Kris Kristofferson Health, Legendary Singer-Songwriter and Actor, Dies at 88

Kris Kristofferson Health

(Reuters) –kris kristofferson health, for decades one of the America’s most critically acclaimed singer songwriters – thanks in particular to hits like ‘Me and Bobby McGee’ – and significantly a character actor too, died on Saturday at the age of 88, according to Rolling Stoneacidad.

Kristofferson had been for memory loss since 70s.

Kris Kristofferson health, an exceptional man – an athlete with poet heart, an ex-US army officer, a helicopter pilot, Rhodes scholar, cleaning toilet in University of Michigan, which became the best decision of his life.

Kristofferson first made his mark in the music industry as a singer-songwriter in the country music hub of Nashville, writing classics such as the Grammy winning ‘Help Me Make It Through the Night’, ‘For the Good Times’ and the powerful ballad that was the title track on the album of the same name that became the theme tune for Janis Joplin’s one time lover, number one hit ‘Me and Bobby McGee’.

During the early seventies he has established himself as a disproportionate singer with a growling, coarse bass voice and an extremely in demand actor, particularly opposite Barbra Streisand in the hit movie “A Star is Born” in 1976.

Kristofferson was born in Brownsville, Texas on June, the 22nd, 1936 as the second of four children and travelled often because his father was a general in the Air Force. Kristofferson went to Pomona College, California, where he too played football and rugby; he then went to Oxford University on a Rhodes scholarship and then served in the Army, thus following this father and grandfather into the service.

He graduated through Ranger School in the Army, got to fly helicopters and was a captain. Krsitofferson was offered a position of teaching English in 1965 at US Military Academy in West Point New York, he was enticed by a desire to teach his passion of William Blake, but chose to head to Nashville instead.

“NOTHING LEFT TO LOSE”

In Kristofferson’s best songs, there were always seekers, wastrels and broken souls looking to find love, a redemption or a cure for the hangover they received from life. The protagonist of “Bobby McGee,” a song Kristofferson said was prompted by the Federico Fellini’s “La Strada,” said it best: ‘Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose.”

Willie Nelson, once of whom was one of Kristofferson’s heroes, summed it up best when he spoke to CBS’s 60 Minutes in 1999, “Kris brought (country music) kind of from the dark ages up to the present-day time, made it acceptable and brought great lyrics – I mean, the best possible lyrics.” “Simple but profound.”

Kristofferson also recorded four albums with Rita Coolidge, with whom he had two children and was married for five years in the 70s and was again married to Jerry’s first wife, Rosie, in the ’80s and ‘90s with whom he has another son; he toured with Nelson, Cash and Waylon Jennings for six years in the 80s as a country music super group called the Highwaymen.

Kristofferson’s manly appearance landed him in the movies of “Cisco Pike”, “Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid”, “The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea”, “Convoy”, “Heaven’s Gate”, “Lone Star” and “Blade”.

Kristofferson was one of the notorious living during his time of stardom. He described having many girlfriends and shows he could not recall because of alcohol consumptions. He quit alcohol – but not cannabis – when a physician said that he was killing himself.

“It was fun,” Kristofferson said to “60 Minutes.” “It was the way that I thought an artist was supposed to live. I always-ish to the utterance of Blake in giving the guessing that the road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom … As far as risking one’s life I think , God protects fools and songwriters.”

Despite his early success as a movie actor and singer, Kristofferson joined the United Farm Workers movement and opposed U.S. Involvement in Nicaragua and El Salvador in the 1980s.

Kris Kristofferson Health: Key Highlights

Health ChallengeDetails
Lyme DiseaseDiagnosed with Lyme disease in 2019, impacting memory and mobility.
Cognitive IssuesExperiencing memory lapses and mental fog, possibly age-related.
Chronic Pain & MobilityStruggles with back and joint pain, leading to mobility issues.
Public ApproachKristofferson openly discusses his health challenges, promoting transparency and authenticity.
Health ManagementOngoing treatment for Lyme disease, physical therapy, and mental health focus.

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