Months before her tragic death at 53, cancer-stricken actress Shannon Doherty admitted that she wanted her remains to be mixed with the ashes of her beloved dog and her dad, who died in 2010.
In a January episode of her Let’s Be Clear podcast, the Charmed and Beverly Hills, 90210 alum stated, “I want to be cremated with a mixture of my father, me, and Bowie.”
Doherty also mentioned scattering her ashes in “precious spots” such as Malibu or using them to grow a tree.
She even gave her best friend Chris Cortazzo permission to wear some of her remains around his neck in a necklace, as reported by RadarOnline.com.
The TV star was surrounded by her loved ones, including her cherished German Shepherd Bowie, when she passed away on Saturday following a nine-year battle with breast cancer.
When Doherty was first diagnosed with cancer in 2015, she credited her canine companion with sensing that something was wrong and detecting the illness before anyone else. In 2016, she recalled that Bowie “would obsessively sniff right here on my right side for a long time before. So, it made sense when I got diagnosed.”
Earlier this year, Doherty paid tribute to Bowie — who has an Instagram account of her own — on social media, writing: “Happy birthday to the best dog in the world. I love you to an obsessive point.”
In a previous post, Doherty called her dog the “love of my life … It’s amazing what dogs can get you thru. Heart wrenching s— becomes bearable. To think that not all dogs, all animals are treated with such love and respect. Can we please be kind?”
Although Doherty was an outspoken advocate for rescue animals, Bowie was a purebred German Shepherd given to her as a gift by her ex Kurt Iswarienko.
In her final act, Doherty reached a settlement in her bitter divorce from her estranged ex just one day before she died from cancer.
As RadarOnline.com reported, the couple filed joint paperwork on Friday, July 12 stating that the filing was uncontested, with Doherty waiving her rights to spousal support after previously accusing Iswarienko of waiting “in hopes that I die” to avoid making payments.
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Source: Los Angeles Times1