Arab Times

Franklin cancer docs recall her grace, grit

‘Kind, respectful’

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Regardless of her reputation as a performer, Aretha Franklin’s cancer doctors say she was no diva as a patient.

As the anniversar­y of her death, two of her doctors tell The Associated Press that the Queen of Soul handled the diagnosis and treatment with grace – and the grit to keep performing for years with a rare type of cancer.

“As a person, she was extremely kind, she was respectful, she was funny – she treated people like me and my team members as her friends,” said Dr Manisha Shah of Ohio State University. “There is no phone call that would end without her asking about us. Most of the time she would ask about us first. It’s because who she was: She was really down-to-earth.”

Franklin, who died in Detroit on Aug 16, 2018, at 76, had pancreatic neuroendoc­rine cancer, which starts in the pancreas but is far different and much slower developing than the more common, aggressive type of pancreatic cancer known as adenocarci­noma. Franklin’s kind is exceedingl­y rare: Neuroendoc­rine cancers comprise about 7% of cancers originatin­g in the pancreas, according to the Neuroendoc­rine Tumor Research Foundation.

Shah said she first saw Franklin after her 2010 diagnosis, surgery and treatment at Detroit’s Karmanos Cancer Center.

“I think she had her priorities very clear in her mind . ... She would ask me how long this treatment would go for, what would be her restrictio­ns,” Shah said. “As far as I can see, she was able to live that dream, or her plan.”

Franklin

Of course, her illness meant some cancellati­ons, which was to include performing on her 76th birthday in March of last year in Newark and at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in April. But she gamely carried on as her illness progressed: Performanc­es of note included closing a gala in November 2017 for Elton John’s 25th anniversar­y of his AIDS foundation, and bringing president Barack Obama and many others to tears in 2015 with a triumphant performanc­e of “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman” at a Kennedy Center tribute for the song’s co-writer, Carole King.

“How can the same person who is going through this cancer journey continue to do what she did all her life? It’s amazing how she went through it so gracefully,” Shah said. “She wasn’t afraid.”

Both Shah and Dr Philip Agop Philip, a professor at Karmanos and Wayne State University, recalled how she wanted to continue her life as normally – and positively – as possible.

“She was full speed – she wasn’t even complainin­g,” said Philip, who first saw Franklin in early 2011 and was her doctor of record at the time of her death. “That was different than what I expected . ... She never showed signs that she was close to thinking that she may give up ... until the end, close to the end.”

In the public eye, she even embraced the “diva” tag, once saying, “What do YOU think?” when an AP reporter asked Franklin if she thought she was the ultimate diva while discussing a VH1 Divas concert honoring her music. Still, Philip also saw a patient who didn’t demand star treatment, saying she never made him or his staff “feel that we need to treat her as a celebrity.” Of course, given her fame, some accommodat­ions were made: She came and went through a side door and there were more frequent changes in appointmen­ts because of her performing schedule. While there, however, she was keen on doing whatever needed to be done, he said.

“She knew her body, she knew herself,” he said. “A lot of patients will ask for treatment that doesn’t really make much difference to her body. She didn’t do that.”

Shah says Franklin’s cancer – the same kind Apple co-founder and longtime leader Steve Jobs had – has many treatment options, and her doctors employed both targeted drug therapy and chemothera­py.

Shah said she talked with Franklin about traveling to Europe for a treatment before it was approved last year in the United States. It was then the doctor learned of her patient’s famous fear of flying, which anti-anxiety tapes and classes couldn’t help.

“She said, ‘Oh no, I can’t go – I don’t fly,’” Shah recalled. “We had several other options for her.”

Both Shah and Philip recall Franklin’s positivity in the face of cancer, and the positive effect that had on them as well as their colleagues.

“Aretha as a person who was fighting cancer, she was very curious, she was very calm. She was hopeful, she was an optimist. This was kind of her attitude. She didn’t let cancer cripple her. She did not have that feeling that cancer was the main center of her life,” Shah said. “She lived her life as simply and beautifull­y and as full as possible every day. For us, it was such an inspiring journey of several years with her.”

LOS ANGELES:

By Jeff Karoub

Performing

Also:

The US Department of Justice has weighed in on the next big music copyright case on the horizon following the Katy Perry “Dark Horse” decision, and taken Led Zeppelin’s side in the longrunnin­g copyright dispute that pits the writers of the group’s anthem “Stairway to Heaven” against the publishers of the earlier song “Taurus” by Spirit.

The DOJ filed an amicus brief late Thursday supporting Zeppelin against a claim by the trustees of the late Spirit singer/guitarist Randy Wolfe – a.k.a. Randy California – that it lifted a musical passage for its song from “Taurus”.

Michael Skidmore, the trustee of the Randy Craig Wolfe Trust, sued the band in 2014, arguing that “Stairway to Heaven” ripped off elements of Wolfe’s compositio­n. A jury ruled in favor of Led Zeppelin in 2016, finding that the two songs were not substantia­lly similar.

Skidmore appealed, and on Friday a three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ordered a new trial. The panel found that US District Court Judge Gary Klausner gave instructio­ns that failed to make clear that an arrangemen­t of otherwise unprotecta­ble elements in a song can be sufficient­ly original to merit copyright protection.

“Without a selection and arrangemen­t instructio­n, the jury instructio­ns severely undermined Skidmore’s argument for extrinsic similarity, which is exactly what the jury found lacking,” wrote Circuit Judge Richard A. Paez, for the court. (Agencies)

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