Heath Ledger Found Dead In New York City Apartment; Autopsy Is Inconclusive Official Says

Film, Hollywood

::Developing::

Heath Ledger

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FROM THE NY TIMES CITY ROOM  BLOG 

Updated, 2:35 p.m. | An autopsy of the actor Heath Ledger was performed on Wednesday morning, but the results are inconclusive, according to Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for New York City’s chief medical examiner, Dr. Charles S. Hirsch.

Additional blood and tissue testing needs to be performed before the manner and cause of death can be determined, Ms. Borakove said in a phone interview, estimating that the process could take 10 days to two weeks. “If you have no apparent cause, you have to do further testing,” she said.

No cause of death has been ruled out, she added. The autopsy, at the medical examiner’s headquarters at 520 First Avenue, near 30th Street on the East Side of Manhattan, began around 8:30 a.m. and lasted about two hours, she said.

The two types of tests that still have to be performed include toxicology, which examines the adverse effects of chemicals in the bloodstream, and histology, in which thin slices of tissue are analyzed by pathologists.

Ms. Borakove said the body was ready to be released to Mr. Ledger’s family for burial. “We don’t need to keep the body once the family is ready,” she said.

Mr. Ledger, 28, the Australian-born actor whose breakthrough role as a gay cowboy in the 2005 movie “Brokeback Mountain” earned him a nomination for an Academy Award, was found dead on Tuesday afternoon in an apartment at 421 Broome Street, between Crosby and Lafayette Streets, in SoHo. Prescription sleeping pills were found near his body, but it is not known if the medication played a role in his death.

WCBS-TV reported today that “along with the prescription drugs that were found in the apartment, police also recovered a rolled up $20 bill with narcotic residue on it” and that police “also found several drug packets containing an unknown substance.”

Asked about the CBS news report, Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s chief spokesman, said it was largely inaccurate.

Mr. Browne said that investigators found a “rolled-up $20 bill” in the apartment where Mr. Ledger’s body was found, but he said that the police “never said residue was found on it.”

He said the bill had not yet undergone forensic tests. “We have a rolled-up $20 bill and we never said it had residue on it or was tested,” Mr. Browne said. “It will be tested, because it was rolled up.”

Mr. Browne said no other narcotics were found in the apartment. He speculated that WCBS — in reporting that several drug packets were found — might have been confusing it with some “blister pack” of prescription drugs. He said some prescription drugs were in bottles and some in blister packs.

“There was no narcotics found in the apartment, period,” Mr. Browne said.

Mr. Browne declined to identify the name of any physicians listed on the prescription drugs.

Al Baker and John Sullivan contributed reporting.

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The Independant is reporting that the New York City Police Department is calling the death “possibly drug-related”

UPDATE:: NO EVIDENCE OF SUICIDE AS OF WEDNESDAY MORNING JAN 23 4:20 am

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FOXNEWS DOT COM

NEW YORK — New Yorkers clustered outside the Soho loft apartment building where Heath Ledger was found dead on Tuesday said they were “devastated” and “anguished” to learn of the tragedy.

Tamba Mossa, the superintendent of 421 Broome Street — where Ledger had lived for the past four or five months — called the “Brokeback Mountain” actor a “very great man” but said he was blindsided by the news.

“I wasn’t prepared to hear about his death at that moment,” Mossa told a crush of reporters at the scene. “I’m very, very sad.”

But Ledger had seemed depressed recently, according to the superintendent.

“He looked sad,” said Mossa.

New York City Police officers guarded the entrance of the white apartment building, which sits on a cobblestone street in the swanky SoHo section of New York City next to a Nanette Lepore boutique. Swarms of paparazzi, fans and passersby milled about on the sidewalk. One woman came carrying flowers.

The Australian-born Ledger, 28, was found dead by his housekeeper Tuesday afternoon, naked and at the foot of the bed. Sleeping pills and other medications that had been prescribed to him were discovered in the apartment, according to police.

“I’m devastated,” said a young woman who lives in the neighborhood and identified herself only as Jen. “There was never any news of him being involved in anything other than his acting. I’m definitely a fan of his. This is shocking.”

She said she had spotted Ledger in the area a few times while he was still with his former fiancée, actress Michelle Williams, whom he met on the set of “Brokeback Mountain” and with whom he had a 2-year-old daughter named Matilda.

The couple, who lived together with the baby in Brooklyn, broke up last year. In recent months, Ledger had been renting the SoHo apartment.

One passerby on his way home was stunned to learn of the actor’s death.

“I wasn’t familiar with his work, but I just feel anguished,” said David M. Rheingold, 35, who works for a nonprofit. “I feel terrible for his daughter. It’s horrible, just horrible.”

One SoHo resident marveled at the throngs of people who had descended on the scene of Ledger’s death.

“In life, he would not have drawn any kind of crowd like this,” said Roark Dunn, 50, who produces photo shoots. “He’s comparatively obscure.”

Many of those who stopped in front of Ledger’s apartment building said they admired the actor’s work.

“I was moved by the movie ‘Brokeback Mountain,'” said Paul Khor, 40, a fashion buyer visiting from Singapore.

Three Fordham University freshmen and self-professed Ledger fans said they came to SoHo as soon as they heard the news.

“We’re sad,” said Daria Tavana, 19, a playwright major. “He’s somebody who recently had begun to take on really hard roles. It’s totally unbelievable.”

Another onlooker said he appreciated Ledger’s acting and called his performance in “I’m Not There,” the recent Bob Dylan film, “tortured.”

“I respect him very much. He seemed like a legitimate artist,” said the 28-year-old journalist, who declined to give his name but said he works in the neighborhood. “In this day in age, it’s hard to get shocked about any celebrity passing, but he was a really talented actor. It’s sad he’s not going to be around anymore.”

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From The Seattle Post Intelligencer Blog

Update, 3:25 p.m.: Paolo Dayao, 26, attended Stadium High School in Tacoma and was an extra in “10 Things I Hate About You.” In an e-mail we asked what he remembered of Ledger. He responded:

I remember him being really nice and down to earth. I guess since he was unknown at the time we did that movie, he didn’t have that Hollywood snobbiness that some of the other actors had. He hung out with the extras in between takes and I remember that he didn’t always go back to his trailer like some of the others would when they were setting up the next scenes. I did get a chance to hang out with him and play hacky sack in between some of the scenes that we shot. He was a pretty nice guy.

Hacky sack with Heath Ledger. Wow.

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Two years ago this month, actor Heath Ledger learned that his breakthrough performance in Ang Lee’s “Brokeback Mountain” earned him an Academy Award nomination. Today, hours after a new slate of actors heard about their Oscar hopes, Ledger was found dead.

Ledger was not a Seattleite. He was a not a Northwesterner. But for anyone who remembers the filming of “10 Things I Hate About You,” he was — at least for a short time — a presence in the region.

At Gasworks Park, he tamed Julia Stiles over a game of paintball. At Stadium High School in Tacoma, he frolicked over the bleachers, singing to Stiles during soccer practice and delighting dozens and dozens of student extras. The film also featured location shots at Seattle’s Fremont Troll and the Buckaroo Tavern. (See our 1999 review and the Seattle Film Office map for more.)

Tom Brady's Cast Is Already Off; Dinner At Butter With Bunchen

Betting, Las Vegas, New York City, Patriots

Sir Thomas will be ready and able come two Sundays from now, as if you hadn’t clued into that one….

But I bet lots of people are going to make a heap of cashish on this game

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Live From New York It's Saturday Night Live On Strike

Stories

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NEW YORK (AP) – It wasn’t live from New York as usual.

About 150 audience members in a tiny Manhattan theater were the only folks in the world to witness a totally new “Saturday Night Live” episode starring guest host Michael Cera and musical guest Yo La Tengo.

Anyone who tuned into NBC was subjected to a two-week-old rerun featuring Brian Williams and Feist, thanks to an ongoing Writers Guild of America labor strike.

“It was everything that’s never been on the show before,” cast member Kenan Thompson told The Associated Press after the show. “Sometimes it doesn’t get a chance to shine, but it sure shined here.”

The “SNL” cast and writers collaborated on staging the special “Saturday Night Live—On Strike!” event at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre to benefit the behind-the-scenes staff affected by the strike. The live performance was not officially sanctioned by NBC, but “SNL” executive producer Lorne Michaels, who celebrated his 63rd birthday, did attend.

“He came and saw it and laughed a little bit,” said Thompson.

The performance included all the trappings of a typical “SNL” episode, such as a host monologue, musical performance, “Weekend Update” news segment and several comedy sketches—all without any commercial interruption.

“It was a little dirtier than usual,” audience member Birch Harms said.

A typical “SNL” episode features about seven sketches, but the cast performed about 15 original sketches during the two-hour event. Thompson said he starred in a sketch called “Hip-Hop Whodunit,” a mock game show about solving hip-hop crimes, and also appeared as a French comedian during “Weekend Update.”

“They didn’t have elaborate costumes or graphics or anything,” audience member Risa Sang-urai said. “Sometimes they would explain things or wear wigs. It wasn’t anything too elaborate, but you didn’t really need it.”

Tickets to the hush-hush sold at the 11:30 p.m. EST performance were difficult to come by. Many audience members were friends or acquaintances of “SNL” cast members or performers at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre, an improv theater co-founded by “SNL” cast member Amy Poehler.

Thompsen said everyone in the current cast participated in the event, except Maya Rudolph. Past cast members Rachel Dratch and Horatio Sanz also performed. Singer Norah Jones made a cameo appearance, according to audience members.

Production of “SNL” shut down because many of the stars also write the shows. The cast and writers of “30 Rock” have also planned to stage a similar live performance Monday at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater.

“Everybody’s in a holding pattern right now,” Thompson said of the “SNL” staff. “It’s a shame. All these creative people are just sitting around. We’ve obviously got material we’re waiting to unleash on the world.”

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On the Net:

http://www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/

Danny Ackroyd Sells His Fat Penthouse In New York City

Stories

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DAN AYKROYD, once “live from New York,” may soon be gone from New York, or at least from his spacious penthouse on the Upper East Side.

Mr. Aykroyd, the comedian, actor and writer, who was a mainstay of “Saturday Night Live” in its heyday in the 1970s, along with John Belushi and Gilda Radner, is giving up his triplex penthouse atop a sliver of a postwar high-rise on the Upper East Side.

The apartment occupies half of the top three floors of the 46-story tower at 360 East 88th Street at First Avenue, and includes 3,400 square feet of space, four bedrooms, a terrace and two working fireplaces.

The apartment is in the Leighton House, a high-rise caught up in a housing slowdown in the late 1980s. When many of the condominiums could not be sold when the building opened in 1991, they were rented out.

The penthouse was finally sold for $1.4 million in 1998 and then two years later was bought under the name of Mr. Aykroyd’s wife, the actress Donna Dixon, for $3.7 million, according to property records. The asking price is now $7 million.

“They bought it because it was on 88th and First and is the tallest building in the neighborhood,” said Mr. Aykroyd’s broker, Roger Erickson of Sotheby’s International Realty.

But now the Aykroyds and their three daughters are spending more time on the West Coast and don’t need the spacious New York penthouse.

Another penthouse shares the three top three floors and is a slightly smaller unit with a large terrace. It also has been on the market recently for $7 million, raising the possibility that the two units could be combined for a palatial spread on the top three floors of the building.

But Mickey Roth, a broker at Prudential Douglas Elliman who represents the second owner, said that apartment had recently been taken off the market because the seller hoped to be able sell it for an even higher price.

“This type of apartment is something unique,” Mr. Roth said. “It has nothing to do with the price per square foot in the building.”

E-mail: bigdeal@nytimes.com

World Trade Center Memorial Delayed By Two More Years

Stories

From The Associated Press

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(AP) – Construction of the memorial and underground museum commemorating the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks will be finished in 2011, two years later than originally planned, officials said Tuesday.

Officials had said for years that Sept. 11, 2009, would be the opening date for the museum and the “Reflecting Absence” memorial, which surrounds two waterfall-filled pools marking the World Trade Center tower footprints.

The builders of the memorial adjusted the timetable last year, saying the above-ground plaza would open in 2009 and the underground museum open a year later.

Steve Plate, who oversees the rebuilding of the trade center site for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, said Tuesday that the schedule would be pushed back another year.

Agency spokeswoman Candace McAdams said the schedule was revised to reflect a more realistic schedule that became clear after construction began.

“We see the reality, and want to operate on responsible timelines,” Ms. McAdams said. “We’ll work as aggressively as possible to complete the project as soon as possible.”

Mr. Plate, the agency’s director of priority capital programs, said that by 2009, the reflecting pools in the memorial would be built up to street level. By 2010, the cobblestone-filled plaza surrounding the memorial pools will be “nearly complete,” he said. Ms. McAdams said the plaza would be open to the public by that time.

The entire memorial, museum and pavilion will be finished by 2011, Mr. Plate said.
Construction of the memorial began in spring of 2006, and briefly stopped while architect Michael Arad’s design was altered to cut costs that were approaching $1 billion. The redesign — which cut over $200 million in costs — made the museum a bit smaller and moved stone parapets listing the names of the nearly 3,000 people killed in the attacks to street level.

Don Imus Rises From The Dead In New York City

Bartlett, Broadcatching, Broadway, Carville, Dierdre Imus, Dodd, Film and Video, Hillary, Imus, Kids With Cancer, Matalin, McCain, McCord, McGuirk, MSNBC, Neocon, New York, New York City, Obama, Ruffino, Town Hall, Tullycast, WABC

What a surreal day

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John Donald was low-key. Very.

Awkward silence between segments (Rob?) everybody on stage at first apprehensive.

Opening like a sitcom with each cast-member introduced.

McCain put the bad-breath infused middle aged white-boy majority to S L E E P. (prattling on about “winning” and “surrender” and ” liberal” move-on Democrats)

Mr. Imus: I’m back and Dick Cheney is still a war criminal and Hillary Clinton is still Satan

Such a jackass panderer sometimes but I’m real glad he’s back.

(Gift-bags were a joke -going to give to ebay charity and glad to donate the 100$ ticket price to little kids with cancer.
JT

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John Donald Imus Back On The Air

Bartlett, Broadcatching, Carville, Dierdre Imus, Imus, Kids With Cancer, McCord, McGuirk, MSNBC, New York, New York City, Ruffino, Town Hall, Tullycast, WABC

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1. CBC.ca Arts – Rural-targeted TV network picks up forthcoming Imus radio show
2. E! News – Imus Back on TV in the Morning
3. FMQB: Radio Industry News, Music Industry Updates, Arbitron Ratings, Music News and more!
4. Radio Ink – The Voice of Radio Revolution
5. Imus Returning to TV on RFD-TV – 11/14/2007 1:09:00 PM – Broadcasting & Cable
6. Celebrity News – Imus Back on the Airwaves, and on the Tube
7. Don Imus Comes Home to RFD-TV – Press Release
8. It’s Official: RFD-TV HD to Air Imus In the Morning
9. Media Blog – Mixed Media by Jeff Bercovici: Imus Is Back, and So Are His Buds – Portfolio.com
10. RFD finds home for Don Imus – Entertainment News, Radio News, Media – Variety
11. mediabistro.com: FishbowlNY
12. Rural Media Tunes In to Imus
13. 6abc.com: Imus Returning to TV, Too
14. New Yorkers will need satellite to see TV simulcast of Don Imus’ return to radio
15. RFD-TV Lands Imus Simulcast – 11/14/2007 7:20:00 AM – Multichannel News
16. The Associated Press: Don Imus Also Returning to Television
17. Don Imus returning to television on RFD-TV – BloggingStocks

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