It was a striking example of Hollywood protecting its own: After an aggressive lobby from powerful film industry figures, “Entertainment Tonight” decided against airing a video that shows the late Heath Ledger hanging out at a party where drugs were being taken.

The show said it pulled the story “out of respect for Heath Ledger’s family.” But don’t discount the effect of a lightning-fast campaign launched by a public relations firm that represents many of the stars “Entertainment Tonight” depends upon for stories.

Even some celebrities themselves – Natalie Portman and Sarah Jessica Parker, to name a couple – called to urge “ET” to pull the plug.

Ledger, 28, died in his Manhattan apartment Jan. 22. Authorities suspect a possible drug overdose, but the cause of his death is still pending the outcome of toxicology tests. Police said several prescription drugs – but nothing illegal – were found in the Manhattan apartment where the “Brokeback Mountain” actor’s body was found.

“Entertainment Tonight” is hardly the lone news organization to broach the topic of potential drug abuse by the star. But the video it acquired, reportedly taken two years ago at a party at the Chateau Marmont Hotel, drew the fiercest attention.

The syndicated magazine’s sister show, “The Insider,” aired a “preview” of the story that it had planned to run Thursday that actually showed several segments of the video. Following the protest, “The Insider” yanked the segment from the West Coast version of its telecast.

Ledger is seen standing in the doorway of a room where the party was taking place, swigging from a beer bottle. The actor is heard saying that he was “going to get serious (word bleeped) from my girlfriend” for being at the party.

The show made clear that there was nothing on the video showing Ledger taking any drug. At one point, however, the then-26-year-old said he “used to smoke five joints a day.”

But a person who has seen the entire video, who asked not to be identified because of its sensitive nature, said Ledger then points to his tattoo of “M” (for his daughter, Matilda Rose) and says, “this is to remind me never to smoke weed again.” That part of the quote was not used in Wednesday’s preview.

Later, with Ledger in the background, an unidentified man, his face blurred, seems to snort cocaine from a table.

After seeing a promotion for the show Wednesday, a publicist at ID, Ledger’s public relations firm, called “Entertainment Tonight” and asked that the segment be pulled. The request was refused.

ID then composed a three-paragraph protest letter that it distributed to some 30 other public relations firms around Hollywood, asking them to tell their clients about what was about to happen. The circle included powerhouse publicists like PMK-HBH, 42 West and BWR.

The letter said “ET” had paid a large sum of money for the video to stir up an exploitive story about Ledger.

“For the sake of his grieving family and friends, his child and common decency, we hope to pressure `Entertainment Tonight’ and `The Insider’ to do the right thing and pull the spot,” the letter said. “This is not journalism, it is sensationalism. It is a shameful exploitation of the lowest kind, to a talented and gentle soul, undeserving of such treatment.”

Stars, studio executives and PR firms all called “ET” to register protests, said Kelly Bush, CEO of ID. The star-studded roster of Bush’s firm alone includes Robin Williams, Sean Penn, Tobey Maguire, Mike Myers, Jennifer Hudson, Katie Holmes, Ellen DeGeneres, and Ledger’s “Brokeback” co-star Jake Gyllenhaal.

Bush said the response was unlike anything she’d ever seen.

“I hope it represents a turning point,” she said. “I think we have all heard from members of the media and members of the public that it’s too much. Britney Spears and Paris Hilton are the top news stories when Darfur should be.”

No boycott was threatened, she said. But when a television show that needs celebrities like living things need oxygen hears from so many powerful sources, a threat probably wasn’t necessary.

Not a spoken one, anyway.

“We need them as much as they need us,” Bush said. She wouldn’t speculate on what made “Entertainment Tonight” change its mind, but said “they’ve probably never gotten this much heat before over anything.”

Executives at “Entertainment Tonight” refused to talk publicly about the retreat. There was some bewilderment and anger at the company about why its show was singled out when many other publications and TV outlets were talking about the same thing. The party video is likely to be seen soon in England, and is already available over the Internet.

But “ET” can’t complain about getting nothing for its money. Even though it was called a “preview,” “The Insider” already aired a significant story with salient portions of the video, while maintaining the appearance of having taken the high road in the end.

Drew Pinsky, star of VH1′s “Celebrity Rehab With Dr. Drew,” backed “Entertainment Tonight.” He saw the video and was quoted by the show, calling it “heartbreaking.”

“When a 28-year-old seemingly healthy man, whom we love and respect, dies suddenly, there is a reason,” Pinsky said. “His death plays upon our deepest fears. We owe it to the public to try to answer the question why. I am convinced that if this heart-wrenching video had aired, it would have gotten through and had a positive effect on young people in America. Perhaps it could have even saved some lives.”

Also unanswered are questions about how much the Hollywood friends who jumped to Ledger’s defense this week knew about any drug use while he was alive, and what they had done to help him. Few of the people close to Ledger have come forth with statements since his death, and those who have chose not to broach the topic of any possible drug use.

One notable exception was Lee Daniels, who produced “Monster’s Ball,” in which Ledger starred.

“The definition of substance abuse is really up to one’s perspective,” Daniels told The Associated Press last week. “I didn’t see him as a drug addict. I saw him as someone who enjoyed life. I know drug addicts; he was not a drug addict.”

 

HEATH Ledger had become a regular user of cocaine and heroin in the past year, getting so high on drugs that an exasperated Michelle Williams was forced to boot him out of their Brooklyn home, The Post has learned.

“She couldn’t take it any more. Heath wouldn’t show up for two to three days, and all of a sudden he would show up on her doorstep, an absolute wreck,” a member of Ledger’s entourage who did drugs with him told The Post’s Lorena Mongelli. “He was partying, doing drugs. She didn’t like the company he was keeping. She gave him an ultimatum. . . . and threatened to get custody of the girl. He wanted to make it work, but it was this scene he was wrapped up in. Was he an addict? Yeah.”

The revelation comes as “Entertainment Tonight” and “The Insider” said that “out of respect for Heath Ledger’s family,” they would drop plans to air a video of Ledger snorting cocaine with a rolled-up bill at the Chateau Marmont. The video was taped without Ledger’s knowledge following the SAG Awards two years ago. PageSix.com reports that Ledger quips on the tape, “I’m gonna get so much [bleep] from my girlfriend. We have a baby together, Matilda.”

Heath’s drug pal told The Post the 28-year-old star’s mushrooming fame had him constantly exposed to drugs. As the pressures of work grew, he couldn’t say no, and then wouldn’t get help. “He was hanging out with a bad crowd. He wasn’t cleaning up his act. He was making absolutely no effort . . . He was really into heroin. He wasn’t sleeping or communicating with anyone.”

Ledger’s lifeless body was found in his Broome Street loft in SoHo last week along with six kinds of prescription pills. Authorities believe he overdosed, although the cause of death won’t be official until toxicology tests are finished.

“At the end of the day this is really tragic,” the source said. “He was a nice guy. I first met him in 2002. He was scared about the whole Hollywood thing . . . I don’t think he realized how crazy it was going to be. So many people wanted a piece of him.”

But, the pal adds, things got really bad when heroin entered the picture. “Once you go down that road, then it gets really scary. Because all of sudden you shoot up, you take heroin, then you do a line of cocaine and then you take sleeping pills. Look at River Phoenix, he died exactly the same way.”

Ledger’s reps didn’t get back to us.

(source)

 

Entertainment Tonight and The Insider have purchased exclusive rights to tragic video footage of Heath Ledger allegedly snorting cocaine at a party two years ago.

The footage, which PageSix.com hears was bought for $200,000, was shot without Heath’s knowledge, at the Chateau Marmont hotel in L.A. following the SAG awards on January 29, 2006.

In the video, Heath is shown talking while at a private party after sniffing a cocaine-like substance off a table with a rolled up bill in his hand. As he speaks, his face noticeably twitches.
An insider tells PageSix.com that Heath says at one point, “I’m gonna get so much sh*t from my girlfriend. We have a baby together… Matilda, Matilda Rose.”

ET and The Insider planned to show the clip later this week. PageSix.com understands this is now “under review.”

The celebrity news programs have released a joint statement warning a media outlet that they will be subject to lawsuits and fines if they choose to show the video. An excerpt of the letter reads:

THIS IS TO ADVISE YOU THAT ET AND THE INSIDER HAVE EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS IN AND TO PROPRIETARY MATERIALS OF HEATH LEDGER AT THE CHATEAU MARMONT ON APPROXIMATELY JANUARY 29, 2006

ANY BROADCAST OR USAGE OF THIS MATERIAL IN ANY MANNER NOT AUTHORIZED SHALL CONSTITUTE AN INFRINGEMENT AND VIOLATION OF ET AND THE INSIDER’S VALUABLE EXCLUSIVE AND PROPRIETARY RIGHTS AND WILL CONSTITUTE INFRINGEMENT AND TORTIOUS INTERFERENCE BY THE INFRINGER, EXPOSING THE INFRINGER TO SUBSTANTIAL MONETARY DAMAGES.

Calls to Entertainment Tonight and The Insider were not returned at publication time.

(source)

 

Heath Ledger’s battle with alcohol and drugs was so harmful to his relationship with Michelle Williams that she tried to get him to enter rehab, Us Weekly reports in its latest issue, on newsstands now.

For three years, Williams was a firsthand witness to the gifted actor’s use of alcohol and drugs, including cocaine, heroin and “a variety of pills,” says a Ledger confidant.

In March 2006 – just weeks after the couple walked the Oscars red carpet and when daughter Matilda was only five months old – Williams drove Ledger to Promises Treatment Center in Malibu, California, the confidant tells Us Weekly.

Ledger refused to check in, instead swaying her with a pledge to clean up.

Even after the couple realized “they were in way over their heads,” according to a source, and split in September 2007, two sources tell Us that Williams demanded Ledger be drug-tested before his visitations with Matilda.

When news of Ledger’s death broke last Tuesday, Williams was inconsolable. “She cried and screamed as soon as she heard,” a source on the Swedish set of her latest film, Mammoth, tells Us.

 

Heather Ledger’s sudden death has been especially tough on his good friend – and Brokeback Mountain costar – Jake Gyllenhaal.

The actor, who is godfather to Ledger’s two-year-old daughter Matilda, has been devastated by last week’s news. Says one Gyllenhaal friend, “Jake is taking this harder than most people.”

Nowhere is that more apparent than on the New Mexico set of Gyllenhaal’s latest movie, Brothers.

“This has had a strong personal affect on [Jake],” says a set source. The insider adds that Gyllenhaal left the set immediately after learning of Ledger’s Jan. 22 death – but he flew back on a commercial flight to shoot an additional scene on Thursday.

“He was there, but he wasn’t with us. It was obviously a major trauma,” says the movie source. “These guys were very close. [Jake] was sitting in the director’s chair staring off into space.”

Gyllenhaal has been off since shooting that scene, and was photographed Saturday looking subdued with girlfriend Reese Witherspoon in Los Angeles. Set sources say director Jim Sheriden is shooting around the grieving actor during his personal leave.

The 27-year-old’s somber mood is a sharp contrast to the happier times on the set of Brothers. During one intense early prison scene, Gyllenhaal jokingly reached into his pocket and took out a picture of his Brokeback beau to stick on the prison wall. “Like those prisoners put [loved ones] on the wall, but Jake’s was Heath Ledger,” one set source recalls. “That was hilarious. It was a nice moment.”

The source adds, “When you think back on it now, it’s touching.”

(source)

 

In a night of fun and frivolity, Heath Ledger’s death weighed heavily on his peers.

Outstanding Male Performance winner Daniel Day-Lewis dedicated his trophy to Heath, who was found dead in his New York apartment on Tuesday, telling the crowd, “It’s always been the work of other actors… that’s given me that sense of regeneration. Heath Ledger gave it to me.” He then went on to praise Heath’s work in Monster’s Ball (“unique”) and Brokeback Mountain, saying, ” He was perfect. And that scene in the trailer in the end of the film is as moving as anything I think I’ve ever ever seen.”

Nominee Ryan Gosling and his sister Mandy wore black ribbons in honor of Heath. “Mandy made them for Heath,” Ryan said on the red carpet, adding later, “I admired him a lot.”

And in the evening’s official In Memoriam video tribute, Heath’s image was the last one seen. As the clip’s soundtrack faded out, the audience applauded the 28-year-old actor who still had so many great roles in front of him.

(source)

 

Family and friends, including ex-girlfriend Naomi Watts, came together to remember Heath Ledger at a special memorial dinner held in his honor on Saturday.

The intimate event took place at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

Around 15 people wore black for the occasion as they reminisced about the 28-year-old actor who was found dead in Manhattan on Tuesday.

An onlooker tells Usmagazine.com, “Even though it was a sad occasion, everyone was smiling, hugging each other and holding hands. It was a really positive group.”

Earlier that evening, the group, including Ledger’s mother, Sally and sister Kate, had gathered for a short memorial at the Westwood Village Memorial Park. Australia’s Channel 7 reports that Watts was “visibly upset.”

Across the country in New York, 1,000 guests at the G’Day USA Australia Day Ball at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel held a moment of silence in honor of Ledger. Australia’s consul-general also read a letter written by the actor’s father, Kim, according to Melbourne newspaper, The Age.

“Heath did not become an actor for the fame or fortune,” Kim wrote. “He loved his craft and he loved helping his friends. He loved chess and skateboarding too.”

Kim’s letter also said: “My image of Heath in New York is him with his skateboard, a canvas bag and his beanie. That was Heath to me…Heath is and always will be an Australian.”

Australian news outlets are also reporting a memorial and burial service will take place in Perth, Ledger’s home town.

(source)

 

Heath Ledger’s motionless body was still warm when paramedics were called to his SoHo apartment, according to the Emergency Medical Service dispatch report obtained by The Post.

“Torso is warm,” reads a log entry from 3:28 p.m.

The statement came from a 911 caller whom police identi fied as Ledger’s masseuse, Diane Lee Wolozin. Police say Wolozin used the actor’s cell phone to report the emergency at 3:27 after finding him naked, face down and unresponsive in bed.

A person’s hands, feet and head generally get cold about 20 minutes after his or her heart stops, several Fire Department EMTs said. A body of Ledger’s size would take about an hour to lose heat, they said.

That means he was dead for as little as 20 minutes, but likely longer.

A warm body, said a veteran Manhattan EMT, “means he wasn’t dead for long.”

Another EMT said “body temperature is crucial on emergency calls, but there are a lot of factors.

“It could mean his heart didn’t stop that long ago, or it could mean he was under blankets that were retaining heat. It’s very hard to say until you get there.”

The alarming revelation makes even more heart breaking the fact that nine potentially critical minutes were wasted when Wolozin made three calls to actress Mary-Kate Olsen be fore she called 911.

Ledger’s maid Teresa Solomon said she heard him snoring at 1 p.m.

“Every second counts,” said one veteran EMT. “But it’s extremely hard to judge. Could it have helped? Could it have helped if she did CPR? Maybe. But it may have all been a moot point. Unfortunately, it’s really impossible to tell.”

When Wolozin – who had a 3 p.m. massage appointment with Ledger – walked into the actor’s room and saw him unconscious, she immediately buzzed Olsen three times.

When she finally called 911, according to the dispatch report, she reported that someone was “passed out in apt. 4″ at 421 Broome St. She quickly specified that it was a, “mle, 30 . . . in bed not breathing n not waking up [sic].”

She also told dispatchers that Ledger was found “stiff – head, hands, feet cold,” before declaring that his torso was still warm.

According to the EMT report, FDNY Engine Company 55 was sent to the loft, quickly followed by two volunteer hospital-based medics and two FDNY EMTs.

The Engine Company arrived first, and in an effort to save the actor, appear to have started cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

An entry at 3:34 says, “FDL///Confirmed arrest//CPR.” One EMS dispatcher said that means, “CPR was already in progress when the medics arrived, which means the guys from the engine started.”

The FDNY did not comment yesterday on what measures were taken.

Around the time the firefighters apparently started CPR, the medics and EMTs arrived at the $24,000-a-month apartment – and realized it was too late. After assessing the situation, the medics pronounced Ledger dead on arrival at 3:36.

The two medical units did not administer CPR, and sent in codes of “83D” to the dispatcher, meaning “patient is deceased, no resuscitation initiated,” according to EMS code. A patient is placed in this category if he is “unresponsive, breathless and pulseless.”

Police said they suspect that Ledger died at about 1 p.m.

A source who arrived at the scene 10 minutes after Ledger was declared dead said the actor was showing “visible signs of death,” including his lips turning blue. “He was very obviously dead,” the source said.

Shortly after the last-ditch effort to revive Ledger, police were called.

At 7:09, cops told dispatchers, “Susp at this time – no fowl [sic] play – suspected – poss accidental overdose,” said the report, meaning authorities at the scene suspected an overdose, not foul play. Police later said prescription sleeping pills were found in the apartment.

The medical examiner is still investigating the cause of death.

Wolozin has not given a full public statement since the incident. But cops said that upon finding Heath, she immediately called Olsen.

“Heath is unconscious. I don’t know what to do!” Wolozin screamed in her first call to Olsen on Tuesday, police sources said. Moments later, Wolozin called back, and said, “I think he may be dead. I’m calling 911!”

Wolozin is not licensed by the state to be a masseuse, so she was not trained to do CPR.

According to the EMT report, Ledger’s EMT call will be part of an FDNY trial study launched in May 2007. The study will examine responses to 1,000 cardiac arrest cases.

“Basically, after a call, you give some detail about the response, and that’s sent to” the FDNY’s Office of Medical Affairs, said one EMT.

(source)

 




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