolan said earlier this month that Ledger's
Joker would be wildly different from Nicholson's.
"It was a very great challenge for Heath," Nolan said. "He's
extremely original, extremely frightening, tremendously edgy. A
very young character, a very anarchic presence that taps into a lot
of our basic fears and panic."
Ledger told The New York Times in a November interview that he
"stressed out a little too much" during the Dylan film, and had
trouble sleeping while portraying the Joker, whom he called a
"psychopathic, mass-murdering, schizophrenic clown with zero
empathy."
"Last week I probably slept an average of two hours a night,"
Ledger told the newspaper. "I couldn't stop thinking. My body was
exhausted, and my mind was still going." He said he took two
Ambien pills, which only worked for an hour, the paper said.
Ledger was a widely recognized figure in his Manhattan
neighborhood, where he used to shop at a home and children's store.
Michelle Vella, an employee there, said she had frequently seen
Ledger with his daughter - carrying the toddler on his shoulders,
or having ice cream with her.
"It's so sad. They were really close," said Vella. "He's a
very down-to-earth guy and an amazing father."
Before settling down with Williams, Ledger had relationships
with actresses Heather Graham and Naomi Watts. He met Watts while
working on "The Lords of Dogtown," a fictionalized version of a
cult classic skateboarding documentary, in 2004.
Ledger was born in 1979 in Perth, in western Australia, to a
mining engineer and a French teacher, and got his first acting role
playing Peter Pan at age 10 at a local theater company. He began
acting in independent films as a 16-year-old in Sydney and played a
cyclist hoping to land a spot on an Olympic team in a 1996
television show, "Seat."
After several independent films, Ledger moved to Los Angeles at
age 19 and costarred opposite Julia Stiles in "10 Things I Hate
About You." Offers for other teen flicks soon came his way, but
Ledger turned them down, preferring to remain idle than sign on for
projects he didn't like.
"It wasn't a hard decision for me," Ledger told the Associated
Press in 2001. "It was hard for everyone else around me to
understand. Agents were like, `You're crazy,' my parents were like,
`Come on, you have to eat."'