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‘Heartbroken' Sharon Osbourne leaning on family after Ozzy's death: ‘There's a lot of pain'

‘Heartbroken' Sharon Osbourne leaning on family after Ozzy's death: ‘There's a lot of pain'

New York Post21 hours ago
Sharon Osbourne is grieving the loss of her late husband, Ozzy Osbourne, after his shocking death last week at 76.
An insider close to the TV personality revealed that the Black Sabbath legend's passing has left Sharon, 72, so devastated that their children have had to step in to take care of her.
'Sharon's heartbroken but very proud of the life the family built together,' a source told People on Monday. 'Everyone's rallying around her. She's been the rock of this family for decades, and now it's her turn to be held up.'
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4 Sharon Osbourne at Fox Studios in NYC on September 27, 2022.
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4 Ozzy Osbourne and Sharon Osbourne attend the 13th Annual Design Care Benefiting The HollyRod Foundation on July 23, 2011, in Beverly Hills, California.
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'The kids are making sure she's never alone – they've been with her constantly, sharing stories, laughing through the tears and just being together,' the source added. 'There's a lot of pain, but also a lot of comfort from the family time that they got to enjoy up until the very end.'
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Ozzy and Sharon married in July 1982 and later welcomed three kids together: Aimee, 41, Kelly, 40, and Jack, 39.
Besides Aimee, Kelly and Jack, Ozzy also had Riley, 59, Jessica, 45, and Louis, 50, from his first marriage to Thelma Riley.
4 Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne with their children, Aimee, Kelly and Jack, in 1987.
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Ozzy's wife and four of his six children announced the heavy metal icon's passing in a statement to The Post on Tuesday, July 22.
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He died following a long battle with Parkinson's disease and other health issues.
'It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning,' they began.
4 Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne together at an event in 1985.
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'He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time,' his family added. 'Sharon, Jack, Kelly, Aimee and Louis.'
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The 'Crazy Train' singer passed away less than three weeks after his final show with Black Sabbath in the band's hometown of Birmingham, England.
Ozzy and Sharon moved back to Birmingham in March 2023 amid the 'Shot in the Dark' rocker's ongoing battle with Parkinson's.
'Sharon had wanted to move back to England for years, especially as she got older,' a source said after Ozzy's death. 'England was always home for them, but it became more than that.'
'It was about creating peace and the best life possible together in their final chapter,' the insider continued. 'The path back to England wasn't easy. His health has been fragile for years. It was a gift, because they got a year and a half together, at home.'
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What emerged onscreen was a surprisingly loving household. They were relatable — navigating health issues, parenting challenges, substance abuse, animal love, neighbor disputes and dad struggling to use the remote control. 'Even though they were in Beverly Hills and he was this crazy rock star, he was a loving father trying to deal with things things that any other person watching might be dealing with,' says Johnston, who went on to direct the 2020 documentary Biography: The Nine Lives of Ozzy Osbourne and produce the reality show Ozzy and Jack's World Detour, which ran from 2016 to 2018. ''F***, I can't work the remote either' or 'My cat got out and I couldn't get him back inside.' Just mundane and relatable situations they dealt with — and with a lot of love.' After Ozzy's death, we caught up with Johnston to talk about his time with the metal legend and reality TV icon. How came to be 'There was no expectation of a show,' Johnston says of the 2001 meet-and-greet at the Ivy in Santa Monica with MTV. The Osbournes had done an early episode of Cribs, which debuted in 2000, and there was discussion about what else was possible — like Kelly and Jack doing guest VJ spots or Ozzfest coverage. 'As you do, you talk about your lives when you're having lunch,' Johnston says. 'Sharon talked about hers — and everything that was going on — telling us about all the dogs they had and Ozzy waking up in the middle of the night and slipping on dog shit. She was just relaying [a story]. There was no pitch. Just sort of: 'Oh my god, I can't believe this happened last night. I'm so tired,' and it made us laugh. Every story that she told … we were dying.' They left the meeting thinking: 'Oh, my God, the real show is them. There should be cameras in their house,' Johnston says. 'But they thought, They won't let us do that. 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Johnston says that they weren't sure they had a hit until it aired — and their three-week stay at Chez Osbourne turned into three years. What was the secret sauce? 'It was the family more than anything else,' Johnston says. 'Whatever they did in front of a camera and whatever they did off camera was the same. There wasn't this idea of playing for the camera. They were not trying to be funny, they just were. They dealt with everything with a sense of humor. And that's maybe that's an English thing too.' Plus, 'They … didn't give a shit what people thought. That also typified Ozzy throughout his career. He had lots of ups and downs — biting the head off the bat and all these crazy things — but he never backed down [or said]: 'Oh, I didn't do that.' He would say: 'I'm not proud of that' and 'Yes, I was drunk when I did that.' But he always maintained a level of working-class honesty that was endearing." 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'We were an extension of their family — that's how they treated us,' he says. 'That was part of the magic too. If Thanksgiving or Christmas rolled around and we were filming, Sharon would bring in caterers to make sure that the whole crew had dinner. This was out of her pocket [before the show took off]... She also flew the whole crew to Vegas. Ozzy was doing a show, we were going to film it, and she was like: 'Let's get everybody. I'm gonna charter this plane.'' The cops are coming Of course, the show's greatest selling point was seeing Ozzy do anything — talking to the cats, working out, trying to have a heart-to-heart with Kelly and getting screamed at. Johnston's favorite scene was 'Ozzy chasing the cat in the backyard, because of the context. He had fallen, his leg was in a cast, and he was laid up at home. Sharon was upstairs or out. It goes to Ozzy's heart. He loved the animals. The cat had gotten out, and he was convinced that a coyote was going to get it. 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They used the footage, however, playing the log drop with a sound effect of glass breaking. Johnston's phone rang. 'God bless Ozzy,' he says. 'I never got calls from him about anything — because I didn't think he'd watch it — but he must have watched the cut of this episode or a promo. He said: 'Greg, you can't show that. They've got kids. I could have killed somebody.' I'm like, 'Ozzy, it's just a sound effect. You barely rolled the piece of wood over.' But he [insisted]: 'You can't show that.' He didn't want to hurt anybody.' Why magic could never be replicated The runaway success of the show was a lightning-in-a-bottle moment that was never replicated. The Osbournes succeeded because MTV gave them the time, resources and creative freedom to truly document the family's real life. 'After The Osbournes, networks were like: 'Oh, we want something similar, but we want to know what's going to happen [ahead of time],'' Johnston says. 'That defeats the whole purpose of a great non-scripted show because real life is much better, funnier, interesting than anything a producer may come up with. And you want people to deal with their own life, their own consequences, to their own decisions. You don't want [a producer] making decisions for them.' Johnston adds that most networks today probably lack the patience, imagination and budget to do that kind of 24/7 filming. Plus, 'there's no other family like the Osbournes, quite honestly; I've worked on thousands of shows, and there's just no family like them.' At the center of it all, of course, was Ozzy. Asked what he'll remember most about the Osbourne patriarch, Johnston says his humility and humor. Despite his fame, Ozzy stayed grounded, often carrying a wad of $100 bills with a rubber band around them and handing them to people in need with zero fanfare. It was a habit rooted in his working-class upbringing and early years of having nothing. 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