Olivia Newton-John, the British-Born Australian singer and actor, died on Monday at the age of 73, according to a post on her social media accounts.
She “passed away peacefully” in Southern California while surrounded by her family and friends, the post read.
The four-time Grammy award winner was famed for her role as Sandy in the 1978 musical film Grease, alongside actor John Travolta.
Her career spanned more than five decades, although she became devoted to charities after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 1992.
The ‘ultimate’ Sandy
Travolta, who had starred as Danny in the stage version of Grease, said before the film production that Newton-John would be the “ultimate” Sandy, a high school sweetheart-turned-“bad girl”.
She still insisted on taking a screen test before accepting the role. “I worried that at 29 I was too old to play a high school girl,” she told The Telegraph in 2017.
“My dearest Olivia, you made all of our lives so much better,” Travolta wrote on social media on Monday. “We will see you down the road and we will all be together again. Yours from the first moment I saw you and forever! Your Danny, your John!”
Newton-John and Travolta went on to make another movie, Two of a Kind, in 1983. They also recorded a Christmas album in 2012.
Chart-topping
Newton-John was among the world’s most popular entertainers in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
In the US, she had 14 singles that made the top-10 charts.
The Travolta-Newton-John duet, ‘You’re the One That I Want’, was one of the biggest songs in the 1970s. It sold more than 15 million copies.
Her bouncy, steamy song titled ‘Physical’ was named Billboard’s song of the year in 1981.
‘Winning over’ cancer
“Olivia has been a symbol of triumphs and hope for over 30 years sharing her journey with breast cancer,” the post announcing her death said.
Over the years, she dedicated several albums and shows to raise funds for research and early detection of breast cancer.
“I don’t like to say ‘battled’,” she told Australia’s Channel Seven TV in 2018, after revealing she had been diagnosed with cancer for a third time.
“I like to say ‘win over’, because ‘battled’ sets up this anger and inflammation that you don’t want.”
Besides establishing research facilities, she also advocated for plant medicine and using medicinal cannabis in cancer treatments.
Looking back at her career, Newton-John told Reader’s Digest last year: “I have done everything, and the icing on the cake as well.”
“So I feel grateful for anything that happens now.”
This article was originally published on DW.