River's edge
By Dana Kennedy
"I've never seen anything like it," says photographer Ron Davis, who was outside the club, and who claims Phoenix's friends acted dazed and confused despite the star's dire condition. According to Davis, Mathis and River's brother Leaf Phoenix argued with the doorman about River's condition as the actor writhed on the ground. Shortly thereafter, Leaf made his anguished call to 911, pleading for an ambulance and worrying out loud that his brother might have taken Valium. Davis said other patrons, including actress Christina Applegate, also behaved like deer caught in the headlights, unsure of what to do. Despite Davis' claims, there is no evidence that paramedics were slow to arrive or that anyone there could have saved Phoenix's life. He was taken to L.A.'s Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in full cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead about an hour later. The initial autopsy report is inconclusive, and the county coroner's office will not have the results of toxicological tests until this week at the earliest. But the revision of Phoenix's abuse-free image has already begun.
"He was absolutely antidrug," says a producer who worked with him. "Then he went crazy." Another casual acquaintance confirms that Phoenix seemed to be going through a change. "I saw him at a wedding in California about a year ago and he was totally out of it," she says. "It was a formal affair. Even the Chili Peppers were wearing cheesy '70s tuxedos. But River arrived at 9:30 a.m., drinking a bottle of wine, dressed in sneakers, a pair of shaggy, ripped shorts, and a dirty T-shirt. People were angry with him." Although he had no home in L.A., he ran with Hollywood-based rockers and neo-brat packers who frequented a club scene where the music is loud and drugs (such as heroin and the synthetic steroid GHB) are in ample supply.
"We were all worried about the crowd he was with," says director Peter Bogdanovich, who became close to Phoenix during the filming of The Thing Called Love. "L.A. bothered him. Something about it triggered all the more difficult parts of his life." Family and friends say that Phoenix did not have a problem with drugs. Bogdanovich also denies any knowledge of Phoenix's substance abuse on Love's Nashville set, but a production source says the actor was drinking heavily during filming.
"There was one night they couldn't get a performance out of him," she notes. Other insiders point to his much-lauded role in My Own Private Idaho as introducing him to a counterculture very different from the one in which he was raised.
(Additional reporting by DB, Melina Gerosa, Gregg Kilday, Heidi Siegmund, MS, Malissa Thompson, and Jeffrey Wells)
© 1993 Entertainment Weekly Inc