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Gene Hackman would have ‘died long ago’ without wife Betsy’s care, says friend

Gene Hackman’s close friend has revealed how the Hollywood actor was dependent on his wife Betsy Arakawa in his later years.

The Oscar winning actor, 95, and his wife, 63, were tragically found dead at their New Mexico home alongside one of their three dogs. It has since emerged that Betsy most likely died first from hantavirus, with Gene – who had alzheimer’s – sadly dying a week later.

Tom Allin, who was a close friend of the Hollywood star, has revealed that Gene previously said he would have died “long ago” if Betsy wasn’t there to look after him. Speaking to The New York Times, he said: “She was very protective of him”.

Opening up about seeing his friend just before the pandemic in January 2020 for Gene’s 90th birthday, Mr Allin remembered seeing his wife mixing soda into his wine, explaining she “just really looked after him”. At the time, he also noticed that the Hollywood star was declining.

For Betsy’s birthday every year, Gene would cook dinner for her. However, Mr Allin said that she came home in 2023 and Gene had forgotten their tradition.

Gene Hackman was dependent on his wife (AFP via Getty Images)

On Friday, authorities in New Mexico revealed the cause of death of both the Hollywood legend and his wife – who he had been married to since 1991. Dr Heather Jarrell, Chief Medical Examiner for New Mexico at the office of the Medical Investigator, shared the medical insights to the deaths.

The medical expert revealed: “The cause of death for Miss Betsy Hackman, aged 65 years, is hantavirus, pulmonary syndrome. The manner of death is natural, autopsy, examination and full body post mortem, CT demonstrated no findings of trauma, internally or externally, with microscopic findings consistent with Coronavirus pulmonary syndrome”.

Dr Jarrell explained that no trace of COVID 19 or influenza was found within Betsy. She added: “Testing for carbon monoxide was negative. There were no other significant natural disease findings. Pills present on scene, or thyroid medication, which were being taken as prescribed and is not currently a concern for a contributory cause of death”.

The authorities went on to explain that hantavirus can be transmitted by rats and that warnings were issued to those entering the property to reduce the risk of others becoming infected. It was explained: “We did identify signs of rodent entry and other structures on the property and provided information and resources mission related to those areas. Hantavirus can be transmitted to people through rodent urine, droppings or saliva, so it is important to take special steps when cleaning up after vermin, avoiding contact with or breathing in aerosolised rodent urine or faeces, especially in a poorly ventilated area, is key”.

Attention then turned to the death of Gene, with Dr Jarrell revealing that there were several causes of his death – but adding it could not be confirmed that heart failure had occurred. She also revealed that the star had battled Alzheimer’s disease ahead of his death.

His wife tragically died a week before the Hollywood actor
His wife tragically died a week before the Hollywood actor (NY Daily News via Getty Images)
Gene Hackman was diagnosed with Alzheimer's
Gene Hackman was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s (Getty Images)

Dr Jarrell explained: “The cause of death for Mr. Gene Hackman, 95 years, is hypertensive and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, with Alzheimer’s disease as a significant contributory factor. Autopsy examination and a full body post mortem CT examination demonstrated no acute findings of internal or external trauma, and showed severe heart disease, including multiple surgical procedures involving the heart, evidence of prior heart attacks and severe changes of the kidneys due to chronic high blood pressure”.

She continued: “Examination of the brain showed advanced Alzheimer’s disease, as well as blood vessel changes in the brain secondary to chronic high blood pressure. Laboratory testing performed at scientific laboratories division was negative for COVID, 19, influenza and other common respiratory viruses. Testing for Hantavirus was negative. Testing for carbon monoxide was negative. Additionally, there were no autopsy findings concerning for Hantavirus infection”.

Earlier, a timeline of Betsy’s last known movements was uncovered, revealing she had emailed a massage therapist at approximately 11: 21am on 11 February and attended a local Farmers Market between 3: 30pm and 4: 15pm. She then visited a CVS Pharmacy in Santa Fe between 4: 12pm and 4: 20pm before then stopping at a local pet store at about 4: 54pm.

Police revealed CCTV footage showed her car returning home at 5: 15pm and that they discovered unopened emails dating from 11 February. Officers have petitioned phone companies to retrieve records of Gene and Betsy’s devices.

While the police did not specify an exact date of death of the musician, they noted that she had last been in public and active via email communication on 11 February. It was then revealed that Gene had died approximately a full week later – with the star’s pacemaker being a relatively reliable source of information.

Dr Jarrell revealed: “Mr. Hackman’s initial pacemaker data revealed cardiac activity on February 17, with subsequent pacemaker interrogation demonstrating an abnormal rhythm of atrial fibrillation on February 18, which was the last record of heart activity. Based on this information, it is reasonable to conclude that Mr. Hackman probably died around February 18”.

((Image: AP))

Insight was also shared into the death of a dog – whose body had also been found at the property last month. The couple’s pet, named Zinna, had been receiving treatment at a local veterinary practice and was retrieved by Betsy on the last day she was seen in public. Police surmised that the animal had undergone a procedure – with police stating: “]This] may explain why the dog was in a crate at the residence”.

Following the police statement, a member of the assembled press asked the authorities if it was possible Zinna had suffered from hantavirus too – however, Dr Jarrell firmly debunked the theory, stating that dogs cannot contract the disease.

Over the course of Friday’s update, an agonising timeline of Gene’s final days were laid out by the authorities. During a question and answer segment with members of the press, more details were revealed of what Gene’s final days could have been like.

Asked if he could have survived without his wife, Dr Jarrell said: “The answer to that question is that Mr. Hackman showed evidence of advanced Alzheimer’s disease. I’m not aware of what his normal daily functioning capability was. He was in a very poor state of health. He had significant heart disease, and I think ultimately that is what resulted in his in his death”.

She added: “I was able to look at fluid to determine if he was dehydrated, and I did not see evidence of dehydration. I did see evidence of very poor kidney function, and I think he died as a result of his his heart disease, and with Alzheimer’s being that contributing factor”.

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NAFDAC Seizes, Destroys Counterfeit Drugs Worth ₦100bn In Ibadan

The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) destroyed counterfeit drugs at the Moniya dump site in Akinyele Local Government Area of Oyo State.

NAFDAC Director General, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, said the counterfeit drugs worth a Hundred Billion Naira were confiscated from pharmaceutical drug marketers in Idumota market, Lagos.

She noted that the step became necessary to prevent the reintroduction of expired, fake, substandard, and falsified drugs into circulation.

Speaking during the burning exercise, Adeyeye said NAFDAC as the lead agency and chair of the Federal Task Force on Fake and Counterfeit Drugs and Unwholesome Processed Foods is firmly committed to ensuring that food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, chemicals, packaged water, and drinks are safe, wholesome, and effective for human consumption.

According to her, NAFDAC has established stringent guidelines for licensing, sale, and distribution of drug products as part of its commitment to ensuring safe and quality medicine.

READ ALSO: ₦700bn Fraud Allegations Against Udom Not From Us — Akwa Ibom Gov

Adeyeye, who was represented at the event by NAFDAC Director of Narcotics and Controlled Substances, Yedunni Adenuga, said NAFDAC’s recent enforcement activities at the Idumota, Onitsha, Ariara, and Ezeuku open drug markets was mind-boggling.

“The discoveries made of the presence of unregistered products, banned products such as Analgin, Controlled substances such as Tramadol 225mg amongst others, which are part of the things making our country unsafe in terms of security.

“This operation could not have been made possible without the support of the NSA who graciously approved the use of over 1000 security personnel including the Military, Police and DSS.

“Today, you are witnessing the destruction of expired, falsified, controlled, unregistered, and banned medicines removed from Idumota Open Drug outlets.

“The estimated street value of these products being destroyed stands at One Hundred Billion Naira (N100,000,000,000). During the three weeks exercise, several suspects were apprehended. Further investigation is being carried out; those found culpable will be sanctioned.

“I want to reiterate NAFDAC’S commitment to ensuring that Maternal and Child Care are upheld, and this was demonstrated during the recent operation, as large amounts of poorly stored vaccines and products were evacuated.

Bankes bounces back to win fifth race this season

Miha Matavz/FIS

Great Britain’s Charlotte Bankes consolidated her position at the top of the snowboard cross World Cup standings with her fifth win of the season.

Bankes won the second race of a double-header in Gudauri, Georgia after she came from the back of the field in the final to beat French duo Julia Pereira de Sousa and Lea Casta

The 29-year-old’s victory came after the disappointment of a shock qualification-stage exit in the first event on Friday.

“It’s an amazing win”, Bankes said.

“Friday was tough but my coach Jerome]Choupin] found the words to refocus me for today and we put a massive team effort out there to pull it off so I’m really happy”.

Bankes is 57 points above second-placed Casta in the standings with three World Cup races remaining.

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Beauty in Gaza: Noor’s tent salon in the rubble

Gaza City – Amani Dweima has come to the salon with her 16-year-old daughter, Aya.

The 39-year-old wants her eyebrows shaped, and Aya wants a full face of makeup; there’s a wedding planned for that evening after iftar.

“My niece’s wedding,” Amani says. “We’re celebrating the bride with a small family gathering before the groom takes her to their tent. ”

Noor’s Salon

The salon is a small blue tent with a single table inside topped with a damaged mirror, depilation tools, moisturisers, and some makeup.

Outside the tent in al-Shujaeya east of Gaza City, a white handwritten sign reading: “Noor’s Salon” hangs near the curtained entrance.

This is Noor al-Ghamari’s salon, a dream project for the young woman who quit nursing college to pursue her love of hair and makeup.

She set it up about three weeks ago on a destroyed pavement, the only option available when she and her family returned to the north from their displacement to the south.

After greeting Amani and Aya, she starts softening a small piece of sugaring paste, gently kneading it in her hands, and begins working.

“Since I opened, so many women have come to me with heartbreaking stories … about losing their families and loved ones. They arrive exhausted, their faces drained of light,” Noor said.

The idea of a beauty salon in the midst of war may seem odd, Amani and Noor agree, but the act of self-care can help women.

Amani, seated, says: ‘Looking after myself changes my mood,’ as Noor works on her face [Abdelhakim Abu Riash, Al Jazeera]

“Women come to me from tents, overcrowded schools, or the ruins of their destroyed homes.

“I try to offer them a moment of comfort, a small escape. My main goal is for them to leave feeling even just a little lighter, a little happier. ”

Amani, who was displaced to Deir el-Balah and has recently returned to the north, as well, didn’t think about going to a beautician at all in the early days of the war.

Eventually, she came across a similar salon in Deir el-Balah and started to go as regularly as she could.

“Looking after myself changes my mood, especially when I see my reflection in the mirror. I always want to look presentable.

“The tragedies around us never end. Visiting a beauty salon is … a small escape from all the hardships around us,” she adds.

Back in the north, she was “thrilled” when she saw Noor’s Salon and immediately spread the good news to her neighbours and relatives.

Beauty amid war

Noor believes the war has been particularly cruel to women in Gaza – stripping them of their homes and security and of their capacity for self-care as they poured their energy into survival.

“I saw many women whose skin was completely burned by the sun from living in tents, constantly cooking over wood fires, washing clothes by hand, and carrying heavy water containers,” she says.

“On top of that, they have no privacy in the overcrowded displacement camps, not to mention the fear, bombings, and all the horrors of war. ”

Noor stands in front of her tent with the handwritten sign on it. In the background is the destruction that is ubiquitous in Gaza today
Noor stands in front of her tent salon, on a destroyed street in Shujaeya [Abdelhakim Abu Riash, Al Jazeera]

And yet, she says, she has had clients of all ages who feel that self-care is essential for them.

“I met many women who couldn’t stand a single stray hair on their face or eyebrows. Some came to me every week, others regularly or occasionally,” Noor says.

She recalls a client she got once, a woman in her early 30s who had been through a huge trauma when her parents and all her siblings were killed in an Israeli air raid.

Coping with her loss meant the woman lost all desire to do anything.

“I felt so deeply for her,” Noor says.

“I gave her a full treatment – threading, eyebrow shaping, a haircut, even a free face massage and masque.

“When she looked in the mirror, her eyes filled with happy tears. ”

Holding on to dreams

Israel’s war on Gaza began right as Noor was dreaming, laying out the plans for her own – bricks-and-mortar – salon.

Like everyone in Gaza, her life and plans were turned upside down as she, her parents and her eight siblings were forced to flee south after Israeli evacuation orders.

For the first two months, her only thoughts were of survival and helping her family, she says.

“But after the initial months, when we settled in a displacement camp in the south, I heard women say things like: ‘If only there were a hairdresser or a salon nearby so we could take care of ourselves a little. ’

“I would respond: ‘I’m a beautician! ’” Noor laughs.

Noor pausing to check the makeup she has applied to Aya's face in the light filtering through the tent's blue plastic sidesåç
Noor stops to check the makeup she’s applying to Aya’s face for the wedding later [Abdelhakim Abu Riash, Al Jazeera]

“The women would grab me like they had just found a treasure, and I would start working immediately. ”

Some women came to her, while she went to others in their tents – depending on their needs.

Now, her work has become an essential source of income for her and her family during the war, even though she can’t charge her five to eight customers a day much.

“I live here, I understand the reality,” she says, explaining why she keeps her prices low.

‘War aged us’

Amani seems restless as Noor finishes threading her face.

She asks if Noor can dye her hair, but Noor can’t.

“There’s no water in this area,” she explains. “Dyeing needs running water, and my tent is on the pavement, surrounded by destruction – there’s no water, no electricity, nothing.

“I make do with the simplest equipment and only offer basic services. ”

Amani sighs, running her fingers through her greying hair beneath her hijab.

“I only used to have a few grey hairs. But now, it’s everywhere. This war aged us,” she says with a sad smile.

Noor shifted her attention to Aya, discussing the colour of her dress to choose matching makeup.

“I brought my daughter today so she could take care of herself a little – as a way to lift her spirits,” Amani said, smiling at her daughter, whose eyes are closed for eyeshadow application.

“I want her to grow up knowing that she should always take care of herself, no matter what.

“I also want to bring her some joy. What we’ve seen during this war has been beyond devastating. ”

As Noor adds her final touches to Aya’s makeup, she talks longingly about her dreams.

“More than anything, I want this war to end so I can expand my business, move to a proper salon, and offer more services.

“But my message to all women is this: Take care of yourselves, no matter what. Life is short. ”

Pierce Brosnan on 007 future as he says next James Bond must be British

Actor Pierce Brosnan has said it is a “given” that the next James Bond should be British. His comments comes following concerns that the franchise will not be British anymore in the wake of Amazon MGM Studios taking creative control over the 007 character.

In an interview with the Sunday Telegraph, the former Bond also said he thought it was the “right decision” for the franchise’s long-standing producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson to hand creative control to Amazon.

“It takes great courage for them to let go”, said Brosnan. “I thought it was coming for some time I guess, but I think it was the right decision for Barbara and Michael. I hope that]Amazon] handles the work and the character with dignity and imagination and respect”.

In February, the US film and television production and distribution studio announced it will be co-owners with Michael G Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, who have produced the Bond films together since Brosnan’s first movie – 1995’s GoldenEye.

(Publicity Picture)

Brosnan, 71, who played Bond in four films, added that “no one really knows” what will happen to 007 in Amazon’s control.

“In this world that is moving so fast now, at the speed of light, (the change) does come with a certain lament”, he said.

The interview added that Brosnan said it was a “given” for Bond to remain British despite the new US owners.

He said: “History has been passed on and I’m very proud to have been part of the history and the legacy of Bond and the movies that I made with Barbara and Michael.

” That we moved the needle, that we brought it back to life. It had been dormant]for] six years and GoldenEye was such a success that it continued and went from strength to strength… I wish them well. “

Andrew Garfield, the British-American Spider-Man actor, is among the bookmakers ‘ favourites for the role, while the American Oscar Isaac and Chilean-American Pedro Pascal are also contenders.

British-born James Norton, who starred in Happy Valley, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson, who appeared in Kick-Ass and Kraven the Hunter, remain other names linked to the role to step into Craig’s shoes.

Before the Amazon announcement, the Mirror had reported uncertainty around the next Bond project and when it would start.

Daniel Craig’s final film No Time To Die was released in September 2021 and the following year in June 2022 Bond producer Barbara Broccoli said the next Bond film was a long way from starting.

At the time she told Deadline:” There isn’t a script and we can’t come up with one until we decide how we’re going to approach the next film because, really, it’s a reinvention of Bond.

“We’re reinventing who he is, and that takes time. I’d say that filming is at least two years away”.

With Amazon now in creative control and no new Bond appointed, it is likely to be up to three years before we see a new 007 unleashed on screen.

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Wales’ Lake wants big Sherratt send-off against England

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Hooker Dewi Lake is hoping Wales can send interim head coach Matt Sherratt out with a victory against England in the Six Nations finale in Cardiff next Saturday.

Sherratt is due to take charge of his final game in his caretaker role since taking over from the departed Warren Gatland.

The Cardiff coach has overseen a 27-18 home loss against Ireland before the 35-29 away defeat to Scotland.

“The desire is there to be able to send Matt out on a high note”, said Lake.

“For the work that he’s put in the past four weeks, the effort he’s shown and how quickly he’s been able to implement what he’s wanted to.

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Wales are desperate to stop the 16-match international losing run that stretches back to October 2023.

” We’ve been desperate for a while to get that win that has been evading us, “said Lake.

” That’s what Test match rugby and this environment’s about. No matter who’s who’s been in charge or who’s been involved that desire doesn’t go away.

“There’s no need to get up for a game like England, It’s going to do that for itself”.

Wales are searching for a first home win since August 2023 with no Six Nations victory coming at the Principality Stadium since February 2022.

“The crowd being behind you in the Principality Stadium with the hostile environment definitely makes a hell of a difference”, said Lake.

“It was incredible in that Ireland game. You could feel the energy from the crowd, but it’s on us as players to create that and to make the crowd want to bring that energy for us”.

Lake, 25, made his first Six Nations appearance since 2022 after recovering from bicep surgery when he came on as a second-half replacement for Elliot Dee.

“I can’t thank physios and backroom staff enough for the work they’ve put into me behind the scenes”, said Lake.

“Also the coaches and the boys have welcomed me back into the squad.

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