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Keith Richards' Publicist:
'There Was No Brain Damage'
By Doug Pendrell
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Despite rumors flying through tabloids that Rolling
Stone Keith Richards had suffered brain damage, or that
he needed a second surgery, or that he was near death,
have all been dispelled. Richards released a statement
indicating that the first surgery has done the job.
CNN
quoted the statement on their website. "Keith Richards
did not undergo a second operation. The first and only
operation was done on Monday, May 8, and was 100 percent
successful. "There was no brain damage. He continues
to improve as expected." The statement was issued
by Fran Curtis, the Rolling Stones' New York publicist.
The statement was made in response to an article run
by the New
Zealand Herald, which claimed that "the
first operation was performed on the night of Friday,
April 28," and that "medical staff feared for
his life at the time." The New
Zealand Herald also reported that the
surgery which Keith Richards had on May 8th was "a
craniotomy, a serious operation used to remove blood
clots that involves removing a portion of the skull.
Keith Richards sustained the head injury while on vacation
at the Wakaya Club, on a small island in Fiji. The incident
reportedly occurred after Richards fell out of a palm
tree that he was climbing. E
Online reported that "shortly after
his accelerated descent from the palm, he supposedly
mounted a Jet Ski and subsequently suffered another
accident," though neither story has been corroborated.
Richards was originally taken to Ascot Hospital in Auckland,
New Zealand, and released, though he was re-admitted
after suffering from severe headaches (See Keith
Richards Out Of New Zealand Hospital).
The hard-living, hard-rocking member of the Rolling
Stones was one of the original founders of the band
back in the early 1960s, and has been a mainstay of
the band ever since. Since the accident, Richards' two
daughters, 21-year-old Theodora and 19-year-old Alexandra,
have flown to be with him in New Zealand, though, as
the BBC
reports, "spokeswoman Fran Curtis also denied a
Sun newspaper front page story that said Richards's
family had mounted a bedside vigil."
The Rolling Stones have been forced to postpone
their A Bigger Bang European concert dates. The
tour was originally scheduled to start in Barcelona
and Madrid, Spain on May 27th and May 29th, respectively,
and end in Cardiff, Wales on August 29th. The tour will
now be postponed until June, according to Reuters.
Full details of the rescheduled dates are expected shortly.
Keith Richards is no stranger to accidents. In 1990,
Keith Richards punctured his finger on a guitar string,
and the wound became infected. In 1998, Richards fell
of a ladder in his library of his Connecticut mansion,
which caused three broken ribs and a punctured lung.
In both instances, the Rolling Stones were forced to
postpone concerts.
[Additional Sources: CNN, New Zealand Herald, E
Online, BBC, Reuters]
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