James Blunt opens up about what it was like living in his beloved friend Carrie Fisher’s “madhouse”

British singer James Blunt arrives at the Cannes festival palace, for the NRJ Music awards ceremony, Saturday, Dec. 14, 2013, in Cannes, southeastern France. (AP Photo/Lionel Cironneau)

In a recent interview, singer James Blunt divulged on what it was like living with iconic actress Carrie Fisher. Fisher opened up her home — which she referred to as a “guest house for wandering Brits” — to Blunt in the early 2000s, feeding him and acting as his therapist.

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“It was a bit of a madhouse — and the food was terrible!” Blunt said of the home that inspired the title of his debut album “Back to Bedlam.” “But, she was a wonderful person who took people under her wing. Paul Simon used to pass on by, Sean Lennon, Rufus Wainwright, people like that. Her place was like a commune — it was a very creative environment. There were no airs and graces with her, and I was crushed when she passed last year.”

The pair became such good friends that Blunt even wrote a song for Fisher, which will be premiered at her joint public memorial shared with Debbie Reynolds. The memorial is set to take place at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Los Angeles Saturday, and it will be open to fans.

“The saddest thing is that my son will never get to know someone I thought was the most special person,” Blunt said of his beloved friend’s sudden passing in December. “Fisher was my American mother, and a real inspiration.”

RELATED: James Blunt continues to mourn the loss of his dear friend Carrie Fisher

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