Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds’ New York townhouse costs $11.5 million

The longtime Manhattan townhouse owned by the late Debbie Reynolds and her daughter, the late Carrie Fisher, has hit the market for $11.5 million, The Post has learned.
Located on the Upper East Side at 154 E. 74th St., Reynolds raised Carrie and her son Todd Fisher in the home in the 1970s.
The home consists of five bedrooms and spans 4,275 square feet.
“Perfectly updated with custom designer and artisan details to create a beautiful marriage of old and new,” the listing reads.
The first floor spans four floors and features a fully soundproofed large media room, fully sound-automated with a projector and movie screen, and cork floors.
In Todd’s 2018 book, My Girls: A Lifetime with Carrie and Debbie, he spoke about the importance of the screening room.
According to him, it was a family tradition to watch movies in the room with popcorn and “real melted butter” because that was the only thing his mother could cook back in the days when popcorn was made in a pan.







“It was a family tradition that we carried on for the rest of Mom and Carrie’s lives, and to this day I can’t watch a movie unless there’s plenty of popcorn with real melted butter on hand,” he added.
A second kitchen is also included on the ground floor. Meanwhile, French doors lead to the backyard and basketball court with an outdoor seating area.
The second floor – the salon level – houses the chef’s kitchen, dining area and a powder room. At the north end of the floor is the formal living room with a working wood-burning fireplace.
The primary suite is on the third floor and features a gas fireplace. The en-suite bathroom has underfloor heating, double sinks, a separate toilet and a shower connected to a dressing area/closet with a window. At the other end of the floor is another bedroom currently used as an office/library room.




On the top floor, natural light floods the entire center from an expansive skylight. The other two en-suite bedrooms are on this level and also have underfloor heating. The front bedroom has exposed brick and the back bedroom bath has a deep soaking tub with another skylight and fireplace.
In the basement there is a wine cellar with 800 bottles and a full laundry room.
Todd has even more memories of the house in his book.
“My first birthday outside of Greenway Drive. A car was waiting at JFK to take me and my luggage to 154 East 74th Street, the four-story brownstone between Third and Lexington, where I would live with Mom and Carrie,” Todd wrote in his book. “There were two bedrooms on the fourth floor. One was Carries. The other belonged to Joan Hackett when she was in town.”







Steve Halpern with Compass holds the listing.
Carrie died on December 27, 2016, four days after suffering a medical emergency on a commercial flight from London to Los Angeles. The cause of death was given as cardiac arrest, but it was noted that the exact death could not be determined. Sleep apnea and the accumulation of fatty tissue on the artery walls were among the contributing factors. A full report dated June 19, 2017 states that the ‘Star Wars’ actress had cocaine in her system, as well as trace amounts of heroin, other opiates and MDMA. She was 60 years old.
A day after Carrie’s death, on December 28, 2016, Reynolds died at the age of 84 after suffering a massive stroke. Todd had determined that Carrie’s death was partially responsible for her stroke.
In October 2021, the Reynolds home in Los Angeles went on the market.
Todd revealed that she had revealed “I want to be with Carrie” shortly before her death.
https://nypost.com/2022/06/15/carrie-fisher-and-debbie-reynolds-nyc-townhouse-asks-11-5m/ Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds’ New York townhouse costs $11.5 million