Farrah Fawcett dies at age 62 after 3-year cancer battle

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Farrah Fawcett died this morning in at St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, California. Her longtime love Ryan O’Neal was at her bedside, as were several other of her closest friends. She has been battling cancer for three years, and has been in and out of several hospitals in that time. Earlier this week, there were reports that she was being hospitalized again, but I honestly thought it was most likely something routine. Farrah was 62 years old, and she is survived by her son Redmond, aged 24, and her fiancé Ryan.

I could go on and on, but People Magazine has a really great write-up on Farrah’s life and work, so here you go:

Farrah Fawcett, who skyrocketed to fame as one of a trio of impossibly glamorous private eyes on TV’s Charlie’s Angels, has died after a long battle with cancer. She was 62.

Fawcett died at 9:28 a.m. PST on Thursday at St. John’s Heath Center in Santa Monica, Calif. She was with longtime partner Ryan O’Neal, friend Alana Stewart, friend and hairdresser Mela Murphy and her doctor Lawrence Piro. She had recently returned to St. John’s for treatment of complications from anal cancer, first diagnosed three years ago.

“She’s gone. She now belongs to the ages,” O’Neal tells PEOPLE. “She’s now with her mother and sister and her God. I loved her with all my heart. I will miss her so very, very much. She was in and out of consciousness. I talked to her all through the night. I told her how very much I loved her. She’s in a better place now.”

Added O’Neal: “She was with her team when she passed … Her eyes were open, but she didn’t say anything. But you could see in her eyes that she recognized us.”

Though O’Neal recently said that he and Fawcett planned to wed, they did not tie the knot. “There just wasn’t time and Farrah wasn’t in any condition to do it,” says O’Neal.

Friends and family plan to honor Fawcett with a funeral service at a Catholic cathedral in Los Angeles in the next few days.

Like so much about Fawcett’s life – including her bumpy relationship with O’Neal – her heroic struggle to beat the disease was closely followed by her legion of fans.

“I’ve watched her this past year fight with such courage and so valiantly, but with such humor,” Fawcett’s Charlie’s Angels costar Kate Jackson told People in November 2007.

O’Neal, in particular, remained a steadfast supporter of Fawcett, who, despite her frailty, spent the last months of her life filming a TV documentary chronicling her illness, including several trips to Germany to undergo experimental treatment. Fawcett is survived by her son with O’Neal, Redmond, 24, who is currently serving a jail term in California after repeated drug offenses.

Redmond was not there at Fawcett’s side when she died, but spoke to his mother on the phone and told her “how much he loved her and asked her to please forgive him that he was so very, very sorry,” O’Neal tells PEOPLE.

Blonde, blue-eyed and petite – and with a trademark mane as flowing and famous as the M.G.M. lion’s – the Corpus Christi, Texas, native was born Feb. 2, 1947, the younger daughter of an oil-field contractor and his homemaker wife.

A magnet for male students at the University of Texas at Austin, Fawcett eventually set off for Hollywood. Quickly noticed by casting agents, she began landing small parts in forgettable movies, such as 1970’s Myra Breckinridge, based on a gender-bending novel by Gore Vidal. Her role: an ingenuous blonde.

In 1973, Fawcett married actor Lee Majors, forever known as Col. Steve Austin on TV’s The Six Million Dollar Man. Three years later, she appeared in the cult sci-fi film Logan’s Run and began her stint with costars Jackson and Jaclyn Smith on Charlie’s Angels. Well-coiffed and scantily-clad, the threesome created an instant sensation, with a weekly following of 23 million fans.

Fawcett moved on after just one season. By then, she was already a phenomenon, having donned a one-piece red bathing suit and a perfect smile for her legendary pin-up poster, which sold a still-record 12 million copies.

“I became famous almost before I had a craft,” Fawcett told The New York Times in 1986, four years after her divorce from Majors. (By then, she was already involved with Ryan O’Neal.) “I didn’t study drama at school. I was an art major. Suddenly, when I was doing Charlie’s Angels, I was getting all this fan mail, and I didn’t really know why. I don’t think anybody else did, either.”

It took some serious dramatic TV roles, including that of a battered wife in 1984’s The Burning Bed (which earned her an Emmy nomination), as well as starring in small-screen biopics about pioneering photojournalist Margaret Bourke-White and ill-fated Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton, for Fawcett to bounce back.

“What would you do if someone said to you, ‘You’re so popular right now that you can be on the cover of every magazine, but if you do that, you might get overexposed and a backlash will develop’?” Fawcett told The Times after she had emerged from one of the valleys of her career.

Still, she said of fighting for survival in Hollywood, “That’s life. Everything has positive and negative consequences.”

[From People]

That statement from Ryan, “She’s now with her mother and sister and her God. I loved her with all my heart” actually made me choke up. This is very sad… rest in peace, Farrah.

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44 Responses to “Farrah Fawcett dies at age 62 after 3-year cancer battle”

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  1. lala says:

    R.I.P farrah 🙁

  2. Ash says:

    My heart goes out to her family and friends. It especially hits close to home because I lost my father after a 2 1/2 year battle to throat and tonsil cancer in October. Even sadder, it was just four days after my baby was born prematurely. However, my dad held his promise to hang on for her, and while he only saw her through pictures, he saw her.

    The coming in and out of consciousness is such a hard, painful thing to watch. You know the end is soon. She was so brave to document cancer and all its ugliness.

    And lots of people knock Ryan, but I have full respect for him. So many people back away when they hear someone has cancer, but he dove right in with her.

    My dad said upon being moved to his hospice that, “This place is like a mansion, but nothing compared to the one God has waiting for me.” Farrah is there now as well.

  3. I Choose Me says:

    OMG! Say it ain’t so, I thought she was doing better and wasn’t she remarrying Ryan.

    *Sigh* R.I.P. Farrah.

  4. Gloaming says:

    This is so sad, she was a courageous woman. I had a look at her official site and this message was there

    “I am sorry to say our Farrah has passed to a better place and left the pain and confines of her bed behind. She is free to be the woman we all knew and loved. So Few have touched so many. You all keep Fighting the Fight.”

  5. CRAZINESS says:

    So glad her suffering is over. Such a classy lady, such a talented actress.

    (ChooseME: she never married Ryan; they were together off-and-on for more than 20 years but she never accepted his many, many proposals, until last week.)

  6. sarah says:

    I choked up after reading Ryan’s message too. Awful

  7. Diana says:

    Interesting career, solidified by acting in The Burning Bed. I know she provides fond and happy memories for many.

    I’m sorry she suffered with so much pain, and so hope there is a better place for her.

  8. Allie says:

    I loved Farrah, she was such a natural beauty. She fought her battle with cancer with such courage and strength, it’s just so sad she’s gone now. A true icon. Farrah, you will be missed!

  9. x says:

    so sad

  10. rinaz says:

    This is so sad 🙁

  11. geronimo says:

    Very sad news. Classy and beautiful to the end. RIP Farrah.

  12. mel says:

    I agree, glad she’s no longer in pain and at peace. We’ll miss you Farrah.

  13. valupack says:

    A true beauty inside and out. I feel so sad for her father who had to bury a wife and two daughters. RIP

  14. teacher says:

    Such sad and painful news. A piece of us died along with her death. Farrah was in inspiration for us in college and her talents kept us motivated to achieve.

  15. wow says:

    I’ve been following her situation with cancer and this breaks my heart. She gained my respect with her performance in The Burning Bed.

    I feel the worst for her son Redmond to have to be injail when his Mother dies. I’m glad he at least got to speak with her on the phone.

    This is sad. I will watch Barbara Walters special tomorrow. I just couldn’t bring myself to watch the special Alana Stewart & Farrah did. I don’t know why… I guess it just seemed too intrusive even though I know Farrah did it to bring more light to anal cancer. I just didn’t want to watch someone dying. I don’t know what I mean or what I’m saying. I just kinda feel bad for the son.

    I am also proud of the press though for treating this in a dignified way. There didn’t seem to be this urgency or to be the first to report of her death as we’ve seen with other celebrities. I think someone before wrote an abituary for Britany and she wasn’t even dead. It was back during the times she was having all of her troubles.

    R.I.P. Farrah.

  16. Iggles says:

    This is so sad!! Farrah, rest in peace.

  17. justathought says:

    a brave soul indeed….everyone liked Farrah…a shining star.

  18. JohnnieR says:

    Goodbye to perhaps the biggest icon of the 1970’s. A woman of true style, substance, intelligence and humour, who stood apart from the average “sex symbol”…because Farrah was far more than that – she was a true Lady in every sense of the word.

    R.I.P. to a woman who will never be forgotten. This Angel is free of her pain and is now in the world of spirit.

  19. gg says:

    Rest in Peace, beautiful lady. Love and support to her family. This is a sad day.

  20. Megan says:

    RIP =( Farrah Fawcett was such a talented actress. Her role in “Charlie’s Angels” was my favorite. I found a great gallery showcasing her life here: http://www.iheartradio.com/cc-common/gallery/display.html?album_id=172298&cmp=farrahspics_nicole
    She will greatly be missed by everyone

  21. Anoneemouse says:

    She’s got her Angel wings back.

  22. diddy says:

    may her soul rest in peace

  23. Jenna says:

    RIP Farrah. It’s truly a sad day.

  24. notprfect says:

    R.I.P. :'(

  25. Rosanna says:

    Sad day for everybody, especially for Ryan. May he find peace. RIP Farrah

  26. Anna says:

    So sad, may she rest in peace now. It’s heartbreaking that she and Ryan did not even have time to finally get married. But I think it’s so sweet of how respectful he was of her health and how he didn’t push the issue, instead just hoping for a time interval she’d be well enough to appreciate a small ceremony. I’m sorry he never got that. I’m also sorry her son couldn’t be there. Can you imagine how awful it must be not to be at your mother’s deathbed and not even to be allowed to her funeral?
    She was a great broad and she gave us gals a fabulous hairdo for all eternity. Wherever she may be now, I hope she’s having fun and looking out for Ryan and Redmond.

  27. Lalala says:

    the line that got me was “she now belongs to the ages…”

    R.I.P.

  28. dubdub2000 says:

    Ah man, RIP. She was really an icon and will be remembered by many. But she’s definetly in a better place now.

    RIP

  29. pebbles says:

    RIP. cancer’s a bitch.

  30. RAN says:

    RIP Farrah… such sad news

  31. Luz says:

    Farrah chose to publicize her cancer battle, but did not use the opportunity to educate on the connection between anal cancer and HPV (human papilloma virus–also the virus that killed Jade Goody). In a recent study of people with anal cancer, 73 percent were infected with HPV. This is a preventable, screenable disease. Prevent it by engaging in safe sex and limiting your sexual partners, or, if you qualify, getting the new HPV vaccine. Screen for it by getting tested for the HPV virus (a relatively new test)and getting regular cervical and anal pap smears to check for precancerous changes. If you have HPV, don’t smoke, get screened regulary to catch any cellular abnormalities early while its treatable, and take the opportunity to make positive changes so that you have a strong physical, mental, and emotional state. This virus is incredibly, incredibly common, incredibly contagious, and there is so little awareness about it. Oh yes, there’s no test for men, they are usually only carriers of the virus. So even if a guy has been tested “for everything” he has not been tested for HPV.

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/health/sns-health-farrah-fawcett-anal-cancer,0,3387594.story

  32. paranel says:

    RIP. She was the icon of the 70s . A true beauty. Reminds us how short and unpredictable, disloyal life is.

  33. Marie says:

    Great actress, I believe she was great as a person as well.. and man, what a hair!!
    Hope that her family gets some comforting by the thought that she’s in a much better place!
    RIP.

  34. Raven says:

    Stop with the vaccine BS. It’s poison and has very limited effectiveness.

    Loved Farrah, but she was really a throwback to ancient history. Look at that photo, a poster that was a top seller for years. That was all her hair–no weaves. That was all her face–no plastic surgery. And those breasts were hers too–no implants. Who can you even say that about these days?

    She was her own person and lived her life on her own terms. She seemed to enjoy a lot of it.

  35. Luz says:

    Raven, that’s a casual and irresponsible statement to throw out there. The vaccine is a personal decision. The possibility of vaccinating against a cause of cervical, anal, mouth, and throat cancers is not something to dismiss or take lightly–look at the painful, early deaths of Farrah Fawcett and Jade Goody and the families that they left behind. Note though, most of the post is about awareness and taking responsibility for your own health.

  36. Ophelia says:

    Rest in peace darlin. At least there’s no more pain. She was a brave one.

  37. What says:

    Such a sad day for pop culture. First Farrah Fawcett and now Michael Jackson. RIP.

  38. gee_gee says:

    Oh Farrah. I prefer to remember you in ‘The Burning Bed’. That was my fave.

  39. stellapurdy says:

    Ah geez, I knew this was coming but still it makes me sad. She was my idol when I was a child. It’s funny now to look in my yearbook to see all of us with her hairstyle.

    God bless her!

  40. Brianne says:

    She was an inspirational to all women battling any kind of disease. Farrah was a fighter & never gave up until the end. I feel sad for her Dad who is in his 90’s & buried another daughter a couple of years ago. Parents shouldn’t out live their kids. It’s so tragic.

  41. Cece says:

    Now this is sad.

  42. JohnnieR says:

    Hey Celebitchy, how about posting some wonderful photos of Farrah the way you did for the Michael Jackson section? Let’s please not have the death of Mr. Jackson on the same day eclipse the passing of this wonderful woman.

    She was as much an icon as Michael was,
    and was a talented actress in her own right.

    Love you, Farrah. R.I.P.

  43. barneslr says:

    Ah, that poster. My brother had it on his wall for years. She was just the epitome of the Hollywood sex symbol for her era.

    And she proved herself to be an actress of substance…something that most sex symbols struggle with. I’m only sorry she didn’t do more movies; Extremities was probably the best work of her career, IMHO.

    My heart breaks for her loved ones. Cancer is such a horrible disease. I’m sorry she had to suffer for so long, and am glad that she is at least at peace now.

  44. Lamar Cole says:

    For Farrah (Fawcett)

    A great beauty has passed from this life.
    Of good times and sometimes toil and strife.
    Some will say that she went to a better place.
    Look at the blue sky or a white cloud, you will still see her face.

    Movements like those of a gazelle in flight.
    Hair that shone like gold on a moonlit night.
    Eyes that could touch your soul.
    And essence like that of a red rose.

    Farrah, you fought hard to stay here on earth with us.
    But when God calls you, go you must.
    Whenever we feel a summer breeze or april rain.
    It will seem like you are near.
    And in our hearts, your memory will always remain dear.