Roseanne Barr received a serious diagnosis – a “damaged” heart – a warning that left her afraid she could “die on the operating table.”
Barr, 73, opened up about her life as she talked about the ponytail facelift she wanted to get.
“This doctor says I have to go get my heart checked because it’s damaged,” the actress said during an appearance on her podcast, “The Roseanne Barr Podcast.” “Now I’m very upset. Because yes, I need a new doctor.”
He added: “He always sends me other doctors to treat me. And yes, why do I have to go looking for something wrong when there is nothing wrong and get the shape just so I can have an operation and die on the operating table?
Barr doubled down, saying the prospect of surgery was unthinkable to her.
“I mean, it’s unbelievable,” he said. “I’d rather not have any kind of surgery again in my life, and you know, have a heart attack or a stroke and be put in the house.”
The clear statements shed light on his views on aging and end-of-life care, in contrast to the everyday life he has built up in recent years. Barr talked about moving to Texas and how happy she has been since changing her lifestyle and being outdoors in a recent interview with Fox News Digital.
Although it was a “dream come true” for the star of “Roseanne Barr is America”, Barr shared that while he was mowing his property, his tractor fell on him and trapped him under the weight of the machine.
I have a really nice tractor out here, and I’m mowing. The only problem is that I don’t clear the trees as well as I should, and I keep hitting the tree and knocking it over, and it always hits me in the head.
“So, I’ve had a couple of accidents recently. I had this one tree … I knocked it over and a big old branch fell on my head and pinned me in my tractor,” Barr said. “So I knew I had to get out of there, and it weighed about a hundred pounds.”
Barr explained that it took him an hour to move the tree “inch by inch” before he was able to topple it.
Before the publication of the documentary, “Roseanne Barr is America,” in 2025, Barr told Fox News Digital that her life is a reflection of the American experience.
“I went from poverty to riches with a joke.” It’s a typical Jewish-American thing in my generation and a few generations for the funny minority. I think it’s normal, you know.
A fictional comedian who became a household name, Barr rose to fame on ABC’s “Roseanne.” In 2018, Barr was fired after writing a racist statement about Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett.
Barr faced backlash for the tweet, which led to smears from her co-stars and ABC canceling the revival of her hit show “Roseanne,” instead of airing the spin-off series “The Conners.”
The comedian admitted that he doesn’t keep in touch with his former teammates.
“No, I’m not a friend of theirs,” Barr told Fox News Digital. “They’re all in the past. I have fond memories of the good things we had – I wish them all the best. No, let’s not talk. I’ve moved on from that horrible end and chapter in my life, but you know, I don’t hold them back or anything, but my God, we had so much fun on that show.
He said: “And I was sorry that they got their greed and their senseless stupidity to f— all that.
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