Jerry Lee Lewis Is Alive, as Erroneous Death Report Is Retracted

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[UPDATE: Two days after a false report of Jerry Lee Lewis’ death was published, it was announced on Oct. 28 that he had, in fact, died. Read Variety‘s obituary of Lewis here.]

PREVIOUSLY PUBLISHED: Jerry Lee Lewis remains alive, despite a report from TMZ that the rock ‘n’ roll pioneer had died. The story set off a wave of mourning before it was retracted by the site Wednesday.

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“He’s alive. TMZ reported erroneously off of a bullshit anonymous tip,” Lewis’ rep told Variety.

Lewis has been known to be ailing with the flu this month; he was unable to attend the induction ceremony for the Country Music Hall of Fame Oct. 16, where his wife accepted the honor in his place, so saying he is “alive and well” might be overstating one of those two things. But TMZ acknowledged they’d gotten a bum tip on his supposed passing.

“Earlier today we were told by someone claiming to be Lewis’ rep that he had passed,” TMZ said in revising its article. “That turned out not to be the case. TMZ regrets the error.”

A photo was posted after the Hall of Fame induction ceremony of Kris Kristofferson visiting the flu-stricken Lewis at home to personally present him with his medallion.

The false report on Lewis marks the second time in recent weeks that a major music figure has erroneously been reported dead, after People magazine published a story and tweeted that Joni Mitchell had died. In that case, it was more easily spotted by readers as an error, as the story and headline contained “TKs,” marking it as a pre-write with spots that were supposed to be filled in before the publishing of any obituary.

Although he’s been off the concert scene, Lewis was feeling well enough to make it from Memphis to Nashville in May when the Country Hall of Fame recipients were announced, posing for photos and taking part in a news conference.

Beyond the Hall of Fame honor, Lewis is due for more celebration soon, with the Ethan Coen-directed documentary about the rocker, “Trouble in Mind.” The doc has no scheduled released date yet but was praised upon its premiere at Cannes in May; read Variety critic Owen Gleiberman’s review here.

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