Dana Reeve, R.I.P.

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Dana Reeve dies at 44 of lung cancer
Widow of actor Christopher Reeve fought for paralysis cure



WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. - Dana Reeve, who won worldwide admiration for her devotion to her Superman husband, Christopher Reeve, through his decade of near-total paralysis, has died of lung cancer at the age of forty-four.

Reeve, a singer-actress who gave up some of her own career to be one of the nation's best-known caregivers, died late Monday at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Medical Center, said Kathy Lewis, president of the Christopher Reeve Foundation.

Reeve had succeeded her husband as chair of the foundation, which funded research into spinal-cord paralysis cures. She announced in August that, while she wasn’t a smoker, she had been diagnosed with lung cancer.

Lewis visited Reeve in the hospital Friday and said Reeve was "tired but with her typical sense of humor and smile, always trying to make other people feel good, her characteristic personality."

"She was a woman with an incredible heart who really put herself out there to help people with disabilities and especially those who are caregivers — something she knew a lot about," Lewis said.

Reeves' "grace and courage under the most difficult of circumstances was a source of comfort and inspiration to all of us," Lewis added in a statement.

Four months ago, at a fundraising gala for the foundation, Reeve looked healthy in a long, formal gown and said she was responding well to treatment and her tumor was shrinking.

"I’m beating the odds and defying every statistic the doctors can throw at me," Reeve said then. "My prognosis looks better all the time." Asked how she kept her spirits up, Reeve said she "had a great model. I was married to a man who never gave up," she said.

She was still looking well on January 13, when she sang Carole King’s "Now and Forever" at Madison Square Garden during the retirement ceremony for Mark Messier's New York Rangers jersey.



Christopher Reeve, star of Hollywood's Superman movies, became an activist for spinal cord research after a horse-riding accident paralyzed him in 1995. He died October 10, 2004.

Dana Reeve was a constant companion and supporter of her husband during his long ordeal and his work for a cure for spinal cord injuries.

The couple had a 13-year-old son, Will, and Dana Reeve had two grown stepchildren, Matthew and Alexandra.

Reeve, who lived in Pound Ridge, had appeared on Broadway, off-Broadway and regional stages and on the TV shows "Law & Order", "Oz", and "All My Children".

She was performing in the Broadway-bound play "Brooklyn Boy" in California when she had to rush home to reach her husband’s bedside before he died. She gave up the role for the New York run.

A month after she was widowed, before her own diagnosis, she told The Associated Press, "I definitely will be getting back to acting... I am an actress and I do have to make a living."

Reeve also was on the board of the Williamstown Theatre Festival in Massachusetts, where she met Christopher Reeve doing summer theater, and the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey.

A year ago, she won a Mother of the Year award from the American Cancer Society. A society vice president, Dr. Michael Thun, said Reeve "has shown strength and courage in the face of tremendous adversity." Doctors say one in five women diagnosed with the disease never lit a cigarette.

In addition to her son and step-children, she is survived by her father, Dr. Charles Morosini, and sisters Deborah Morosini and Adrienne Morosini Heilman.

No funeral plans were announced. The family said donations could be made in Dana Reeve's memory to the Christopher Reeve Foundation in Short Hills, N.J.

© 2006 The Associated Press
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"Film is a disease. When it infects your bloodstream it takes over as the number one hormone. It bosses the enzymes, directs the pineal gland, plays Iago to your psyche. As with heroin, the antidote to Film is more Film." - Frank Capra



I had hoped she would beat it...


RIP
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You never know what is enough, until you know what is more than enough.
~William Blake ~

AiSv Nv wa do hi ya do...
(Walk in Peace)




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'My mind is full of stars....'



Female assassin extraordinaire.
argh. saw this earlier today and posted a response in my blog -

Unbelievably painful story. Shows you the kind of love you want to have, to weather the darkest hours and hold on, believing and hoping, in spite of all odds. I want to love a man like that. I want to be loved like that. I want to know a man that wonderful, worth loving beyond the darkest hours.

While it feels unjust and unfair that Dana would die - not having been a smoker - of lung cancer just two years after her husband's death, I feel in a weird way that God said, after all your suffering, and now this separation, I'm starting over. I'm plucking the both of you out of this life, and putting you together in the next. May they find each other again, and love just as deep, and hard, and long.
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life without movies is like cereal without milk. possible, but disgusting. but not nearly as bad as cereal with water. don't lie. I know you've done it.



Put me in your pocket...
I heard it on the way in to work also. It's so heartbreaking...especially after everything she's been through. Rest in Peace Dana....and I wish your kids the kind of strength you both had. God bless.


thmilin...what a great post...nice sentiments.



big
Registered User
double bugger



My sister is a makeup artist and shortly after Christopher Reeve died, she had the opportunity of making up Dana for some kind of party or maybe a TV show, I forget what it was. I wish I could have met her then. All she told me was that Dana mentioned that her husband had recently died. I was shocked to read in the morning paper yesterday that Dana had died too.