‘Farrah’s Story’ offers candid look at Farrah Fawcett’s fight against cancer, for her dignity
By Lynn Elber, Gaea News NetworkThursday, May 14, 2009
‘Farrah’s Story’ details actress’ cancer struggle
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — “Farrah’s Story,” an unvarnished look at Farrah Fawcett’s struggle to overcome cancer with her dignity intact, was shown to a somber audience that included longtime companion Ryan O’Neal.
“This is truly Farrah’s evening. She wasn’t up to making it, but she’s here in spirit,” Alana Stewart, a close friend, said in introducing the video diary Wednesday at the Paley Center for Media.
Stewart was a producer on the project, which airs Friday on NBC, and filmed Fawcett as she endured chemotherapy and other grueling treatment. Fawcett was diagnosed in 2006 with anal cancer that has spread to her liver.
Fawcett is doing “OK,” a guarded O’Neal said. He’s shown in the documentary as a steady presence as the actress goes through highs and lows, although the two ended their long romantic relationship in the late 1990s.
Asked if the former “Charlie’s Angels” star was aware of the concern about her, he replied, “I’m gonna tell her.”
Jacqueline Bisset, Melanie Griffith and Paul Le Mat, who starred with Fawcett in the 1984 TV movie, “The Burning Bed,” attended the screening that drew applause and tears.
In an interview earlier Wednesday, O’Neal said he planned to watch Friday’s broadcast (9 p.m.-11 p.m. EDT) with Fawcett at her Los Angeles home.
“She’s heavily medicated,” O’Neal, 68, said. “We’re going to take some of these medications down so she’s lucid and sharp to watch herself. I think she’ll take great pride in this.”
Fawcett, 62, is in a “very rocky place,” O’Neal said. “We put on a brave front, always, when we’re with her. She doesn’t know how scared we are.”
In the film, he expresses concern about how the loss of Fawcett would affect their son, Redmond O’Neal, 24, just admitted into a court-ordered drug program.
The documentary is unsparing but infused with Fawcett’s grit and good humor as she faces pain, setbacks and, as the treatments grow harsher, the loss of her trademark lush blond locks.
“If you liked her, you’re gonna love her” after seeing the film, said O’Neal.
Fawcett shares intimate thoughts in the documentary about her illness, the tabloid that stripped away her privacy and the paparazzi that bedevil her.
“I do not want to die of this disease. So I say to God, ‘It is seriously time for a miracle,’” Fawcett says.
The actress, so identified with glamorous Hollywood make-believe in her frothy 1970s TV show, is bringing the cold slap of true reality to TV. But fiction and fact can’t help but mingle.
At one point, when German doctors seem to have made a breakthrough for Fawcett, a tearful, smiling O’Neal says, “I thought I was in another ‘Love Story’ movie” — a reference to the 1970 film in which he plays a young husband who loses his wife to illness.
“Farrah’s Story” started out as a personal record, intended as a “success story” for family viewing, O’Neal said, and to keep track of her treatment.
Although a private person, Fawcett realized her experience could inspire others, Stewart said in an interview.
“Farrah’s Story” will show her “incredible strength,” Stewart said. “Her big message to people is don’t give up, no matter what they say to you, keep fighting.”
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