Sam Neill's final days: Why friends say 'nobody saw this coming'

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On Instagram he called it a ‘great night,’ saying he’d spent the evening honoring artists he’d idolized for decades.

Just weeks later, Neill’s family would share the news that he had died ‘suddenly’ in a Sydney hospital, saying that the actor ‘passed with the dignity that has characterized his whole life.’ 

For fans, that joyful ARIA snapshot has become the defining image of his final chapter – but for those around him, the news was shocking, as he’d seemed so well in the days before his death.

‘Sam had been feeling great and looked healthier than he had in months after his battle with cancer,’ a source told the Daily Mail. ‘He was in a genuinely happy place, embracing life, staying busy with work, and reading scripts for future projects… Because of that, nobody saw this coming.’

Sam Neill looked like he had all the time in the world as he slipped into the crowd at Sydney ’s ARIA Hall of Fame ceremony in June - his final public appearance before his sudden death at 78

Sam Neill looked like he had all the time in the world as he slipped into the crowd at Sydney ‘s ARIA Hall of Fame ceremony in June – his final public appearance before his sudden death at 78

'Sam had been feeling great and looked healthier than he had in months after his battle with cancer,' a source told the Daily Mail

‘Sam had been feeling great and looked healthier than he had in months after his battle with cancer,’ a source told the Daily Mail

According to the insider, ‘his family is absolutely devastated by the loss.’

In medical terms, too, Neill had every reason to feel hopeful. 

The actor was diagnosed with blood cancer – stage 3 angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma – in 2022. But after years of chemotherapy, when it briefly looked like he was ‘on the way out,’ he was thrown a lifeline in the form of CAR T‑cell therapy – a cutting‑edge treatment that genetically re‑engineers a patient’s own immune cells to hunt down cancer.

Tests in April confirmed there was no cancer left in his body, and Neill spoke about the news with genuine delight, calling it ‘an extraordinary thing’ and admitting he was ‘very, very excited that this can happen.’

From there, he began talking not in terms of endings, but of what came next.

‘It’s time I did another movie,’ he said in April, signaling that he wasn’t done with film sets and scripts just yet.

And friends say that wasn’t idle talk. 

‘He felt as though he had been given a new lease on life and was determined to make the most of every opportunity, enjoying every moment that came his way,’ our source said. 

For his doctor, that renewed energy was more than personal; it was a beacon. 

Dr Orly Lavee, the hematologist who treated Neill and became his friend, recalled how his response to treatment extended far beyond hospital corridors.

‘Sam overcoming an aggressive lymphoma provided so much hope for people far and wide,’ she told the Daily Mail.

‘He was a true believer and advocate for the science and research that continues to improve outcomes for our patients. It’s just one of his many legacies.’

Neill is pictured during his chemotherapy

Neill is pictured during his chemotherapy

Dr Orly Lavee, the hematologist who treated Sam and became his friend, recalls how his response to treatment rippled far beyond hospital corridors

Dr Orly Lavee, the hematologist who treated Sam and became his friend, recalls how his response to treatment rippled far beyond hospital corridors

Long before he was declared cancer-free, Neill spoke candidly about the possibility that his life might be shorter than he’d planned.

In a 2023 interview, he said he wasn’t afraid of dying; what bothered him was the idea of leaving while there was still so much he wanted to do.

‘I’m not afraid to die,’ he admitted, ‘but it would annoy me. Because I’d really like another decade or two, you know?’

He talked about the terraces and olive trees on his beloved Central Otago property in New Zealand, and the grandchildren he longed to watch grow up. 

Even in his memoir Did I Ever Tell You This? he joked about ‘possibly dying’ in the first chapter – more irritated than afraid. 

‘He often said he wasn’t afraid of dying – he simply didn’t want to because he loved his life,’ our source said. ‘He cherished every minute of it, valued the people around him, and wanted nothing more than to keep living, working, and creating for as long as he could.

‘And that is exactly what he was doing.’ 

Away from the cameras, that love of life showed up in the simplest ways. 

In recent years, Neill had stepped back from Hollywood’s bustle to focus on Two Paddocks, his vineyard in Central Otago. He also ran Redbank Farm, a menagerie of animals he clearly enjoyed as much as any glitzy movie premiere.

But beyond the vineyard and farm, family remained at the heart of Neill’s world. 

He had a son, Tim, with New Zealand actress Lisa Harrow, to whom he was married in the 1980s; a daughter, Elena, with Japanese makeup artist Noriko Watanabe, whom he married in 1989; and a stepdaughter, Maiko, whom he adopted from Watanabe’s previous marriage. 

Years later, he reunited with another son, Andrew, who had been placed up for adoption when Neill was in his twenties. They found each other again in 1994, and Andrew became part of the family circle. 

When Neill talked about wanting ‘another decade or two,’ it was for all of them – the terraces and trees, yes, but especially the eight grandchildren he wanted to watch become adults.

According to the insider, 'His family is absolutely devastated by the loss'

According to the insider, ‘His family is absolutely devastated by the loss’

‘He felt as though he had been given a new lease on life and was determined to make the most of every opportunity, enjoying every moment that came his way,' the Daily Mail source said

‘He felt as though he had been given a new lease on life and was determined to make the most of every opportunity, enjoying every moment that came his way,’ the Daily Mail source said

Professionally, he had already carved out the kind of résumé that would outlive any one lifetime. 

Born Nigel John Dermot Neill in Northern Ireland before his family moved to New Zealand in 1954, he eased himself into the name the world would eventually know. 

‘I found I moved more easily in the world as a Sam,’ he once joked. ‘Nigel is an awkward fit in most circumstances. Imagine being a movie actor called Nigel Neill.’

By the time he was playing Dr Alan Grant in Jurassic Park in 1993 – opposite Laura Dern and Jeff Goldblum, sprinting away from CGI dinosaurs in the Steven Spielberg blockbuster – the transformation was complete. 

He would reprise the role in Jurassic Park III and Jurassic World Dominion, and those three films alone were enough to make him a permanent part of pop‑culture history.

It’s no accident, then, that some of the most emotional tributes in the days after his death came from his Jurassic family. 

‘Sam was my beloved lifetime friend… He showed me the depths of loyalty, protectiveness and love always with the driest of wit,’ Dern said, describing him as ‘a true and noble gentleman, wrapped up in my dream leading man’ and signing off with, ‘I will love you forever, Dr. Alan Grant.’

Spielberg, meanwhile, remembered him as ‘exceptionally collaborative’ and recalled how playing a character impatient with children was a stretch for an actor who was, in real life, a devoted father. 

‘I adored making all the Jurassic movies with him,’ the director said. ‘Along with Laura Dern and Jeff Goldblum, we will always have our Jurassic family and Sam will never be forgotten by us or his many millions of fans around the world.’

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