Ozzy Osbourne made peace with death before final tour



Ozzy Osbourne had come to terms with death ahead of his final farewell tour.

“If my life is coming to an end, I can’t really complain about it,” he said in the new trailer for Paramount+’s “Ozzy Osbourne: No Escape from Now.”

“I’ve had a great life,” the rocker added.

Ozzy Osbourne was at peace in the months leading up to his death. Paramount+
The rocker shared that he had “a great life” in an upcoming documentary. Paramount+

The upcoming documentary, which comes out Oct. 7, chronicles his final farewell gig at Villa Park in his hometown of Birmingham in July 2025.

Page Six exclusively reported that the concert buoyed his spirits.

“It energized him — it filled him with life,” a longtime pal said of the show, “He’d really been slowing down, and then after the show he was really back to be being himself. It’s a beautiful ending.”

The documentary follows his final show in July 2025. Paramount+
Osbourne died less than a month later. Paramount+

Less than a month later, Osbourne died aged 76.

“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,” a statement from the family read after his passing.

“He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time. Sharon, Jack, Kelly, Aimee and Louis.”

A public funeral procession took place in Birmingham.

The documentary also chronicles the singer’s health woes. Paramount+
The “Crazy Train” singer revealed he had Parkinson’s disease in 2020 and had hidden it for many years. Paramount+

The former Black Sabbath frontman’s wife, Sharon Osbourne, and their kids, Aimee, Kelly and Jack, are also included in the forthcoming documentary.

They speak candidly about injuries Ozzy suffered after a fall in February 2019, which forced him to cancel a two-and-a-half-year farewell tour.

Sharon, 72, said in the trailer, Ozzy’s one regret was not saying goodbye to his fans.

In his final years, the “Crazy Train” belter’s health deteriorated.

Osbourne’s wife, Sharon, is also interviewed. Paramount+
The Osbourne family attended a funeral procession in Birmingham. Getty Images

In January 2020, he revealed that he had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a diagnosis he had kept secret for over 15 years.

The rock metal legend had also undergone neck injuries sustained in a 2003 quad biking accident.

The documentary reveals that Ozzy underwent numerous corrective surgeries that caused chronic pain and severely affected his mobility.

Credit to Nypost AND Peoples

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