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Meat Loaf was ‘seriously ill’ with COVID days before his death: report

Rock legend Meat Loaf was “seriously ill” with COVID-19 just days before his death Thursday, according to a report.

Sources told TMZ that the 74-year-old “Bat Out of Hell” star was due to attend a business dinner earlier this week for a show he is working on based on his classic hit, “I’d Do Anything for Love.”

But he canceled because he was seriously ill with COVID-19, with his condition soon becoming critical, the outlet’s sources said.

It was not clear if he had been vaccinated. Reps for the star did not immediately return requests for comment early Friday.

No cause of death was given in the announcement of his death on his official Facebook page

“Our hearts are broken to announce that the incomparable Meat Loaf passed away tonight with his wife Deborah by his side,” the post said. 

Meat Loaf is pictured at his last public appearance at the Motor City Comic Con, in Novi, Michigan, in October. MLive.com
Meat Loaf, pictured with his wife, had reportedly canceled a business dinner earlier this week due to his illness.

“Daughters Pearl and Amanda and close friends have been with him throughout the last 24 hours.”

The singer and actor, real name Michael Lee Aday, had become outspoken about COVID — ripping lockdowns and mask mandates last August in one of his last interviews.

“If I die, I die, but I’m not going to be controlled,” the rocker told The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Meat Loaf pictured performing on stage during the Bat Out Of Hell Tour, in March 1978. Getty Images

Still, he admitted being terrified of the pandemic despite proudly offering to hug interviewer Scott Mervins, telling him, “I hug people in the middle of COVID.”

“Oh, I’m scared to death! You kidding me? But I’m sorry, I understood stopping life for a little while, but they cannot continue to stop life because of politics,” the rocker told the paper.

“And right now they’re stopping because of politics,” he said.

He noted a new report at the time saying that “the masks we’re all wearing are useless.”

“But I’ve known that for six months. They don’t do anything,” he said.

“They don’t stop you from getting COVID. They’re just a nuisance and make your nose itch and make it so you can’t breathe.”

He complained about “a Nazi” who shouted “Get your mask on now!” while he was on a plane, griping, “They’re power-mad now.”

In May, he posted a clip of Eric Clapton and Van Morrison’s anti-lockdown song, “Stand & Deliver,” writing, “Listen and Learn.”

Early in the pandemic, the star wrote that “we all need to come together to fight the outbreak of this deadly virus.”

“So, please know how to protect yourself and others around you. It is important that all of us follow the advice given to us from all our medical communities. Everyone is at risk!” he wrote at the time.

But since then, most of his posts have been about the right to “keep on rockin’ in the free world,” quoting the Neil Young song.

Meat Loaf has had numerous health scares over the years, surviving so many injuries, he once joked that he was a “cat with 48 lives,” the Sun said.

In November, he told fans that he “hurt my back” and “have now had 4 back surgeries” in recent years.

“The back surgeries hurt everything,” he said of his absence from the spotlight. “Not a slight back pain. Pain that would bring you to your knees … I could not walk get in or out of bed without help. Could do nothing!!!!!”

Meat Loaf had railed against vaccine mandates. ANP/AFP via Getty Images
Meat Loaf faced a number of health scares over the years. Mirrorpix / MEGA

He said he now had “13 screws holding on a metal plate or plates in half my back. I tell ALL OF YOU, back surgery is the last thing you should opt for. Try anything else,” he wrote.

He sounded more optimistic by the end of November, announcing hopes that his planned “TV show will start up in March” — the last post on his page before the official announcement of his death.