Patrick Swayze has terminal cancer, just weeks to live.
#26
DVD Talk Limited Edition
Terrible terrible news...so sad.
#28
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Guys, four years ago I had an op for colon cancer. I was down to nine stone.
With my wifes help I'm back up to thirteen stone and now try to walk at least five miles a day and only eat fresh cooked food.
I did it, so can Pat....I wish him well...
Aitch,
With my wifes help I'm back up to thirteen stone and now try to walk at least five miles a day and only eat fresh cooked food.
I did it, so can Pat....I wish him well...
Aitch,
#29
DVD Talk Legend
Originally Posted by harryfielder
Guys, four years ago I had an op for colon cancer. I was down to nine stone.
With my wifes help I'm back up to thirteen stone and now try to walk at least five miles a day and only eat fresh cooked food.
I did it, so can Pat....I wish him well...
Aitch,
With my wifes help I'm back up to thirteen stone and now try to walk at least five miles a day and only eat fresh cooked food.
I did it, so can Pat....I wish him well...
Aitch,
but congrats on the recovery!
#31
DVD Talk Special Edition
Red Dawn has always been one of my favorite films, and Roadhouse was always a guilty pleasure. He was also one of my favorite characters in Donnie Darko. I'm sorry for this but I'm a huge fan of "To Wong Foo Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar", i mean come on we saw him dance, we saw him fight, we had to see the guy in drag. I love the film, even though i was somewhat worried about being attracted to John Leguizamo as a chick.
Mr. Swayze you are definity in my prayers, please don't pass away, you at least have to give us Too Wong Foo 2:Electric Boogaloo.
Mr. Swayze you are definity in my prayers, please don't pass away, you at least have to give us Too Wong Foo 2:Electric Boogaloo.
#32
DVD Talk Legend
Damn it, sad news on Thanksgiving. I hope he makes it to Christmas.
http://www.news.com.au/entertainment...8-7485,00.html
ACTOR Patrick Swayze has reportedly started saying goodbye to family and friends after learning his cancer has spread to his liver.
The Dirty Dancing and Ghost star, who in January was told he had pancreatic cancer, has started preparing himself for death, reports say
"Patrick recently got word that the cancer had spread to his liver and that is what his doctors said would begin the countdown to the end," a source told National Enquirer magazine.
"Patrick knew it was coming because he was suffering increased weakness.
"At times, he was so weak that he could barely walk without feeling faint. Sometimes he feels out of breath and has to sit down."
Swayze, 56, told Lisa, his wife of 33 years, and his brother Donny that he doesn't have long to live.
"Lisa phoned Donny in Los Angeles and told him he need to come to Chicago, where Patrick has been filming TV show The Beast. She was crying and scared Donny to death," the source told National Enquirer.
"Donny got the impression his brother was already on his deathbed because Lisa was saying Patrick wanted to say goodbye. She couldn't stop crying."
Swayze has been undergoing pioneering Cyberknife radiotherapy at California's Stamford University Medical Centre, and had been making a steady recovery from the illness.
He has finished filming The Beast in Chicago, where he has been putting in 12-hour days. He went to a party earlier this week to celebrate with Lisa and Donny.
He stayed for one-and-a-quarter hours sitting on a couch the entire time, happily talking to people.
Swayze's wife "mingled a little more than Patrick did, leaving the couch to grab a drink or talk to people, but mostly she remained at his sidem" a source told the US magazine.
"Patrick let the party-goers come to him, never circulating around the room and rarely even standing up, but when others did come to him, he chatted at length with many of them."
In October, his production team reported Swayze had missed only a day and a half of work.
"I'm still fine to work, I haven't changed - oh, I have changed, what am I saying? It's a battle zone I go through. Chemo, no matter how you cut it, is hell on wheels," he told The New York Times.
The Dirty Dancing and Ghost star, who in January was told he had pancreatic cancer, has started preparing himself for death, reports say
"Patrick recently got word that the cancer had spread to his liver and that is what his doctors said would begin the countdown to the end," a source told National Enquirer magazine.
"Patrick knew it was coming because he was suffering increased weakness.
"At times, he was so weak that he could barely walk without feeling faint. Sometimes he feels out of breath and has to sit down."
Swayze, 56, told Lisa, his wife of 33 years, and his brother Donny that he doesn't have long to live.
"Lisa phoned Donny in Los Angeles and told him he need to come to Chicago, where Patrick has been filming TV show The Beast. She was crying and scared Donny to death," the source told National Enquirer.
"Donny got the impression his brother was already on his deathbed because Lisa was saying Patrick wanted to say goodbye. She couldn't stop crying."
Swayze has been undergoing pioneering Cyberknife radiotherapy at California's Stamford University Medical Centre, and had been making a steady recovery from the illness.
He has finished filming The Beast in Chicago, where he has been putting in 12-hour days. He went to a party earlier this week to celebrate with Lisa and Donny.
He stayed for one-and-a-quarter hours sitting on a couch the entire time, happily talking to people.
Swayze's wife "mingled a little more than Patrick did, leaving the couch to grab a drink or talk to people, but mostly she remained at his sidem" a source told the US magazine.
"Patrick let the party-goers come to him, never circulating around the room and rarely even standing up, but when others did come to him, he chatted at length with many of them."
In October, his production team reported Swayze had missed only a day and a half of work.
"I'm still fine to work, I haven't changed - oh, I have changed, what am I saying? It's a battle zone I go through. Chemo, no matter how you cut it, is hell on wheels," he told The New York Times.
#34
DVD Talk Limited Edition
I hope he can spend 1 last Christmas with his family.
#39
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Pancreatic cancer is pretty much a death sentence, even with the advanced treatment he was undergoing. I'm sure he was made well-aware of his actual chances. I would imagine he was doing what he enjoyed knowing how much time he really had left.
#41
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I will always remember him for his memorable role in this Ja Rule video
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#47
DVD Talk Platinum Edition
Swayze becomes beastly
After a bout with cancer, the actor is coming back with a new cable TV show.
By Robert K. Elder / | Chicago Tribune
November 28, 2008
CHICAGO - "So, did you miss me?" says actor Patrick Swayze, walking past the chess pavilion on North Avenue Beach. Bundled up against the encroaching cold, he says: "You carry this job with you, and there's no washing it off."
Swayze is talking to co-star Travis Fimmel in a scene for "The Beast," the gritty FBI television series that has adopted Chicago as its home city. But he could easily be talking to his public too.
The actor has kept a low profile since being treated for pancreatic cancer earlier this year. And until lately, "The Beast" had been Chicago's most secretive production since "The Dark Knight." Recently, however, while filming the 11th of the 12 episodes ordered by the A&E television network, the Chicago Tribune visited the set.
On this particular day, crew members scramble around North Avenue Beach, setting up cameras and sound equipment.
Scattered among the crew are the logos of other shows, notably "Prison Break" and "ER," on jackets and hats.
This is a hometown crew, working on the only show currently filming with Chicago as a backdrop.
Today, they're prepping a walk-and-talk between undercover FBI agent Charles Barker (Swayze) and his rookie partner Ellis Dove (Fimmel). In TV terms, Barker comes from a long, noble tradition of ignoble anti-heroes — a character of suspect (and perhaps flexible) morality. The series' metaphorical title refers not only to sinister forces he fights, but also to the nature of undercover life and its consequences.
"The pilot broods over what happens when you fight the beast," says executive producer John Romano ("Third Watch," "Hill Street Blues"). "Sometimes, you become the beast yourself."
But "The Beast," Swayze says, also is Chicago itself.
"It has an incredible, civilized wildness to it, which hopefully comes off on film," Swayze, 56, says after the shoot. "I couldn't see, honestly, shooting it anywhere but Chicago."
Although the first draft of the pilot set the story in Washington, D.C., Illinois' tax incentives — and a call to the Chicago FBI field office — changed all that, says co-creator Vincent Angell.
"We talked with an agent, had long conversations with him," Angell says, and the producers were convinced that due to the high-profile undercover cases in Chicago historically, the city would be a perfect fit.
For Swayze, filming anywhere but Chicago was a deal-breaker.
"When they tried to shoot anywhere else but Chicago, I said I wouldn't be in it," Swayze says. "It was that important to me."
Swayze's affection for the city had long been cemented after shooting the cop movie "Next of Kin" here in 1988.
He hung out with blues musicians such as Sugar Blue and Buddy Guy, visiting seedy biker bars and blues clubs "out in the boonies," he says.
"I spent a lot of time around this town, every section of this town, on a Harley," Swayze says. "The Beast" won't be all glittering skyscrapers and safe, sunlit neighborhoods.
The producers told their location manager that they wanted not only the iconic, but the crumbling, forgotten corners of the city.
"We have a philosophy: In every episode you're going to see something pretty about Chicago and something grisly and impure about Chicago," Romano says. "You're everywhere from Millennium Park to ... parts of town you don't want to be in after 10 o'clock. I don't want to be specific about neighborhoods; that would be unpleasant. But we're always showing both sides."
For Swayze, the shoot here has been both breakneck and surreal. "I'm doing great," he says. "For whatever reason, the cancer has stopped dead in its tracks."
He has been drinking "serious, body-builder shakes," which have helped him gain back the 20 pounds he lost during chemotherapy, an experience he has called "hell on wheels."
"Health concerns haven't been an issue; it's just time," says Swayze, referring to the production's six-day workweek. "I know I've worked this hard in my life — I just can't remember when."
That said, the production team hopes to see "The Beast" nest in Chicago for another year.
"Fingers crossed," says co-creator Angell. "We're hoping to come back here for a second season."
"The Beast" debuts on A&E in January.
"The Beast" will premiere on A&E in January.
After a bout with cancer, the actor is coming back with a new cable TV show.
By Robert K. Elder / | Chicago Tribune
November 28, 2008
CHICAGO - "So, did you miss me?" says actor Patrick Swayze, walking past the chess pavilion on North Avenue Beach. Bundled up against the encroaching cold, he says: "You carry this job with you, and there's no washing it off."
Swayze is talking to co-star Travis Fimmel in a scene for "The Beast," the gritty FBI television series that has adopted Chicago as its home city. But he could easily be talking to his public too.
The actor has kept a low profile since being treated for pancreatic cancer earlier this year. And until lately, "The Beast" had been Chicago's most secretive production since "The Dark Knight." Recently, however, while filming the 11th of the 12 episodes ordered by the A&E television network, the Chicago Tribune visited the set.
On this particular day, crew members scramble around North Avenue Beach, setting up cameras and sound equipment.
Scattered among the crew are the logos of other shows, notably "Prison Break" and "ER," on jackets and hats.
This is a hometown crew, working on the only show currently filming with Chicago as a backdrop.
Today, they're prepping a walk-and-talk between undercover FBI agent Charles Barker (Swayze) and his rookie partner Ellis Dove (Fimmel). In TV terms, Barker comes from a long, noble tradition of ignoble anti-heroes — a character of suspect (and perhaps flexible) morality. The series' metaphorical title refers not only to sinister forces he fights, but also to the nature of undercover life and its consequences.
"The pilot broods over what happens when you fight the beast," says executive producer John Romano ("Third Watch," "Hill Street Blues"). "Sometimes, you become the beast yourself."
But "The Beast," Swayze says, also is Chicago itself.
"It has an incredible, civilized wildness to it, which hopefully comes off on film," Swayze, 56, says after the shoot. "I couldn't see, honestly, shooting it anywhere but Chicago."
Although the first draft of the pilot set the story in Washington, D.C., Illinois' tax incentives — and a call to the Chicago FBI field office — changed all that, says co-creator Vincent Angell.
"We talked with an agent, had long conversations with him," Angell says, and the producers were convinced that due to the high-profile undercover cases in Chicago historically, the city would be a perfect fit.
For Swayze, filming anywhere but Chicago was a deal-breaker.
"When they tried to shoot anywhere else but Chicago, I said I wouldn't be in it," Swayze says. "It was that important to me."
Swayze's affection for the city had long been cemented after shooting the cop movie "Next of Kin" here in 1988.
He hung out with blues musicians such as Sugar Blue and Buddy Guy, visiting seedy biker bars and blues clubs "out in the boonies," he says.
"I spent a lot of time around this town, every section of this town, on a Harley," Swayze says. "The Beast" won't be all glittering skyscrapers and safe, sunlit neighborhoods.
The producers told their location manager that they wanted not only the iconic, but the crumbling, forgotten corners of the city.
"We have a philosophy: In every episode you're going to see something pretty about Chicago and something grisly and impure about Chicago," Romano says. "You're everywhere from Millennium Park to ... parts of town you don't want to be in after 10 o'clock. I don't want to be specific about neighborhoods; that would be unpleasant. But we're always showing both sides."
For Swayze, the shoot here has been both breakneck and surreal. "I'm doing great," he says. "For whatever reason, the cancer has stopped dead in its tracks."
He has been drinking "serious, body-builder shakes," which have helped him gain back the 20 pounds he lost during chemotherapy, an experience he has called "hell on wheels."
"Health concerns haven't been an issue; it's just time," says Swayze, referring to the production's six-day workweek. "I know I've worked this hard in my life — I just can't remember when."
That said, the production team hopes to see "The Beast" nest in Chicago for another year.
"Fingers crossed," says co-creator Angell. "We're hoping to come back here for a second season."
"The Beast" debuts on A&E in January.
"The Beast" will premiere on A&E in January.
#48
DVD Talk God
From the official stuff that I have read, it sounded like Patrick was doing well.
Anyways, I will definitely check out his new series in January.
Anyways, I will definitely check out his new series in January.
#49
DVD Talk God