Heath Ledger Found Dead In New York Apartment

I just…wow. Seriously, talk about your Tuesday shocker. According to the New York Times (and now the Associated Press and several other outlets), Heath Ledger has died:

The actor Heath Ledger was found dead this afternoon in an apartment in Manhattan, according to the New York City police. Signs pointed to a suicide or an accidental overdose, police sources said. Mr. Ledger was 28.

At 3:31 p.m., a masseuse arrived the fourth-floor apartment of the building, at 421 Broome Street in SoHo, for an appointment with Mr. Ledger, the police said. The masseuse was let in to the home by a housekeeper, who then knocked on the door of the bedroom Mr. Ledger was in. When no one answered, the housekeeper and the masseuse opened the bedroom and found Mr. Ledger naked and unconscious on a bed, with pills scattered around his body. They moved his body to the floor and attempted to revive him, but he did not respond. They immediately called the authorities.

The police said they did not suspect foul play. Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for the office of the city’s chief medical examiner, Dr. Charles S. Hirsch, said that employees of the office were at the apartment and that an autopsy would be conducted on Wednesday.

Police officials have said that the apartment was owned by the actress Mary-Kate Olsen,
Officials said they believed Ms. Olsen, 21, was in California and that Mr. Ledger had been living in her apartment. Ms. Olsen attended the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, for the premiere of “The Wackness,” a film in which she stars with the actor Ben Kingsley. It was not clear where she went after the film screening.

Mr. Ledger, a native of Perth, Australia, won acclaim for his role as a co-star in “Brokeback Mountain” (2005). The film, based on a short story by Annie Proulx about two cowboys who fall in love, won critical acclaim. Reviewing the film in The New York Times, the critic Stephen Holden wrote, “Mr. Ledger magically and mysteriously disappears beneath the skin of his lean, sinewy character. It is a great screen performance, as good as the best of Marlon Brando and Sean Penn.” Mr. Ledger was nominated for an Oscar for Best Actor in January 2006.

Mr. Ledger met the actress Michelle Williams while filming ‘’Brokeback Mountain.” The two actors fell into a romance and moved to Boerum Hill, Brooklyn, where their comings and goings were widely noted by the celebrity press. They had a daughter, Matilda Rose, who was born on Oct. 28, 2005. The couple separated last year.

Mr. Ledger’s first Hollywood film was the teenage romantic comedy “10 Things I Hate About You” (1999). He later appeared in romantic-hero roles in films like “A Knight’s Tale” (2001) and “Casanova” (2005).

Mr. Ledger was also cast as The Joker in the latest Batman installment, “The Dark Knight,” set to be released this summer.

In an interview in London for an article published in November, Mr. Ledger told The New York Times, ‘’I feel like I’m wasting time if I repeat myself.” He said in the interview that he was not proud of his latest role, in Todd Haynes’s “I’m Not There,” in which Mr. Ledger was one of a half-dozen actors depicting the musician Bob Dylan. ‘’I feel the same way about everything I do. The day I say, ‘It’s good’ is the day I should start doing something else,” said in the interview.

As news of Mr. Ledger’s death made its way across the Internet, the Police Department issued a fairly terse summary of the death: “ON TUESDAY, 01/22/08, AT APPROXIMATELY 1530 HOURS, IN THE CONFINES OF THE 5 PRECINCT, POLICE RESPONDED TO 421 BROOME STREET AND FOUND A M/W/28 UNCONSCIOUS. THE VICTIM WAS PRONOUNCED DOA AT THE SCENE. M.E.’S OFFICE TO DETERMINE THE CAUSE OF DEATH. INVESTIGATION CONTINUES.”

Calls by The Times to Mara Buxbaum, a publicist for Mr. Ledger, and Steve Alexander, the actor’s agent, were not immediately returned this afternoon.

I don’t really know what to say about this one yet. Obviously, it’s an early report; there’s currently conflicting information of whether the apartment was his or Mary-Kate Olson’s, and whether the death was suicide or accidental. Gossip site TMZ is all over it, as usual, and has posted all sorts of information that may or may not be true.

I’m a huge Heath Ledger fan, even some of his less-then-quality films like Ten Things I Hate About You and The Order. (I never could bring myself to like A Knight’s Tale, though.) Obviously, his performance in Brokeback Mountain was nothing short of amazing. I was so utterly jazzed about his Joker in The Dark Knight…this is just kind of shocking to me.

We’ll have to see how it progresses. It doesn’t change that he’s dead obviously, but personally, I hope it was accidental, and not suicide.

UPDATE: It appears the apartment was not Olsen’s, and the medication aspect has been changed from “pills scattered around his body” to “sleeping pills — both prescription medication and nonprescription — on a night table.”. The OD could very well be accidental.

–Jer

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1 Comment

  1. Molli said,

    January 23, 2008 at 6:10 pm

    As silly as it may seem to be utterly distressed over the death of a person one does not know personally, the news of Heath’s death hit me like a sledgehammer. I’ve read your two related articles (Fred Phelps, I don’t know you but I’m plan to be right there with Jeremy and marshmallows when you’re burned at the stake) um, sorry, a sickened fury just took a hold of me there. Back to what I was saying… well, the point I was going to make is that I don’t know what to say. For some reason, I’m incredibly sad about his death.

    I had the same thought that you did regarding the sleeping pills. The first report I read had included that extract from an interview regarding his stress and inability to sleep and, given all I’ve seen of Heath over the past decade, my immediate thought was that it was accidental. Hell, I’ve been put on prescription sleeping pills that failed to do a damn thing or, if they’ve managed to put me sleep, haven’t kept me there for very long. I’ve also gone ahead and taken six when I’m supposed to take half of one. At the time, there was no desire to kill myself, I just NEEDED some bloody sleep!! I find it very easy to believe that Heath found him self in the same state, desperate to switch his mind off and rest. I find it impossible to believe that he killed himself and it really sickens me that suicide and the possibility of him being a junkie were splashed all throughout all forms of media before he’d been dead even an hour. As you’ve stated, he has family, he has a daughter. Not too far down the track she’s going to be sitting at a computer and googling her father’s name and she’s going to be confronted with all of this unfounded speculation and people like Fred Phelps. That thought only makes me all the sadder.

    For someone who said she didn’t know what to say……?

    Anyway, for Matilda Rose… if you ever read this I hope you know that many people believe your father to be an amazingly talented man and a truly beautiful human being.

    (Sorry, Jer, definitely wasn’t my intention to hijack your post in such a manner… having a bit of a cry about this all again now. :( )


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