Carrie Fisher, best known to millions of fans for her role as Princess Leia in “Star Wars,” turned 60 on Friday. The actress — and daughter of Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fisher — is also well-known for being transparent about her struggles with bipolar disorder.

In 2008, Fisher penned a memoir titled “Wishful Drinking” about her struggles with alcohol, famous parents, and mental illness, which she parlayed into a Broadway show and an HBO special.

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In 1975, the actress made her big-screen debut in the film “Shampoo,” alongside Warren Beatty and Goldie Hawn. Two years later, Fisher landed the role of a lifetime when she was cast as Princess Leia in George Lucas’ “Star Wars.”

With “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” the latest film in the science fiction franchise that earned record-breaking sales at the box office last year — the franchise’s total value only increases.

With the total worldwide box office gross for all seven original Star Wars films, the three “special edition” re-releases, the re-issues of the first two movies in 1982, and the animated film “Star Wars: The Clone Wars” in 2008, total earnings come in at a whopping $5.149 billion, according to Box Office Mojo.

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Fortune estimated that the seven episodes alone could total $7.3 billion in inflation-adjusted dollars in global sales.

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