Carrie Fisher Net Worth

What was Carrie Fisher’s Net Worth at Death (2016)?

Carrie Fisher Net Worth:
$25 Million

Carrie Fisher Net Worth

Carrie Fisher – Quick Facts
Net Worth: $25 Million
Date of birth: October 21, 1956 – December 27, 2016 (60 years old)
Gender: Female
Profession: Actor, Novelist, Playwright, Screenwriter, Script doctor, Singer, Spokesperson, Voice Actor
Nationality: American

Carrie was born October 21, 1956 in Beverly Hills, California. She has Jewish and British ancestry. Her by far most famous role is Princess Leia on Star Wars movie trilogy. But Fisher played also on Amazon Women on the Moon, Loverboy, and Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery. Carrie was briefly married to famous musician Paul Simon in 1980’s. And there’s probably no nerd that never dreamed of her bikini body in those small metal pieces.

Career

Career: Carrie Fisher’s first big role came in 1974 when she played a seductive teen in the comedy Shampoo. However, her real breakthrough came in 1977 when she joined the cast of Star Wars. Although director George Lucas and most of the cast didn’t expect the film to succeed, it became an overnight phenomenon. The film was later retitled Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, and Carrie Fisher was instantly elevated to considerable fame.

How Rich is Carrie Fisher
When Carrie Fisher died, the year of 2016, she had quite the decent net worth.

Quotes

“Going to AA helped me to see that there were other people who had problems that had found a way to talk about them and find relief and humor through that.”

— Carrie Fisher

“People want me to say that I’m sick of playing Leia and that it ruined my life. If my life was that easy to ruin, it deserved to be ruined.”

— Carrie Fisher

“I don’t want to be thought of as a survivor because you have to continue getting involved in difficult situations to show off that particular gift, and I’m not interested in doing that anymore.”

— Carrie Fisher

“What I wrote all the time when I was a kid – I don’t want to call it ‘poetry,’ because it wasn’t poetry. I was not that kind of a writer. I was a rhymer. I was a fan of Dorothy Parker’s, so maybe I wrote poetry to that extent, but my main focus was the humor of it, and word construction, and the slant. Your words, it’s a very powerful experience.”

— Carrie Fisher

“You can’t find any true closeness in Hollywood, because everybody does the fake closeness so well.”

— Carrie Fisher