Apologies that a few of these are very late...
December 21, 2009
Brittany Murphy, Actress in ‘Clueless,’ Dies at 32
By SARAH WHEATON
Brittany Murphy,
the perpetually perky and slightly quirky actress who worked her way up
from supporting parts to romantic leads after her breakout role in the
film “Clueless,”
died Sunday in Los Angeles. She was 32.
Ed Winter, an assistant chief coroner in Los Angeles County, told
The Associated Press that Ms. Murphy apparently collapsed in the
bathroom and that the cause of death “appears to be natural.” He said
that an official cause of death might not be determined for some time.
The Los Angeles Fire Department responded to a call at 8 a.m. Sunday
at the home that Ms. Murphy shared with her husband, Simon Monjack, a
British screenwriter, in West Hollywood. Ms. Murphy was taken to
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead at 10:04
a.m. Sunday, said Sally Stewart, a spokeswoman for the hospital.

The actress’s wide brown eyes and unrestrained, asymmetrical smile
made her a frequent choice for the role of ditz with an edge — such as
the urban transplant to a Beverly Hills high school in “Clueless” and
the riches-to-rags au pair in “Uptown
Girls” — or a woman over the edge, playing characters with severe
mental illness in the thriller “Don’t Say a Word” and the drama “Girl,
Interrupted.”
The 1995 teen comedy “Clueless,” an adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Emma”
set in southern California and starring Alicia Silverstone,
was a surprise hit, and though Ms. Murphy was 17 when she played the
supporting role of Tai, the airhead persona stuck with her. It was her
2003 stint as the romantic lead in the Eminem vehicle “8 Mile,”
she told The A.P., that earned her more recognition.
“That changed a lot,” she said in the 2003 interview. “That was the
difference between people knowing my first and last name as opposed to
not.”
Peter Travers of Rolling Stone said Ms. Murphy played the
character of Alex
“with hot desperation and calloused vulnerability. She’s dynamite.” But
she was never a critics’ darling. Stephen Holden of The New York Times
was among those who compared her unfavorably to other
female contemporaries, writing that she “suggests a dumbed-down Meg Ryan with a gloss of Melanie Griffith” in the 2004 romantic comedy “Little
Black Book.”
Ms. Murphy was born on Nov. 10, 1977, in Atlanta. Her parents
divorced when she was very young, and her mother, Sharon, raised her
primarily in New Jersey before bringing Ms. Murphy to Los Angeles to
pursue a screen career.
But during the filming of “Clueless,” her mother was diagnosed with
breast cancer, an event Ms. Murphy said affected her profoundly.
When Sharon Murphy’s cancer returned in 2003, Ms. Murphy told People magazine
that she “went to every doctor’s appointment and chemo session” with
her mother. “My mom taught me there’s always a way to channel your
fears into love.”
A diverse set of credits accumulated in Ms. Murphy’s filmography,
including the tough, abused waitress in the gritty “Sin
City,” a concentration camp victim in the television film “The
Devil’s Arithmetic,” and the voice of an animated penguin in “Happy
Feet.”
She also lent her voice to the character Luann on more the 200
episodes of Fox’s animated series “King
of the Hill,” and collaborated on a song with the D.J. Paul
Oakenfold.
“I don’t really take myself very seriously,” Ms. Murphy told The San
Jose Mercury News in 2003. “I’ve never formally trained in acting, so
I’m very instinctual and visceral with decisions. It hasn’t really been
a plot or scheme in any way, shape or form.”
Indeed, her image often slipped beyond her control. She was
repeatedly romantically linked to her co-stars, including Ashton Kutcher from “Just
Married,” and a string of broken engagements made her tabloid
fodder.
Ms. Murphy married Mr. Monjack in 2007. She is survived by him; her
mother; her father, Angelo Bertolotti of Branford, Fla.; and a brother.
The Sylvester Stallone film “The
Expendables,” which features Ms. Murphy, is in post-production and
is scheduled to be released next year.