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Sound of Music star Charmian Carr dies at 73

The actor portrayed Liesl von Trapp in the classic 1965 film.

Obit Charmian Carr AP AP

CHARMIAN CARR, THE actor best known for portraying the eldest von Trapp daughter in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s The Sound of Music, has died. She was 73.

Carr died on Saturday of complications from a rare form of dementia in Los Angeles, Carr’s spokesman, Harlan Boll, said.

At 21, the actor portrayed Liesl von Trapp in the 1965 film version of the musical The Sound of Music. She famously performed the song Sixteen Going on Seventeen.

After The Sound of Music, Carr’s only other major Hollywood role was starring with Anthony Perkins in the Stephen Sondheim television musical Evening Primrose. She played a mysterious young woman who lived in a department store.

“It’s always sad when a member of the family passes away — and in the case of the ‘family’ of the movie The Sound of Music, it’s especially sad when it is the first of the group to go,” Ted Chapin, president of the Rodgers & Hammerstein organisation, said in a statement.

“Charmian Carr played the oldest von Trapp child, and in some ways she maintained that role in real life — guiding, cheering, supporting and generally being there for the rest of her ‘sisters’ and ‘brothers’. ”

20th Century Fox, the studio that produced the Sound of Music film, noted Carr’s death on Twitter.

The actor later wrote two books about her Sound of Music experiences: Forever Liesl and Letters to Liesl. She fully embraced audiences’ reverence for the musical, frequently appearing at fan events commemorating the film, including sing-a-long performances at the Hollywood Bowl.

“I tell people that they should consider sing-a-long Sound Of Music like going to a therapist,” she told The Associated Press before a 2005 appearance.

It’s just a kind of therapy. They can move around. They can dance and talk back to the screen. They can skip their appointment with the shrink that week.

Carr went on to become an interior designer in Southern California. Her clients included Michael Jackson and Sound of Music screenwriter Ernest Lehman.

She was born in Chicago in 1942. Her mother was a vaudeville actor, and her father was a musician and orchestra leader. Her family moved to the San Fernando Valley when she was a child.

Carr is survived by her four siblings, her two children and four grandchildren. She is also survived by the six other actors who became part of cinematic history when they were cast as the von Trapp children.

“We’re second family,” Kym Karath, who played the youngest von Trapp, Gretl, said in an AP interview last year to commemorate the film’s 50th anniversary. “As adults, we were deeply bonded, so our lives have really interwoven with each other.”

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