His family thought he had more time.
Fans believed the music would never stop.
But within hours of being rushed to a Los Angeles hospital, Neil Sedaka — the voice behind “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do” and “Calendar Girl” — was gone. Now, the death certificate, the frantic 911 call, and the truth about the silent disease that destroyed his he
Neil Sedaka’s death at 86 came faster than anyone expected. Earlier that day, he began feeling unwell and was rushed by ambulance to a Los Angeles hospital, where deputies and paramedics responded to an urgent medical call. His family, shattered by the loss, remembered him not just as a rock and roll icon, but as a devoted husband, father, and grandfather whose warmth matched his talent.
The official cause of death was atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, with kidney failure contributing — a brutal combination of plaque-clogged arteries and failing organs that can quietly build for years. Yet Sedaka’s legacy reaches far beyond his final diagnosis. From his Juilliard-trained beginnings in Brooklyn to chart-topping hits in two different decades, TV appearances, Grammy nominations, and his place in the Songwriters Hall of Fame, his melodies became the soundtrack of countless lives. The music he left behind is the part that will not die.
