Despite the fact that being in the public eye means most celebrities come under an undue amount of scrutiny, sometimes a lot more details come out after they pass away. As much as the yellow press might try to dig, it’s impossible to know everything.
So we’ve compiled a list of things most of the public didn’t know about famous people until after their demise. Get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote your favorites and be sure to share your own thoughts and stories in the comments section down below.
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George Michael
While the tabloids spent years obsessing over the scandals and controversies in George Michael's life, the singer was quietly operating as one of the most generous philanthropists in the music industry. It wasn't until after his death that the world realized just how much he had been giving away in secret.
He donated massive sums to organizations like the Terrence Higgins Trust and Macmillan Cancer Support, but perhaps his most touching contribution was to Childline. Founder Esther Rantzen eventually revealed that Michael had secretly handed over millions in royalties from his hit single "Jesus to a Child," ensuring that countless children got help without him ever asking for a shred of public credit.
I hope all the people who have talked badly about him are ashamed. I allways thought he was a decent guy, just not very lucky
Gene Wilder
It is impossible to think of Gene Wilder without picturing him in that purple velvet coat from Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, and it turns out he fought to protect that magical image until his final days. When he passed away, the world learned he had been secretly battling Alzheimer’s disease, a diagnosis he deliberately kept out of the headlines.
His family later explained that this wasn't about vanity or pride; it was an act of pure kindness. Wilder knew that when children saw him, they saw the candy man, and he didn't want to replace their delight with confusion or worry about his health. As his loved ones beautifully put it, he simply couldn't bear the thought of being responsible for "one less smile in the world."
Alan Rickman
On screen, Alan Rickman was the master of the eloquent, withering put-down, whether he was holding court as Hans Gruber in Die Hard or terrorizing students as Severus Snape in the Harry Potter films. But while he commanded attention in theaters, he was intensely private about his personal struggles. It wasn't until his diaries were published in 2022 as Madly, Deeply that fans realized he had been battling prostate cancer since 2005.
The diagnosis came right in the middle of his Harry Potter tenure, and he actually considered walking away from the franchise during Order of the Phoenix. deeply conflicted, he ultimately wrote that he had to "see it through" because it was his story to finish. He kept that promise, continuing to perform until a stroke and a subsequent diagnosis of pancreatic cancer claimed his life in January 2016.
David Bowie
David Bowie turned his final exit into one last piece of performance art, dropping his twenty-sixth studio album, Blackstar, on his 69th birthday just days before he passed away. When he died on January 10, 2016, at his Lafayette Street home in New York City, the world was completely blindsided.
The English icon had been privately battling liver cancer for eighteen months, keeping the diagnosis so quiet that even close friends were shocked by the news. In the end, he managed to say goodbye on his own terms, leaving behind a final masterpiece just forty-eight hours before he was gone.
Prince
When the world lost Prince in 2016 to an accidental o****d overdose, the headlines were dominated by shock and grief, but a much quieter, more beautiful truth soon began to surface. It turns out the music icon was secretly funding a massive amount of philanthropic work, strictly insisting on staying anonymous to keep the focus on the causes rather than his celebrity.
One perfect example of this stealthy generosity involved an environmentalist working on the Green Jobs Act who received a mysterious check for $50,000, only to discover later that the silent benefactor behind the donation was none other than the Purple One himself.
Loretta Young
Loretta Young managed to keep a huge secret under wraps for decades, almost taking it to her grave. The Golden Age icon actually had a daughter, Judy Lewis, with none other than Clark Gable after they worked together on The Call of the Wild in 1935. As a devout Catholic, Young went to extreme lengths to hide the pregnancy, eventually "adopting" her own biological child to avoid a scandal.
The full truth wasn't confirmed to the public until her biography, Forever Young, hit shelves three months after she died in 2000, though she had privately told Judy back in 1966. In a tragic final twist, Young reportedly confided in her daughter-in-law, Linda Lewis, shortly before her death that her intimacy with Gable hadn't been consensual at all.
Sally Ride
When Sally Ride blasted off in 1983, she shattered the glass ceiling as the first American woman to reach the stars. She was also quietly setting another historic milestone that wouldn't be recognized until after she was gone.
While the world celebrated her mission as a massive victory for women in science, Ride kept a major part of her identity strictly private. It wasn't until her passing that the public learned she was also the first gay astronaut to venture into space, a trailblazing truth she chose to hold close to her chest throughout her life.
Whitney Houston
While the world watched Whitney Houston navigate a life defined by chart-topping hits, a turbulent marriage, and battles with addiction, she was carrying a traumatic secret that wouldn't surface until after her death in 2012. It turns out the legendary singer was allegedly the victim of childhood abuse, a revelation brought to light by her assistant and close friend, Mary Jones.
Jones recalled a confessional moment where Houston admitted her abuser wasn't a man, but a woman, specifically her cousin, soul singer Dee Dee Warwick. Reports indicate that Warwick didn't just target Whitney, either; her brother Gary was also allegedly a victim of the abuse.
Chadwick Boseman
Few celebrity deaths have blindsided the public quite like the loss of Chadwick Boseman in 2020. To the world, he was the regal and invincible King T'Challa, anchoring the billion-dollar phenomenon Black Panther and becoming a fixture of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. But in reality, he was privately fighting a Stage III colon cancer diagnosis that he received the very same year he made his MCU debut.
His commitment to the craft was absolute and he continued to put out h**h-profile performances while undergoing treatment, keeping his condition so tightly under wraps that even his directors, including Ryan Coogler and Spike Lee, had no idea he was sick. In the end, Boseman was a superhero in the truest sense, suffering in silence to inspire millions before succumbing to the illness.
Anthony Perkins
Most people will forever associate Anthony Perkins with the chilling role of Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho, but off-screen, he was a man who guarded his privacy fiercely. In fact, he managed to keep his battle with AIDS completely out of the public eye right up until his death in 1992.
It wasn't until he was gone that a prepared statement revealed the truth, where Perkins humbly explained his silence by riffing on a line from Casablanca. He wrote that he didn't see himself as being noble, but simply felt that the troubles of "one old actor" didn't really amount to a "hill of beans" in the grand scheme of a crazy world.
What's sad is he told his close friends Nancy and Ronnie Reagan and they shunned him when he was dying.
David Cassidy
When David Cassidy passed away on November 21, 2017, the public believed the narrative he had spun about battling dementia. It seemed like a tragic, unavoidable decline for the former teen idol, but a documentary released after his death revealed a much darker reality.
In a shocking confession, Cassidy admitted that the dementia story was essentially a cover-up for his severe alcoholism. He candidly revealed that he wasn't actually showing signs of the disease; instead, his body was shutting down due to acute alcohol poisoning, a truth he had obscured by lying about his drinking habits until the very end.
Billy Tipton
During his lifetime, Billy Tipton was known as a working jazz musician with a modest but respectable following. However, his name became internationally famous immediately after his death due to a stunning revelation: Tipton was a trans man, a fact he had successfully kept hidden from virtually everyone.
The secret was so well-guarded that it reportedly shocked his own inner circle; even his former wives and his adopted sons claimed they had absolutely no idea that he wasn't cisgender until the very end of his life.
Spencer Tracy And Katherine Hepburn
It is one of Hollywood's most legendary open secrets: the electric chemistry Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn shared across nine films wasn't just good acting. Off-camera, the pair were locked in a deep romantic relationship that spanned more than twenty-five years.
Because Tracy remained married to his wife, Louise, throughout the entire affair, the couple went to great lengths to keep things discreet. In fact, out of respect for the situation, Hepburn waited until both Tracy and Louise had passed away before she finally confirmed the reality of their long-term love affair to the public.
Rock Hudson
For over three decades, Rock Hudson was the ultimate Hollywood leading man, but he lived with a secret that wouldn't be fully understood until the very end of his life. In the mid-1980s, he became one of the first major celebrities to battle AIDS, a diagnosis that ultimately claimed his life on October 2, 1985.
At the time, the disease was heavily stigmatized and associated almost exclusively with the gay community, yet Hudson never publicly addressed his sexual orientation while he was alive. It was only after his passing that the silence was broken, revealing the truth about his identity and fundamentally changing the global conversation around the epidemic.
Elizabeth Taylor, one of the first celebrities to participate in raising AIDS awareness, helped organize and host the very first fundraiser to benefit the AIDS project in Los Angeles during the mid-1980s. She helped raise more than $270 million for the cause.
Jimmy Savile
For decades, Jimmy Savile was treated like a national treasure in the UK, a quirky radio and TV icon known for his charity work and eccentric style. However, his legacy was completely obliterated shortly after his death in 2011 when the horrific truth about his private life finally came out.
A staggering wave of around 450 people eventually stepped forward to accuse the presenter of abuse. The BBC later broke down the grim statistics, noting that the vast majority of his victims were female, and about 80% of them were children or young adults when the attacks occurred, exposing him as one of the most prolific predatory offenders in British history.
Cary Grant
When you picture Cary Grant, you probably think of the debonair suit-wearing icon of the Golden Age, not counter-culture psychedelics. However, the documentary Becoming Cary Grant pulled back the curtain on a fascinating, lesser-known chapter of his life, revealing that the Hollywood legend was actually a proponent of LSD.
He wasn't dropping acid to party, though; Grant utilized the hallucinogen as a form of serious mental therapy to work through his personal trauma, a detail that adds a complex, experimental layer to his polished public persona.
Archie Leech worked in the English music hall as a comedian and tumbler. He ran away from home when his mother died and his father quickly remarried. Years later, after he had found success in Hollywood, he found out that his mother was still alive and had been committed to a psychiatric care home by his father. He was reunited with her and looked after her until her passing.
Joan Crawford
The legacy of Hollywood screen legend Joan Crawford took a dark turn almost immediately after her death in 1977. The following year, her adopted daughter Christina published the explosive memoir Mommie Dearest, alleging that her upbringing was filled with severe abuse rather than glamour. The book tore the family apart, with Crawford's younger twin daughters, Cathy and Cindy, fiercely defending their mother and disputing Christina's version of events.
However, the accusations weren't entirely without support and other figures in the industry, including actress Helen Hayes, corroborated the darker side of Crawford's parenting, describing her as "cruel" behind closed doors.
The experiences of people within a single family can differ wildly. My brother and I both remember the wild mood swings and terrifying behaviour of our mother. My father has no idea what we're talking about.
Elvis Presley
Nearly half a century after he left the building, the King of Rock and Roll is still a massive financial powerhouse, with an estate currently valued around $100 million. But the picture was a lot bleaker when Elvis Presley actually passed away in 1977. At the time, his net worth was sitting at a surprisingly low $5 million, drained by the massive upkeep of Graceland and some messy business entanglements.
Things actually got worse before they got better, too, with the IRS hitting the estate with a $14 million bill for back taxes in 1981. While aggressive licensing deals eventually turned the finances around, tax woes seem to be something of a family heirloom. His daughter Lisa Marie reportedly owed the government $1.8 million when she died in 2023, and that very same year, the state of California filed a lien against his granddaughter, Riley Keough, for over $68,000 in unpaid taxes.
OK, but when a 24-year-old man meets a 14-year-old girl, isolates her from her family, and has her move in with him at age 17 while he is in his late 20s, that is grooming. He literally said that she was "young enough that I can train her any way I want". Priscilla's rebuttal that "it really isn't that uncommon in the South" isn't really the flex she thinks it is.
Marilyn Monroe
Things were really unraveling for Marilyn Monroe by the time the 1960s rolled around. Her final completed movie, The Misfits, hit theaters in February 1961 but failed to connect with audiences, marking a somber end to her cinematic run. Behind the scenes, she was fighting a losing battle against substance abuse and mental illness, health crises that effectively wiped out her entire 1961.
She attempted a return to the set the following spring to shoot Something's Got to Give, but the comeback was short-lived; unable to overcome her personal struggles, the screen icon was unceremoniously fired by 20th Century Fox in early June 1962.
She was fired because 20th Century Fox had to save money from what was being spent on Cleopatra starring Elizabeth Taylor. They closed down every other film being made, but in Monroe’s case, they blamed her to save face. Also, she did not commit s*****e.
Paul Reubens
Generations of fans grew up adoring Paul Reubens as the whimsical man-child Pee-wee Herman, spanning from his Saturday morning Playhouse to his classic big-screen Adventure. There was even a massive wave of nostalgia when he revived the character for a stage production in 2009 and the 2015 film Pee-wee’s Big Holiday, leaving audiences hoping for another comeback.
That hope ended abruptly on July 30, 2023, when Reubens passed away at the age of seventy, a loss that blindsided the public. It turned out the comedian had been privately waging a six-year war against cancer without letting the world know. In a posthumous statement, he apologized for the secrecy, expressing how much he loved creating art for his fans but explaining that he needed to face his health struggles away from the spotlight.
Freddie Mercury
If the claims in Lesley-Ann Jones's new biography Love, Freddie hold water, we might have to completely rethink what we know about the Queen frontman's private life. The book alleges that Mercury fathered a secret daughter back in 1976 during an affair with the wife of a close friend.
Now forty-eight years old and working as a medical professional in Europe, the woman reportedly maintained a close relationship with the rock star until his death. Far from being an absentee dad, Mercury is said to have visited her regularly and even gifted her seventeen volumes of his personal diaries, a treasure trove of history she has kept private for decades.
We've only got Lesley Ann Jones's word that any daughter ever even existed. It's something she made up to sell books. It's very convenient that said daughter supposedly died when people started asking too many questions. The people closest to Freddie, including Mary Austin and Brian May, have said it's bollocks and I'm more inclined to believe them than a journalist who never met Freddie.
Corey Haim
While Corey Haim is remembered as the ultimate face of 1980s teen stardom, his rise to fame in Hollywood came with a horrific price. The Canadian actor opened up about enduring severe abuse during his prime years, but he took the specific identity of his tormentor to the grave.
His close friend and frequent co-star, Corey Feldman has since carried the torch of that accusation. Feldman claims to know exactly who was responsible, having publicly implicated figures like actor Dominick Brascia, a narrative that later became the centerpiece of a documentary diving into the industry's darkest corners.
Paul Walker
Paul Walker was an action movie icon whose Porsche collided with a light pole near Los Angeles, but few knew just how deep his altruism ran. He was actually leaving a fundraiser when he died, a fitting final act for a man who had secretly founded the disaster-relief group Reach Out Worldwide.
Unlike the typical celebrity approach of doing good for clout, Walker was adamant about keeping his generosity under the radar. He was a "secret saint" who let his wallet and his heart do the talking, ensuring his contributions made an impact without ever demanding the spotlight.
As commendable as the described actions may be, let's not sanctify him uncritically just yet. He started dating Jasmine Pilchard-Gosnell when she was 16. He was 33. I had always heard he was a "good guy" but this is rather problematic
Marlon Brando
Music legend Quincy Jones once dropped a bombshell about Marlon Brando’s private life, suggesting the Hollywood titan had a sexually fluid history that included encounters with icons like James Baldwin and Marvin Gaye.
It turns out this wasn't just hearsay, at least regarding one famous comedian. Jennifer Lee, the widow of Richard Pryor, actually stepped forward to confirm that her late husband and Brando had been intimate. She wasn't exactly scandalized by the memory, either, effectively shrugging it off as a byproduct of the wild, experimental energy that defined the 1970s.
That does not surprise me and is actually something i feel indifferent about because it looks like everybody was consensual. Why is a man having s*x with a man still a thing? If this news broke 40 years ago, ok, but today i do not really see why this is a dark secret
David Carradine
David Carradine is forever etched in pop culture history as the stoic, zen-like master from Kung Fu and K**l Bill, but his death in 2009 revealed a private side that shattered that serene image. When the actor was found deceased in a Bangkok hotel room, the circumstances were shocking: he had passed away due to accidental asphyxiation during a solo intimate act gone wrong.
It was a tragic, secret end for a man who projected such public composure, though those in his inner circle weren't entirely surprised. His third wife, Gail Jensen, later admitted that the star definitely had his "kinky moments," a reality that remained hidden until the very end.
Oh my god! Why not say he died at an accident wich is what happened? As soon as some unusual séxpractice is involved it is the kinkiest thing in the world, i feel sorry for all the people whose sexlife is only the usual in-out without any attempt to spice it up. We are lucky enough to live in a time where we can (hopefully) talk to our partner what we would like to try without judgement. If it is fun for both ( or more) why not? The only disgusting thing here is people seeing him as some pervert only because they do not understand why he was into it. I do not understand how people are into feet either, i still do not judge them. Whatever does it to you
Bob Crane
To the public, Bob Crane was the wholesome, charming star of the hit sitcom Hogan’s Heroes, but his brutal 1978 m****r cracked open a double life that shocked the world. When investigators began digging into the crime, they stumbled upon a massive, hidden archive of homemade adult videos and photos.
This discovery completely rewrote his legacy, shifting the focus from his comedic acting to what appeared to be a severe addiction relating to explicit content, revealing that he had been meticulously documenting his numerous escapades for years while the cameras weren't rolling.
Mickey Rooney
Considering that Mickey Rooney was the undisputed king of the box office from 1939 to 1941 and kept landing roles for seven decades, the state of his finances when he died in 2014 was a total shocker. The Hollywood legend passed away with an estate valued at a meager $18,000, but the real drama was in the paperwork.
Rooney explicitly cut his estranged wife, Jan Chamberlin, and all eight of his surviving biological children out of his will entirely. Instead, what little money remained went to his stepson, Mark Aber, who had served as his caretaker in his final years. His lawyer later blamed the lack of funds on financial mismanagement by a different stepson, and while Rooney’s biological kids initially tried to fight the will, they eventually walked away from the legal battle in 2015.
Why would you bother to fight a will for a sum so measly? Whether you won the case or not you would still end up out of pocket.
Raquel Welch
Even though Raquel Welch remained active in Hollywood much longer than most, she managed to shield a significant health battle from the public eye until after she was gone. When the legendary actress passed away in February 2023 at the age of eighty-two, her representatives initially stated it was just due to a short illness.
However, the real story emerged months later when her death certificate was released, confirming that while she died of cardiac arrest, she had secretly been living with Alzheimer's disease for years. It was a revelation that caught fans off guard, and to this day, her family has chosen to stay silent regarding that private struggle.
John Edgar Hoover
J. Edgar Hoover spent his career building the FBI into a monolith of law and order, but his legacy took a massive hit once the truth about his methods finally came to light. It turns out the man in charge of enforcing federal law was actually one of the biggest rule-breakers in Washington.
Hoover ran a covert operation that routinely crossed the line, utilizing everything from illegal wiretaps to actual break-ins to gather dirt on political dissidents and private citizens alike. He didn't just collect this intel for national security, either; he used those secret files as leverage to intimidate h**h-ranking politicians, amassing enough power to ensure that no one dared to challenge his authority while he was alive.
Nicholas Tucci
With credits piling up on shows like Daredevil, Ramy, and The Blacklist, plus a memorable turn in the horror hit You're Next, it really felt like Nicholas Tucci was just hitting his stride. That momentum made the news of his death on March 3, 2020, all the more shocking.
He was only thirty-eight when he passed away, and it was revealed by his father, Alexander, via Facebook that he had been secretly fighting cancer. Tucci had made the deliberate choice to shield the public from his diagnosis because he wanted to keep chasing his artistic goals and working on set without his illness defining his career.
Robin Gibb
The Bee Gees built a massive legacy on squeaky-clean vibes and perfect falsetto harmonies, but member Robin Gibb’s personal life wasn't quite as polished as the band's image. While the world saw a wholesome pop star, Gibb was actually hiding a significant secret from his wife, Dwina.
A year after he lost his battle with cancer in 2012, news broke that he had fathered a love child with his housekeeper, Claire Yang. He certainly made sure they were taken care of, too; his will revealed that he left Yang a substantial financial gift, including a house worth £800,000, permanently shattering the illusion of his straightforward domestic life.
Farrah Fawcett
For decades, the public narrative surrounding Farrah Fawcett was inextricably tied to Ryan O'Neal, her famous on-and-off partner of thirty years. However, shortly after the Charlie's Angels star passed away in 2009, a man named Greg Lott came forward with a stunning revelation that challenged that history.
Speaking to the Daily Mail, Lott claimed that he had actually been Fawcett's boyfriend for the final stretch of her life. The two had originally met as students at the University of Texas and reportedly rekindled their romance in 1998, staying together in a relationship Lott described as "blind, crazy, in love" until the very end.
Paul Newman
Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward were held up as the gold standard of Hollywood romance, a fifty-year marriage that defied the industry's reputation for infidelity. Newman famously brushed off temptation with his iconic line about having "steak at home," implying he had no reason to go out looking for a hamburger.
However, that perfect façade developed a crack a year after his 2008 death when biographer Shawn Levy released claims that the actor actually had a secret affair with journalist Nancy Bacon, an allegation Newman had flatly denied while he was alive. The emotional toll of that secret was later laid bare in the 2022 documentary The Last Movie Stars, where his daughter Elinor admitted how devastating it was to see the illusion crumble and realize her father was fallible after all.
So still gossip? Or is there any proof? As long as not at least one of the two admitted to it, it is just someome making an allegation
How many of these people would be popping up on Bored Panda's lists of celebrities who were horrible, if they were still alive? Believe me, I'm probably the first person around here to bash Hollywood and the music industry as a bunch of monsters, but the way people are prompted to hate people because someone was a snob once, or did something bad as a child, or has the wrong beliefs, or had some emotional or psychological issues... it's just sick. And I'm happy to read, for instance, that despite George Michael's personal issues, he was in other ways a decent person. (UPDATED: On the other hand, Loretta Young claims Clark Gable r***d her. Because it was old-time Hollywood, Gable probably never thought of himself as a rapist. If there's one thing about s****l politics that I hate it's the notion that if it isn't illegal, it's OK. If true [and why would she lie?], burn in Hell, Clark Gable.)
I never knew that about Clark Gable. I'll never be able to watch his movies again.
Load More Replies...This list is pretty badly researched. Lots of these people were known groomers, or worse.
"Lots". Okay how many out of the 31 listed ? Or did you go to Trump University and learn to just state a wild inaccuracy as fact
Load More Replies...Another one that deserves mention is that Michael Jackson was bald. Not discovered until after his death.
I don’t think he was bald in the traditional sense…I believe he had areas that were scared and hair didn’t grow from the Pepsi commercial incident.
Load More Replies...How many of these people would be popping up on Bored Panda's lists of celebrities who were horrible, if they were still alive? Believe me, I'm probably the first person around here to bash Hollywood and the music industry as a bunch of monsters, but the way people are prompted to hate people because someone was a snob once, or did something bad as a child, or has the wrong beliefs, or had some emotional or psychological issues... it's just sick. And I'm happy to read, for instance, that despite George Michael's personal issues, he was in other ways a decent person. (UPDATED: On the other hand, Loretta Young claims Clark Gable r***d her. Because it was old-time Hollywood, Gable probably never thought of himself as a rapist. If there's one thing about s****l politics that I hate it's the notion that if it isn't illegal, it's OK. If true [and why would she lie?], burn in Hell, Clark Gable.)
I never knew that about Clark Gable. I'll never be able to watch his movies again.
Load More Replies...This list is pretty badly researched. Lots of these people were known groomers, or worse.
"Lots". Okay how many out of the 31 listed ? Or did you go to Trump University and learn to just state a wild inaccuracy as fact
Load More Replies...Another one that deserves mention is that Michael Jackson was bald. Not discovered until after his death.
I don’t think he was bald in the traditional sense…I believe he had areas that were scared and hair didn’t grow from the Pepsi commercial incident.
Load More Replies...
