Prolific writer Nora Ephron dead at 71
"She brought an awful lot
of people a tremendous amount of joy. She will be sorely missed," said
the statement from Alfred A. Knopf.
Ephron's romantic
comedies included the box office hits "When Harry Met Sally," and
"Sleepless in Seattle," both of which earned her screenwriting Oscar
nominations.
She was also nominated for an Oscar for writing "Silkwood," the story of anti-nuclear activist Karen Silkwood.
She was one of the first woman to write and direct her own films, including "Sleepless in Seattle."
Ephron, known for
creating strong female characters in her stories, wrote and directed
"Julie & Julia," which earned Meryl Streep a best actress Oscar
nomination in 2010.
Ephron's parents, Henry
and Phoebe Ephron, were also screenwriters, with "Carousel," "Desk Set"
and "There's No Business Like Show Business" on their resumes.
"They were funny and they
believed that everything was copy," Ephron said in a CNN interview in
2009. "They believed that anything in life could be turned into a story,
which is really the first rule of humor."
Ephron's life was particularly central to her father's memoir, "We Thought We Could Do Anything."
Humor was important for surviving her childhood, she said.
"I don't think you can get through almost anything without humor," she said.
She married screenwriter Nicholas Pileggi in 1987, eight years after she divorced investigative reporter Carl Bernstein.
The destruction of her marriage to Bernstein was the basis of her book and movie "Heartburn."
"And I feel bad for the
people who don't at some point understand that there's something funny
in even the worst things that can happen to you," Ephron said.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the stories Ephron set in his city are classics.
"The loss of Nora Ephron
is a devastating one for New York City's arts and cultural community,"
Mayor Bloomberg said in a statement. "From her earliest days at New York
City's newspapers to her biggest Hollywood successes, Nora always loved
a good New York story, and she could tell them like no one else."
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