Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Robert Goulet In Hospital Awaiting Lung Transplant

By The Associated Press


LAS VEGAS - Singer and actor Robert Goulet is heavily sedated and breathing through a respirator in a Los Angeles hospital while he awaits a lung transplant, his wife says.

Vera Goulet says doctors told her lung transplants are the most successful operation of any transplant, with a success rate of 88 per cent.

She says a suitable donor has yet to be found.

His wife says the 73-year-old singer fell ill when flying home to Las Vegas after performing at a September 20 concert in Syracuse, New York.

She says doctors initially assumed it was some kind of virus but he grew weaker until he had to be rushed to the hospital 10 days later.

Goulet was diagnosed with a form of pulmonary fibrosis that his official website describes as a rapidly progressive and fatal condition.

He was transported to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles as a transplant patient Oct. 13.

"He can hear me but he can't respond," Vera Goulet said.

"God willing, if we proceed with this, our doctors feel that there's no reason he will not have at least 15 years of life doing what he does, going back on stage and singing," she said.

"That's very encouraging."

Speaking by phone from the hospital, Vera Goulet said doctors inserted a breathing tube down her husband's throat and sedated him and they were last able to speak two weeks ago.

"He said: 'Just give me a new pair of lungs and I'll hit the high notes until I'm 100,"' she said.

"I told him I loved him. He told me he loves me."

"He was ready to have the tube inserted. And he said: 'Just watch my vocal cords."'

The couple's 25th wedding anniversary was Oct. 17.

Meanwhile, she said, fans and performers have been calling and e-mailing from around the world, including comedian Jerry Lewis, actress Suzanne Somers and singer Harry Connick Jr.

"Tony Orlando called and said: 'Give him a punch in the stomach for me,"' she said.

Goulet, born to Canadian parents in Lawrence, Mass., has won acclaim for a Broadway career that took off after his debut performance as Sir Lancelot in "Camelot" in 1960. Goulet's multiple appearances on "The Ed Sullivan Show" helped make him a star.

Goulet won a Grammy Award in 1962 for Best New Artist and a Tony Award in 1968 for his role in "The Happy Time."

Over the years, Goulet continued to perform onstage.

His illness forced the cancellation of planned performances in Denver and a commercial TV shoot, Vera Goulet said.