Ad

Latest Posts

Christy Dignam’s daughter forced to deny ‘cruel’ death rumours

Christy Dignam’s daughter Kiera has been forced to deny “cruel” claims her father has passed away.

The Aslan star was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer, which there is “no cure” for, on St. Patrick’s Day in 2013.

The 62-year-old suffered a health setback last year, and he is now receiving palliative care at his home.

Photo: Colin Keegan/Collins)

Taking to Twitter on Sunday, Kiera was forced to confirm her father is still alive after rumours started circulating on social media.

She tweeted: “Can people please stop sharing and posting that my Dad has passed away, this is not true!

“Until an update on anything comes from myself and my family please ignore.

“This is a tough enough time and cruel to have to be put in a position to have to clear something like this up.”

The news comes after Christy sat down for his “final ever” interview with Ryan Tubridy on RTÉ Radio 1.

During their chat, he said: “Just fear, nobody wants to die. When I first got diagnosed [with cancer], I remember praying I was like ‘please, just give me 10 more years.’ And that 10 years are up now and you’re kind of saying, ‘I know I only asked for 10 but you couldn’t throw another 10 in there could you, yeah?”

Recalling the day he was told he had cancer, Christy explained: “I kept getting these chest infections and they gave me antibiotics, but they didn’t seem to be working so I got an ambulance one day when I could hardly breath and they did a load of tests.”

“Then they sent me to Beaumont for a couple of biopsies and they told me it might be bad news. There might be two cancers – amyloidosis is one of them and multiple myoma is the other or it could be neither.”

The Dubliner continued: “I came in the next day, and they told me you’ve got the two of them… initially I rejected it and I said to your man, ‘you go back to Trinity and get your degrees because you don’t know what you’re talking about’.”

“Anyone who has got a cancer diagnosis will understand that, but I remember about five years prior to being diagnosed, I had to go out to the hospice in Raheny and there was this 17-year-old kid there and he was dying, and I went out and did a couple of songs.”

“When I was on the way back home, I got a phone call off his sister and she told me that the chap had died just after I’d left. I started thinking he had 17 years of life, and I was fifty at the time…”

“Initially I was so ill I couldn’t avoid confronting it. It hit me in the face but when I got a handle on the medication and stabilised the whole thing, I’d live as if there was nothing wrong with me and if something debilitated me, I’d deal with it that day. That’s the way it’s been.”

Christy is spending his final days in his house, where there is a medical bed set up in the living room.

Christy and his father

He said: “It’s a conveyor belt up to heaven. I’ll come in here and that’ll be the end of it.”

Christy added: “I was sitting here one day a few weeks ago and I was looking out the window and this fella walked by, and I thought to myself, ‘I’ll never do that again. I’ll never just go for a walk…’ and that sent me into a spiral and I thought about all the things I won’t do again.”

“It’s like you’re heading into an abyss. I wouldn’t be hugely religious. Logic gets in the way. But I believe we’re all spiritual beings in one sense or other. I remember there used to be an old saying – that ‘religion is for people who want to go to heaven, spirituality is for people who have been to hell.’ And I really identified with that.”

Ad

Latest Posts

Don't Miss