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Family bids farewell to Ledger in hometown
Patrick Riviere
PERTH—Heath Ledger was remembered at a private memorial service in his
Australian home town on Saturday, with fellow actor Cate Blanchett
giving a eulogy and Ledger’s father thanking his son’s fans for their
support.
Ledger, 28, best known for his role as a conflicted gay cowboy in the
2005 movie “Brokeback Mountain,” died of an accidental overdose of
prescription drugs in his New York apartment on Jan 22. His death
shocked film fans and actors around the world and prompted warnings
about mixing prescription drugs, particularly pain killers,
tranquillizers and sleeping pills. Among the mourners at Saturday’s
memorial service, in Perth, were Ledger’s former partner and Brokeback
Mountain co-star Michelle Williams, who arrived with Ledger’s sister
Kate but without the couple’s two-year-old daughter Matilda.
Also among the hundreds of mourners at the service, at a private girls
school in the Western Australian city, was model Gemma Ward, with whom
Ledger had been reportedly linked, as well as Australian actors
Blanchett, Bryan Brown and Joel Edgerton. Ledger’s father, Kim Ledger,
had earlier asked the media to allow the family to grieve in private,
but said cameras would be allowed to photograph mourners as they arrived
for the memorial service. “It’s a pretty sad time and we are finding it
difficult to cope by ourselves, let alone cope with everybody around the
world,” Kim Ledger told reporters outside the family home earlier on
Saturday. “Having said that, we do really appreciate the outpouring and
the emotional support from all over the world.” The memorial service
lasted about 90 minutes. Local media said Ledger’s body was then
cremated at a private funeral service attended by only about 10
immediate family members. Other mourners went on to a beachside
restaurant for a wake. OSCAR NOMINATION Ledger starred in 18 movies in
Australia and Hollywood, and received an Oscar nomination for his
portrayal of a gay cowboy opposite co-star Jake Gyllenhaal in “Brokeback
Mountain.”
Most recently, he starred as the Joker in the latest “Batman” movie
“Dark Knight,” and was one of the many incarnations of Bob Dylan in “I’m
Not There.” He was working in Terry Gilliam’s “The Imaginarium of Doctor
Parnassus” at the time of his death. Other films included “Casanova,”
“The Brothers Grimm,” “Monster’s Ball,” “A Knight’s Tale,” “10 Things I
Hate About You” and “Ned Kelly,” where he portrayed Australia’s
best-known bushranger. |