Brittany Murphy, the star of “Clueless” and “8 Mile,” died from pneumonia, with prescription drugs and anemia also playing a role, a coroner’s official said Thursday.

The Dec. 20 death of the actress was accidental and likely could have been prevented if Murphy had seen a doctor sooner, Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter said.

He noted, however, that she did have an appointment scheduled with a physician a few days after she died.

Winter declined to specify what types of drugs were involved in her death and said further details would be released in several weeks when the report was completed.

He also said there was no evidence of wrongdoing.

Winter said Murphy’s community-acquired pneumonia was serious and proved lethal when combined with the medications and iron deficiency anemia.

Murphy died at age 32 after collapsing in her Hollywood Hills home. Her mother and husband have said the actress didn’t abuse prescription medications or have an eating disorder.

Attempts to reach them for further comment were not immediately successful.

Murphy’s husband, Simon Monjack, and her mother, Sharon Murphy, told investigators the actress had been experiencing flu-like symptoms in the days before she died.

Monjack told The Associated Press last month that his wife did take several prescriptions, including an anti-seizure drug, but did not abuse the medications.

He said she had been taking over-the-counter Robitussin for her recent sickness.

Dr. Michael Baden, a former chief medical examiner in New York City, said the quantities and type of drugs Murphy was taking were key to understanding how she died.

“One doesn’t die of pneumonia, usually, that quickly,” Baden said.

He said the use of some prescription medications can lead to pneumonia.

“It sounds more like it’s a drug-related than a natural pulmonary pneumonia,” said Baden, who did not work on the Murphy case but has served as an expert witness in numerous high-profile deaths.

 

Brittany Murphy’s grieving husband says he’s suing Warner Bros. over her death, claiming: “They killed her.” Simon Monjack alleges that Murphy died from stress just two weeks after the studio fired her from the “Happy Feet” sequel.

Monjack told The Daily Beast’s Gerald Posner, “She was devastated . . . You’re disposable as an actress or actor.”

While the cause of Murphy’s death has still not been confirmed, Monjack insists it was not due to drugs. He also described the moment she was found unconscious in the bathroom of his Hollywood Hills house in December. “I came running in,” he told Posner. “I immediately started doing CPR. I felt a tiny heartbeat. I was pushing with the heel of my hand. And every second I pushed, I felt my hand become stronger and her heart weaker. And then it stopped. And I kept pushing. She died in my arms. I knew she was dead.” Warner Bros. did not immediately respond.

 

The official cause of death is still pending, but Brittany Murphy’s mother believes her daughter died from a heart murmur, according to Radaronline.com.

“The congenital condition was diagnosed when Brittany was a teenager and she always had the best medical care for it,” Sharon Murphy said.

The 32-year-old actress, known for her big eyes and wide grin and from such movies as “Clueless” and “Girl, Interrupted,” collapsed and died on Dec. 20 in Hollywood.

In a 911 call, Murphy’s mother told the dispatcher that her “daughter’s passed out” and went on to say that Brittany had been vomiting and was feeling dizzy.

Rumors have swirled that drugs, alcohol or mental illness may have contributed to the young star’s death, but her mother refutes those reports.

The actress’ husband, Simon Monjack, told People magazine about his wife’s sick heart.

“We had it checked out every which way you could imagine.”

 

A 911 call released Friday reveals the frantic efforts by Brittany Murphy’s mother and husband to save the actress’ life on the morning she died.

Murphy’s mother, Sharon, is heard crying and telling a fire dispatcher that the actress wasn’t breathing.

The dispatcher then gives directions to Sharon Murphy on how to try to revive Murphy. She relays the information to Murphy’s husband, Simon Monjack, who had already started CPR and is heard in the background trying to revive the actress.

“My daughter’s passed out,” Sharon Murphy tells the dispatcher, adding that the actress had been ill, had vomited and was feeling dizzy. She states that her daughter wasn’t taking any medication.

She also said on the eight-minute call that no one saw how Murphy collapsed. Sharon Murphy is heard crying and wailing at times on the call.

“Brittany please come back!” she is heard screaming.

Brittany Murphy, 32, was found in the bathroom of her Hollywood Hills home on Dec. 20 and was later pronounced dead at a local hospital.

Coroner’s officials are awaiting the results of toxicology tests to determine how she died. They have said the family reported Murphy was ill with flulike symptoms in the days before her death.

Murphy’s family laid her to rest at a funeral service on Dec. 24 at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills.

Murphy moved with her mother, Sharon, to Los Angeles when she was a teenager to pursue an acting career. She started out in sitcoms and commercials in the early 1990s before winning starring roles in several films.

Her breakthrough role came in 1995, as a dowdy high school student (and best friend of star Alicia Silverstone’s character) in “Clueless.”

Murphy worked steadily after that. She shared the screen with Winona Ryder and Angelina Jolie in 1999′s “Girl, Interrupted.” She played Eminem’s love interest in “8 Mile” and Ashton Kutcher’s wife in “Just Married.” She starred as a suspicious girlfriend in 2004′s “Little Black Book” and a barmaid with an abusive ex-boyfriend in 2005′s “Sin City.” She also voiced Gloria the penguin in the 2006 animated film “Happy Feet.”

Murphy was juggling multiple movie projects in the months before her unexpected death, wrapping two indie thrillers over the summer and preparing to shoot a romantic comedy next month.

Here is the audio if you want to listen:

 

Actress Brittany Murphy will be laid to rest at a small, private funeral on Christmas Eve, while a larger memorial service may be held early next year.

Family spokesman Alex Ben Block said the Thursday funeral for the “Clueless” and Girl, Interrupted” actress will be by invitation-only at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills.

The 32-year-old actress died after collapsing at her Hollywood Hills home on Sunday.

Authorities continue to investigate the death. An autopsy performed Monday was inconclusive, and the coroner’s office is awaiting results of toxicology and tissue tests before determining an official cause of death.

Murphy moved with her mother, Sharon, to Los Angeles when she was a teenager to pursue an acting career. She started out in sitcoms and commercials in the early 1990s before winning starring roles in several films.

She played Eminem’s love interest in “8 Mile” and Ashton Kutcher’s wife in “Just Married.” She starred as a suspicious girlfriend in 2004′s “Little Black Book” a barmaid with an abusive ex-boyfriend in 2005′s “Sin City.”

Murphy was juggling multiple movie projects in the months before her unexpected death, wrapping two indie thrillers over the summer and preparing to shoot a romantic comedy next month.

Michael Feifer, who directed Murphy in her final role, described the actress as professional, kind and healthy on the set of “Abandoned.” Murphy’s husband, screenwriter Simon Monjack, accompanied her on set and served as her hair and makeup artist.

“The two of them really took care of each other,” Feifer recalled. “He was her teddy bear, and she was just his little princess.”

The future of that film and Murphy’s other thriller, “Something Wicked,” is uncertain. Neither has secured theatrical distribution.

The private funeral Thursday afternoon is to be an intimate affair, Block said, noting the irony that Murphy loved Christmas and would be buried on Christmas Eve.

Other stars buried at Forest Lawn include Liberace, Bette Davis, Lucille Ball, Gene Autry and Freddie Prinze.

 

Brittany Murphy’s heartbroken husband yesterday blasted the “crazy” suggestions that the “Clueless” star overdosed or had an eating disorder, insisting he has no idea what killed his 32-year-old wife.

Murphy spent her last night of life noshing on Thai takeout and homemade soup while checking out Oscar contenders from her bed, widower Simon Monjack told People magazine.

He bristled at suggestions Murphy’s cardiac arrest was caused by drugs or an eating disorder.

“These rumors that she was anorexic? It’s crazy — she was slim, but that was her natural physique,” Monjack told the mag.

“This is what’s killing all of us. How did it happen? Her mum, myself and her family — we want to know why we lost our baby.”

Authorities have ruled out foul play, but investigators reportedly found prescription drugs in the actress’ Hollywood Hills home.

Monjack said Murphy — who in the past six months had worked on the films “Abandoned,” “Something Wicked” and “Shrinking Charlotte” — had laryngitis and was taking herbal medications and tea.

“It’s horrible — the death of a beautiful young woman,” he said.

In recent public appearances, Murphy appeared to be gaunt and underfed.

But at the time of her death, the 5-foot-5 Murphy weighed 115 pounds — within parameters of normal weight under federal standards, assistant chief coroner Ed Winter told The Post.

“We are faced with this ridiculous reality that people out there believe she felt, ‘Oh, poor me, I’m fat, I’m thin.’ Brittany didn’t see beauty as a physical thing — which I’m bloody lucky for,” he said.

Murphy Saturday night screened “It’s Complicated,” “Public Enemies” and “The Princess and the Frog” to help her decide how to vote as a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

“She was tired and a little sad because she was sick,” her husband said.

But a leading pain-medication specialist said he was troubled by the amount of pills reportedly found in Murphy’s home.

“I’d be surprised if there weren’t medication-related issues involved in her death,” said Dr. David Kloth, a member of the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians, a group that monitors prescription-drug abuse.

“To be 32 years old and die for no reason — that just doesn’t happen.”

(source)

 

A staggering trove of powerful prescription medications was recovered from Brittany Murphy’s bedroom after her untimely death, investigative notes obtained by TMZ.com reveal.

The notes from a Los Angeles County coroner investigator say Murphy, 32, had been complaining of shortness of breath and severe abdominal pain for seven to 10 days before she went to the bathroom about 7:30 a.m. Sunday and collapsed.

Her mother found her on the floor a half-hour later, according to the notes, and Murphy’s husband, Simon Monjack, attempted to revive her by placing her in the shower.

“Large amounts” of prescription medications were found on Murphy’s nightstand, and the coroner also found “numerous empty” bottles of prescriptions written to Murphy, her mom, Monjack and unidentified third-party names, the notes said, according to TMZ.

The drugs included the anti-seizure medication Topamax, anti-anxiety medications Klonopin and Ativan, pain relievers Vicoprofen and hydrocodone, depression medication Fluoxetine and hypertension medication Propranolol, TMZ reported.

The shocking report follows an interview Monjack, 39, gave to Access Hollywood in which he hit back at suggestions that he was a bad influence on the “Clueless” star.

“My world was destroyed yesterday,” Monjack said.

He said his wife’s mother found the body in the bathroom.

“Her mom screamed for me and I ran. Then called 911,” he told the celebrity outlet.

Coroner spokesman Capt. John Kades told the Daily News that investigators booked the medications into evidence.

He said Monday’s autopsy found no obvious cause of death and that a final determination may take up to two months. .

Murphy’s estranged dad, Angelo Bertolotti, demanded a full probe.

“It just astounds me that she’s dead,” he told The News. “She was just so bubbly, even as a little girl. I don’t recall her ever having any health problems.”

“She got married and everything seemed to go downhill,” said Bertolotti.

A friend of the star echoed persistent rumors that Monjack – who reportedly opposed the autopsy – was a poor match for the saucer-eyed starlet.

“When Brittany married Simon, she cut off communication with a number of people who cherished her,” the pal told The News. “She lived in denial about him.”

“I don’t know why anyone would think that,” Monjack shot back in the Access Hollywood interview posted online. “She found love. We found love.”

In an eerie last interview, Murphy said this month that she had concerns about her frail frame. “I am a bit thinner now than what I would like to be,” she told Fox News.

Denying rumors of drug use and eating disorders, she told Access Hollywood at the same press event: “As far as having a New Year’s resolution, I’d love to have a child next year.”

(source)

 

Brittany Murphy’s sudden death came as little surprise to those familiar with the “Clueless” star’s ugly, drug-fueled descent over the past few years.

A Hollywood insider told The Post yesterday that substance abuse and oddball behavior had sadly become par for the course for the once-promising “8 Mile” and “King of the Hill” star, who went into cardiac arrest and died Sunday at her home.

Her death at age 32 “wasn’t a surprise” at all, the source told said. “I’m not psychic, and I could have predicted it.”

One filmmaking executive told the Web site The Daily Beast that Murphy’s hard-partying reputation was similar to that of actress Lindsay Lohan.

“This is like Lindsay Lohan dying,” the studio suit said. “It really doesn’t come, unfortunately, as a shock.”

A makeup artist said Murphy dabbled too much in heroin and cocaine and referred to the star’s reputed eating disorder, which left her shockingly skinny toward the end.

“She had too many drugs and too little food,” the makeup artist said.

Coroners completed an autopsy yesterday, but refused to release any findings until results of the toxicology exams come back.

TMZ, citing notes from an investigator with the coroner’s office, said there were “large amounts of prescription medication” on her bedroom nightstand — and empty med bottles in the names of her husband, mother “and unidentified third-party names.”

They included anti-seizure drugs, an anti-inflammatory, Prozac, anti-anxiety meds, an antibiotic and painkillers Vicobrofen and Hydrocodone.

According to the notes, mom Sharon Murphy called 911 and Brittany’s husband — screenwriter Simon Monjack — “attempted to revive the decedent by placing her in the shower and running the water.”

“The decedent remained unresponsive and purged her stomach contents prior to the arrival of the paramedics.” When they arrived, Murphy was “without signs of life.”

Paramedics tried to revive Murphy at her Hollywood Hills home before she was pronounced dead at nearby Cedars-Sinai Medical Center on Sunday.

The investigator spoke with police at the scene, who told him “foul play is not suspected,” TMZ reported.

“Clueless” director Amy Heckerling — who had once been close with Murphy but admitted she’d fallen out of touch with her — said “there’s been rumblings” that the troubled star had been having problems.

“It’s a small town to a certain degree — people who know people on crews said that her last picture, that wasn’t a happy situation,” Heckerling said.

“There have been rumblings that she’s not the same girl I worked with — as for her health — for a while. Obviously, I can’t say that I know this for sure. But when you hear of a 32-year-old girl dying of natural causes, then you know, health-wise, she just wasn’t in the same place.”

Ed Winter, of the LA coroner’s office, said its probe was just beginning — but conceded that he had heard the same whispers of drug abuse.

Still, no on-the-record sources have come forward to tell coroner’s investigators that Murphy did illicit drugs, Winter said.

“They’ve been saying that there were issues, but we haven’t had it firsthand yet,” he said. “We’re trying to gather all the information.”

LA County coroner’s

Capt. John Kades said he didn’t know whether Monjack had requested that there be no autopsy, as had been reported.

TMZ said last night that Murphy’s will, written before she met Monjack, leaves everything to her mother. It wasn’t known if the star amended the will after marrying.

One of Murphy’s final public appearances was on Dec. 3, as she walked the red carpet for the opening of design brand Tt Collection’s Pop-Up shop in Los Angeles.

Although some in the crowd thought Murphy looked emaciated, Tt designer and founder Tiffany Saidnia insisted otherwise.

Saidnia said Murphy wore a size 2 when they first met eight years ago and donned a size 2 again when she attended the recent opening.

“She was in great spirits [Dec. 3] and happy as can be,” Saidnia told The Post.

(source)

 

Authorities said Monday it appeared actress Brittany Murphy died of natural causes after becoming ill with flulike symptoms in the days before she collapsed in the bathroom of her Hollywood Hills home.

Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter said an autopsy had been conducted and officials were awaiting the results of toxicology and tissue testing before determining an official cause of death. It could take up to six weeks before a determination is made public.

Officials also interviewed Murphy’s personal physician and examined prescription drugs taken from her home.

Paramedics tried to revive Murphy early Sunday, but she was pronounced dead at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. The hospital said she died of cardiac arrest.

The autopsy found no signs of trauma to the body of the 32-year-old star of “Clueless” and “8 Mile.” Police did not suspect foul play.

“We went to the scene to see if there was anything that suggests foul play, and there wasn’t,” Los Angeles police Detective Wendi Berndt said.

Winter said Murphy’s family reported she had been ill and that could have contributed to her death. He said he had no further details about the medication taken from the home Murphy shared with her screenwriter husband Simon Monjack.

“My world was destroyed yesterday,” Monjack told Access Hollywood in an interview Monday. He said Murphy’s mother, Sharon, discovered the actress unconscious in the shower, and he called 911.

He told Access Hollywood that Murphy had laryngitis but it didn’t seem that serious.

Funeral arrangements have not been announced.

“The sudden loss of our beloved Brittany is a terrible tragedy,” Monjack and her family wrote in a statement. “She was our daughter, our wife, our love, and a shining star.”

Murphy’s death put “Saturday Night Live” in an awkward spot.

Two weeks ago, the NBC show aired a sketch during “Weekend Update” in which cast member Abby Elliott did an impression of Murphy, who had recently been fired from a film project. The impression portrayed Murphy as spacey and living in the past.

After Murphy’s death, the sketch disappeared from Hulu.com, an online video repository co-owned by NBC Universal. Sharon Pannozzo, a publicist for “Saturday Night Live,” didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Murphy moved to Los Angeles with her mother, Sharon, in the early 1990s. Her career started with small roles in television series, commercials and movies. Her part in “Clueless” led to larger projects.

She is also known for her role in “Girl, Interrupted” and voiced the character Luanne Platter for more than 200 episodes of Fox’s animated series “King of the Hill.”

Her role in “8 Mile” led to wide recognition.

“That was the difference between people knowing my first and last name as opposed to not,” she told AP in 2003.

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