With the loss of its celebrities, Gen X ponders mortality

Throughout the year, those in Generation X have responded with incredulity, sadness and fear as one '80s celebrity after another died, starting in January with David Bowie.|

People we lost in 2016

Celebrities, actors and directors

Carrie Fisher, 'Star Wars' Princess LeiaMusicians and Industry Executives Leaders, politicians and military figures Journalists, authors, innovators, media and academic figures Chefs, sport, design, art and business figures

Actor and comedian Ricky Harris

Zsa Zsa Gabor

'Growing Pains' dad Alan Thicke

'Days of Our Lives' star Joseph Mascolo

'Howard Stern Show' personality Joey Boots

Florence Henderson, TV's Carol Brady

'The Man From U.N.C.L.E.' actor Robert Vaughn

Agnes Nixon, creator of 'All My Children'

'NCIS' showrunner Gary Glasberg

Curtis Hanson, '8 Mile' and 'LA Confidential' director

Charmian Carr, Liesl in 'The Sound of Music'

Alexis Arquette, actress and transgender activist

Lady Chablis of 'Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil'

'Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp' star Hugh O'Brian

Actor Gene Wilder, star of 'Willy Wonka'

Actor Kenny Baker, 'Star Wars' R2-D2

Actor David Huddleston, 'The Big Lebowski'

'Dances with Wolves' actor Chief David Bald Eagle, Jr.

'Miss Cleo,' TV psychic network pitchwoman

Garry Marshall, TV and movie legend

Noel Neill, Lois Lane on 'Superman' TV show

'Star Trek' actor Anton Yelchin

TV actress Ann Morgan Guilbert

Ron Lester, 'Varsity Blues' actor

'ALF' actor Michu Meszaros

Actress Beth Howland, waitress on 'Alice'

Alan Young, Wilbur on 'Mister Ed'

'Casablanca' actress Madeleine LeBeau

William Schallert, dad on 'The Patty Duke Show'

Wrestler, entertainer Chyna

Doris Roberts, mom on 'Everybody Loves Raymond'

Daisy Lewellyn, reality TV star

Voice of 'Star Wars' Adm. Ackbar, Erik Bauersfeld

Actress Patty Duke

James Noble, Actor known as 'Benson' governor

Garry Shandling, inventive TV comedian

Actor Joe Santos of 'The Rockford Files'

'L.A. Law' actor Larry Drake

Actor George Kennedy

'Big Ang' Raiola, 'Mob Wives' star

George Gaynes, 'Punky Brewster' actor

Bob Elliott, half of comedy legends Bob and Ray

Joe Alaskey, voice of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck

Abe Vigoda, 'Godfather' and 'Barney Miller' actor

Dan Haggerty, 'Grizzly Adams' star

René Angélil, husband of Céline Dion

Actor Alan Rickman, Harry Potter's Professor Snape

David Margulies, 'Ghostbusters' actor

Pat Harrington, Schneider on 'One Day at a Time'

Cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond

80s pop star George Michael

Rick Parfitt, Status Quo guitarist

Soul singer Sharon Jones

Rock 'n' roll star Leon Russell

Singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen

Music legend Buckwheat Zydeco

Rapper Shawty Lo

Former N.W.A. manager Jerry Heller

Fred Hellerman of the Weavers

Juan Gabriel, Mexican music icon

Jazz great Pete Fountain

Ralph Stanley, bluegrass music legend

Singer Attrell Cordes of P.M. Dawn

'Voice' singer Christina Grimmie

Singer-songwriter Guy Clark

Jane Little, Guinness World Record holding bassist

Singer Prince

Merle Haggard, country music's outsider hero

Frank Sinatra Jr.

Keith Emerson of Emerson, Lake & Palmer

Sir George Martin, Beatles producer

Joey Martin Feek of country duo Joey + Rory

Country music legend Sonny James

Denise Matthews, Prince protege Vanity

Maurice White, leader and founder of Earth, Wind & Fire

Paul Kantner, Jefferson Airplane guitarist

The Eagles' Glenn Frey

David Bowie, master of reinvention

Robert Stigwood, force behind 'Saturday Night Fever'

Former senator, astronaut John Glenn

Former Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird

Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej

Israeli leader and Nobel laureate Shimon Peres

WWII Navajo code talker Joe Hosteen Kellwood

Phyllis Schlafly, towering social conservative figure

Suzanne Wright, autism advocate

Rep. Mark Takai of Hawaii

Mother Mary Angelica, nun who built Catholic media network

Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford

Former first lady Nancy Reagan

Antonin Scalia, Supreme Court justice

Edgar Mitchell, Astronaut who walked on moon

Dale Bumpers, fmr. U.S. senator, Arkansas governor

Former Rep. Mike Oxley

'Watership Down' author Richard Adams

Vera Rubin, dark matter pioneer

PBS newscaster Gwen Ifill

'Tuck Everlasting' author Natalie Babbitt

Actor, playwright and Nobel laureate Dario Fo

Author Gloria Naylor

Legendary playwright Edward Albee

W.P. Kinsella, whose book inspired 'Field of Dreams'

Children's author Anna Dewdney

George Curry, champion of black press

PBS' John McLaughlin

ESPN's John Saunders

Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate

CNN's Will King

Morely Safer, '60 Minutes' legend

Jim Harrison, author of 'Legends of the Fall'

Ray Tomlinson, creator of email

Pat Conroy, author of 'Prince of Tides' and 'Great Santini'

Umberto Eco, famed author of 'The Name of the Rose'

Harper Lee, 'To Kill a Mockingbird' author

Marvin Minsky, Pioneer of artificial intelligence

Craig Sager, colorful Turner Sports reporter

Paul Elvstrom, sailing great

Former Heisman Trophy winner Rashaan Salaam

Dylan Rieder, pro skateboarder and model

Golfing great Arnold Palmer

Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernandez

Former FIFA President João Havelange

Former NFL head coach Dennis Green

Pat Summitt, legendary women's basketball coach

Fashion photographer Bill Cunningham

Hockey legend Gordie Howe

MMA fighter Kimbo Slice

Boxing legend Muhammad Ali

Comic book artist Darwyn Cooke

Architect Zaha Hadid

NFL Ravens' Tray Walker

Robert Redbird, iconic Native American artist

'American Gladiator' Lee Reherman, 'The Hawk'

BMX legend Dave Mirra

World's 'top chef' Benoit Violier

Bill Johnson, Former Olympic gold medal skier

'Iron' Mike Sharpe, WWE Superstar

Monte Irvin, Baseball Hall of Fame outfielder

Lawrence Phillips, imprisoned ex-NFL rusher

Andrew Smith, former Butler basketball player

*Info from CNN

Princess Leia was our first girl movie heroine, and we made our moms braid brunette yarn so we'd have earmuff buns for Halloween. Carol Brady of "The Brady Bunch" was the ideal mother we probably didn't have, because our moms had to work and left us latchkey kids home alone, with TV and processed food our only companions.

Carrie Fisher and Florence Henderson - and other icons of Generation X's youth - are now gone, stolen by the cruel thief that is 2016. The year has left the generation born between the early 1960s and the early 1980s wallowing in memories and contemplating its own mortality.

"It's a very melancholy time," sighed Shelly Ransom, a 47-year-old speech-language pathologist in Darien, Connecticut. "This is really bringing back a lot of teen angsty feelings. These people are supposed to still be the voices of my generation. It's sad to see these artists not there to be our voice."

Or, as weary, 51-year-old Lawrence Feeney, a filmmaker from New Port Richey, Florida, put it: "You lose George Michael and Carrie Fisher in a three-day span, you feel like you've gotten a couple of daggers thrown at you."

Throughout the year, office conversations, dinner party discussions and social media have exploded with incredulity, sadness and fear, as one '80s celebrity after another died, starting in January with David Bowie.

The feelings have been particularly acute for Gen X, whose members came of age when many of these cultural figures were popular.

We adored Bowie in the movie "Labyrinth" and danced to "Modern Love" at prom. We remember reading the words "Purple Rain" on the theater marquee and wondered why that little guy in high heels was so sexy. We made out fervently in cars in high school as George Michael crooned on the FM dial (Remember radio? It came decades before Spotify, and you couldn't pick your music).

"We were the generation that was going to change the world. When I was a young man, I watched people my age stand in front of tanks in Tiananmen Square and tear down the Berlin Wall. Now I find myself complaining about arthritis in my hands and taking care of my aging parents," lamented Rob Withrow, a 43-year-old landscape business owner in Palm Bay, Florida.

He added: "The musicians I admired growing up are now dying off. Hopefully, I still have quite a few more decades left in me, but the reality of dying is much clearer to see."

Of course, this happens to every generation: Our idols die off, and we suddenly feel our youth slipping away.

But Lou Manza, a professor of psychology at Lebanon Valley College in Annville, Pennsylvania, said baby boomers and older generations weren't as invested in or connected to their celebrities. Gen X had MTV, which put pop stars like Prince and Bowie into our homes in heavy rotation.

That, combined with the immediacy and intimacy of 21st-century social media - we knew when platinum-haired punk rocker Billy Idol turned 61 because Facebook informed us, for instance - amplifies the sadness.

"Our parents in the '70s would hear about a celebrity death on the nightly news, or the next day in the newspaper," Manza said. "Now, there's more and more of an immediacy with every successive generation."

Sarah McBride Wagner, a 37-year-old writer in Weirton, West Virginia, said social media has created a place for collective mourning.

"We've never met these people. Yet we're all so affected by it," she said. "Being a shared grief both makes it bigger and easier."

For some, the death of beloved childhood figures reminds us of the passing of people closer to us and of the march of time, which seems more like a fast jog.

"We're at the age now when we really start to see ourselves in our parents. My son just turned 10, and it occurred to me as he hung out with my parents that it's really not going to be too many more years before my husband and I are my parents, and he is us," said Amanda Forman, a 38-year-old mother of three and a writer from Flourtown, Pennsylvania.

"The celebrity deaths of people we've admired exacerbate those feelings. I think in the case of those who passed who are slightly older, it makes us feel like we are that much closer, that our generation is next. And it makes us feel like our childhood is that much further behind us."

___

Follow Tamara Lush on Twitter at http://twitter.com/tamaralush

People we lost in 2016

Celebrities, actors and directors

Carrie Fisher, 'Star Wars' Princess LeiaMusicians and Industry Executives Leaders, politicians and military figures Journalists, authors, innovators, media and academic figures Chefs, sport, design, art and business figures

Actor and comedian Ricky Harris

Zsa Zsa Gabor

'Growing Pains' dad Alan Thicke

'Days of Our Lives' star Joseph Mascolo

'Howard Stern Show' personality Joey Boots

Florence Henderson, TV's Carol Brady

'The Man From U.N.C.L.E.' actor Robert Vaughn

Agnes Nixon, creator of 'All My Children'

'NCIS' showrunner Gary Glasberg

Curtis Hanson, '8 Mile' and 'LA Confidential' director

Charmian Carr, Liesl in 'The Sound of Music'

Alexis Arquette, actress and transgender activist

Lady Chablis of 'Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil'

'Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp' star Hugh O'Brian

Actor Gene Wilder, star of 'Willy Wonka'

Actor Kenny Baker, 'Star Wars' R2-D2

Actor David Huddleston, 'The Big Lebowski'

'Dances with Wolves' actor Chief David Bald Eagle, Jr.

'Miss Cleo,' TV psychic network pitchwoman

Garry Marshall, TV and movie legend

Noel Neill, Lois Lane on 'Superman' TV show

'Star Trek' actor Anton Yelchin

TV actress Ann Morgan Guilbert

Ron Lester, 'Varsity Blues' actor

'ALF' actor Michu Meszaros

Actress Beth Howland, waitress on 'Alice'

Alan Young, Wilbur on 'Mister Ed'

'Casablanca' actress Madeleine LeBeau

William Schallert, dad on 'The Patty Duke Show'

Wrestler, entertainer Chyna

Doris Roberts, mom on 'Everybody Loves Raymond'

Daisy Lewellyn, reality TV star

Voice of 'Star Wars' Adm. Ackbar, Erik Bauersfeld

Actress Patty Duke

James Noble, Actor known as 'Benson' governor

Garry Shandling, inventive TV comedian

Actor Joe Santos of 'The Rockford Files'

'L.A. Law' actor Larry Drake

Actor George Kennedy

'Big Ang' Raiola, 'Mob Wives' star

George Gaynes, 'Punky Brewster' actor

Bob Elliott, half of comedy legends Bob and Ray

Joe Alaskey, voice of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck

Abe Vigoda, 'Godfather' and 'Barney Miller' actor

Dan Haggerty, 'Grizzly Adams' star

René Angélil, husband of Céline Dion

Actor Alan Rickman, Harry Potter's Professor Snape

David Margulies, 'Ghostbusters' actor

Pat Harrington, Schneider on 'One Day at a Time'

Cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond

80s pop star George Michael

Rick Parfitt, Status Quo guitarist

Soul singer Sharon Jones

Rock 'n' roll star Leon Russell

Singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen

Music legend Buckwheat Zydeco

Rapper Shawty Lo

Former N.W.A. manager Jerry Heller

Fred Hellerman of the Weavers

Juan Gabriel, Mexican music icon

Jazz great Pete Fountain

Ralph Stanley, bluegrass music legend

Singer Attrell Cordes of P.M. Dawn

'Voice' singer Christina Grimmie

Singer-songwriter Guy Clark

Jane Little, Guinness World Record holding bassist

Singer Prince

Merle Haggard, country music's outsider hero

Frank Sinatra Jr.

Keith Emerson of Emerson, Lake & Palmer

Sir George Martin, Beatles producer

Joey Martin Feek of country duo Joey + Rory

Country music legend Sonny James

Denise Matthews, Prince protege Vanity

Maurice White, leader and founder of Earth, Wind & Fire

Paul Kantner, Jefferson Airplane guitarist

The Eagles' Glenn Frey

David Bowie, master of reinvention

Robert Stigwood, force behind 'Saturday Night Fever'

Former senator, astronaut John Glenn

Former Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird

Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej

Israeli leader and Nobel laureate Shimon Peres

WWII Navajo code talker Joe Hosteen Kellwood

Phyllis Schlafly, towering social conservative figure

Suzanne Wright, autism advocate

Rep. Mark Takai of Hawaii

Mother Mary Angelica, nun who built Catholic media network

Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford

Former first lady Nancy Reagan

Antonin Scalia, Supreme Court justice

Edgar Mitchell, Astronaut who walked on moon

Dale Bumpers, fmr. U.S. senator, Arkansas governor

Former Rep. Mike Oxley

'Watership Down' author Richard Adams

Vera Rubin, dark matter pioneer

PBS newscaster Gwen Ifill

'Tuck Everlasting' author Natalie Babbitt

Actor, playwright and Nobel laureate Dario Fo

Author Gloria Naylor

Legendary playwright Edward Albee

W.P. Kinsella, whose book inspired 'Field of Dreams'

Children's author Anna Dewdney

George Curry, champion of black press

PBS' John McLaughlin

ESPN's John Saunders

Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate

CNN's Will King

Morely Safer, '60 Minutes' legend

Jim Harrison, author of 'Legends of the Fall'

Ray Tomlinson, creator of email

Pat Conroy, author of 'Prince of Tides' and 'Great Santini'

Umberto Eco, famed author of 'The Name of the Rose'

Harper Lee, 'To Kill a Mockingbird' author

Marvin Minsky, Pioneer of artificial intelligence

Craig Sager, colorful Turner Sports reporter

Paul Elvstrom, sailing great

Former Heisman Trophy winner Rashaan Salaam

Dylan Rieder, pro skateboarder and model

Golfing great Arnold Palmer

Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernandez

Former FIFA President João Havelange

Former NFL head coach Dennis Green

Pat Summitt, legendary women's basketball coach

Fashion photographer Bill Cunningham

Hockey legend Gordie Howe

MMA fighter Kimbo Slice

Boxing legend Muhammad Ali

Comic book artist Darwyn Cooke

Architect Zaha Hadid

NFL Ravens' Tray Walker

Robert Redbird, iconic Native American artist

'American Gladiator' Lee Reherman, 'The Hawk'

BMX legend Dave Mirra

World's 'top chef' Benoit Violier

Bill Johnson, Former Olympic gold medal skier

'Iron' Mike Sharpe, WWE Superstar

Monte Irvin, Baseball Hall of Fame outfielder

Lawrence Phillips, imprisoned ex-NFL rusher

Andrew Smith, former Butler basketball player

*Info from CNN

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