Yeah. I was with her. We were talking. She was in good health. Everything was going good. It was in the afternoon, about 1:30 or 2 o'clock in the afternoon. I had just given her a backrub. She sat down, and all of a sudden, she says, "Something's happening to me. Something's happening. " She was sitting like where you are, and I was sitting there. She said, "There's something happening to me. " I said, "What's the matter? " All of a sudden she just - her eyes went up to the ceiling and she lost control of her body. She leaned forward and said, "I don't know what's going on. " I got her so she wouldn't fall down on the floor. I got her up on the bed. That's the time when she just blacked out. I got on the phone. Luckily there was a fire station right across the street from the Holiday Inn. It was the Holiday Inn in Philadelphia where this happened. They tried to revive her. I got in the ambulance when it came. I noticed that she wasn't moving at all. I think she passed away in the ambulance, that quick. By the time we got her to the hospital, the doctors came out and said, "She's gone. " I stayed in there in the room with her and held her hand, and she's giving me signals what to do. That sounds farfetched, but it was. She was telling me how to handle the kids, take care of the kids, do this and do that, but she was gone. I felt the vibrations. That was quite an emotional thing. She was a beautiful person. She was a giver. She gave people, not only of herself, but anything else that she had that somebody else would benefit by, she'd do it. Like, for instance, every year she would go down to the fire station with $300 worth of chickens to allocate to the poor people. She was always for the underdog, always thinking about that. That's the way she treated her people in the show. At one point in our career we had a big show on the road. We had a choir - a big choir. That choir was [?].