Carrie Fisher On Studio-Ordered Weight Loss

Via Thegaurdian.com:

Actor and writer reveals good-natured battle against studio-ordered weight loss in new documentary about relationship with mother Debbie Reynolds

Carrie Fisher has revealed how the makers of Star Wars: The Force Awakens sent a personal trainer to her home to weigh her, remove unhealthy food from her cupboards and persuade her to exercise.

Fisher was at the Cannes film festival this weekend for Saturday’s screening of the HBO documentary Bright Lights, about her relationship with her mother, the 84-year-old Hollywood icon Debbie Reynolds.

The film, directed by The Cove producer Fisher Stevens, shows the 59-year-old actor being persuaded to perform lunges and use a cross trainer.

While working out on a treadmill, the actor wonders if she will be retrospectively thinned down by Star Wars’ makers if her character Leia Organa should die and return as a “Force ghost”. She asks: “My question is, if you die when you’re fat, are you a fat ghost, or do they go back to a more flattering time?”

At one point in the film, the fitness professional empties Fisher’s kitchen of unhealthy food and drinks. But Fisher reportedly fought back against the fitness regime, buying cans of cola and refusing to do lunges.

Bright Lights features footage of Fisher when she was a little girl, as well as archive material highlighting her mother’s years of Hollywood fame. The actor and comic previously riffed on the relationship for her 1987 semi-autobiographical novel Postcards from the Edge, which was later adapted by the author for the acclaimed 1990 film starring Meryl Streep, who received an Oscar-nomination for the role.

Fisher reprised her role as Leia Organa in JJ Abrams’ blockbuster space opera The Force Awakens last year. She will return as the Resistance leader in the upcoming Star Wars: Episode VIII.

In December the actor and writer revealed she felt pressured to lose 16kg (2st 7lb) for her return to Star Wars, directing criticism at the “insane” image obsession of Hollywood. “They don’t want to hire all of me – only about three-quarters! Nothing changes, it’s an appearance-driven thing,” she told Good Housekeeping magazine. “I’m in a business where the only thing that matters is weight and appearance. That is so messed up. They might as well say get younger, because that’s how easy it is.”

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