Reynolds, Fisher to be buried side by side

Hollywood legend Debbie Reynolds and her daughter Carrie Fisher, Star Wars' Princess Leia, will be buried together at a cemetery for celebrities.

Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher

Debbie Reynolds and daughter Carrie Fisher will have a joint funeral and will be buried together. (AAP)

A joint memorial service and side-by-side burial are being planned for mother-and-daughter Hollywood stars Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher, who died a day apart earlier this week in Los Angeles.

Todd Fisher, son of Reynolds and younger brother to Carrie, said a glimpse he caught of hummingbirds at a cemetery site at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills convinced him it was the ideal spot for their final resting place.

"That's the way it was meant to be," said Todd Fisher, 58, recalling that his mother, the Oscar-nominated singer and actress, had a special fondness for hummingbirds, which were regular visitors to the grounds of her Beverly Hills home.

Fisher said he and other relatives were gathering this weekend to firm up funeral arrangements, including dates.

He said the family was planning two private events - a joint memorial celebration and a burial of his mother and sister next to one another at Forest Lawn - to be followed by some form of public commemoration of the two women.

Reynolds, who sang and danced her way into the hearts of moviegoers in such Hollywood musicals as Singin' in the Rain, suffered a stroke and died on Wednesday at the age of 84.

Her daughter, Carrie Fisher, best known as Princess Leia in the Star Wars films, died a day earlier on Tuesday, four days after suffering a heart attack on a flight from England, where she had been shooting the third season of a British television comedy. She was 60.

Carrie and Todd Fisher were both born to Reynolds and the late singer Eddie Fisher, whose marriage ended in scandal in 1959 after the crooner began an affair with actress Elizabeth Taylor.

In an interview to be broadcast on the US ABC News program 20/20, Todd Fisher elaborated on his mother's final hours, insisting "she didn't die of a broken heart" but rather "just left to be with Carrie."

"It wasn't that was sitting around inconsolable, not at all," her son recounted in excerpts from the interview published by ABC.

"She simply said that she didn't get to see Carrie come back from London. She expressed how much she loved my sister.

"She then said she really wanted to be with Carrie," he added.

"In those precise words, and within 15 minutes from that conversation she faded out, and within 30 minutes, she technically was gone."


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Source: AAP


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