Paramedics fought for hours to save Ozzy Osbourne before the Black Sabbath frontman’s death on Tuesday, according to a new report.
A Thames Valley air ambulance landed in a field close to the rocker’s mansion at 10:30 that morning, the Daily Mail claimed.
The outlet alleged medics tried and failed to save the singer’s life for two hours.
A spokesperson for the organization told Daily Mail, “We can confirm that our helicopter was dispatched to provide advanced critical care at an incident near Chalfont St Giles yesterday.”
Locals told the outlet that they worried “something serious was happening” when they saw the chopper.
One noted, “We immediately feared it may be for him as he was known to be in fragile health.”
Osbourne’s family members’s reps have yet to respond to Page Six’s requests for comment.
The Grammy winner’s loved ones released a statement Tuesday revealing Osbourne’s death “with more sadness than mere words can convey.”
They wrote that the Prince of Darkness was “with his family and surrounded by love” in his final moments.
He is survived by wife Sharon Osbourne and their three kids — daughter Aimee, 41, daughter Kelly, 40, and son Jack, 39.
Additionally, Ozzy was the father of son Elliot, daughter Jessica and son Louis from his first marriage to Thelma Riley.
The songwriter’s cause of death has yet to be revealed.
Ozzy suffered from a myriad of health issues prior to his passing, from Parkinson’s disease to limited mobility from a 2003 accident exacerbated by a 2019 fall.
The musician retired from touring in 2023 but did perform a farewell Black Sabbath show with bandmates Tony Iommi, Bill Ward and Geezer Butler earlier this month.
Ozzy had previously told Rolling Stone he would “die a happy man” as long as he did this.
“My fans are what it’s all about,” he gushed to the magazine in 2023.