Celebrities Don't Really Die in Threes ... Do They?

There's an old saying that celebrity deaths always come in threes (old, that is, if you're the kind of person who frequently reads or writes about celebrity mortality).
Sometimes it just seems to ring true. Back in June 2009, there was the funereal trio of Michael Jackson, Farrah Fawcett and Ed McMahon. When actress Brittany Murphy passed away in December of last year, followed swiftly by socialite Casey Johnson, the very morbid among us were trying to place a third. Some tabloids argued that though it happened several months later, Corey Haim's death by overdose fulfilled that triumvirate.
Going back another year -- to January 2008 -- Brad Renfro, Heath Ledger and Suzanne Pleshette all died within a week of each other.
This week, people are again talking about the "rule of three" in relation to the deaths of Dennis Hopper, Gary Coleman and and Rue McClanahan.
The rule of three can be traced back to Feb. 3, 1959, when Buddy Holly, Richie Valens and the Big Bopper all died in a plane crash in an Iowa cornfield. The theory gained a place in creepy celebrity lore at the end of 1970 and the beginning of 1971, when iconic rockers Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison died in relatively close succession. That one really rattled people, as all three died at age 27.
Since then, the so-called rule of three has provided a tidy way for folks to try to make sense of celebrity deaths.
So, is the universe trying to tell us something when three people a lot of people happen to be familiar with pass away in close proximity to one another? Or, as human beings, do we try to rationalize the horror of death by imposing some kind of order on random tragedy?
"The concept of things happening in threes is deeply rooted in religious beliefs like Christianity, the Holy Trinity, the Three Wise Men, etc.," explains 'Cult of Celebrity' author Cooper Lawrence. "But the notion that bad things happen in threes is mostly superstition. Two deaths may happen and we add a random, close enough third to it. Or there are four, but we dismiss the third to keep to our 'deaths happen in threes' rule. The reason we do it is that once we have found the third we no longer have to wonder if it will be us. Finding a pattern to death helps us master our own mortality."
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Recently Departed Celebrities
Dennis Hopper, May 29: The Hollywood wild man who lit up the screen in classic films 'Easy Rider,' Blue Velvet' and 'True Romance, died at his home in Venice less than a year after being diagnosed with prostate cancer. He was 74.
Getty Images
Getty Images
Bonnie Fuller, editor-in-chief of
HollywoodLife.com, has a keen eye for celebrity trends, and she also debunks the myth of deaths happening in threes, but believes that the myth holds true for other celebrity occurrences -- like pregnancies and marriages.
"I do think it is people trying to make a pattern out of terrible events, and there can't really be a connection between people who have no relationship passing away," Fuller explains. "But there are occurrences that do become like these viral events, like celebrity marriages and vow renewals, engagements and pregnancies. But that is more about folks being inspired by someone and the idea catching on in Hollywood."
It's interesting that in numerology the number 3 represents the number of communication, because a trio of famous people passing away really does seem to stir up a lot of conversation. But despite the number being significant in numerology, celebrity numerologist
Glynis McCants says that deaths happening in three is indeed an old wives' tale.
"It's just never true that they die in threes. There are always more or less, but people try to fit it into a three," McCants explains. "But because three is the number of communication, it gets people talking and by talking people feel like they are able to control death. We like to believe, if it is three, we can handle it. It makes people feel safe, but unfortunately the rule just isn't true."
Watch the Girls on Pop: Do Celebrity Deaths Come in Threes?
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I agree. Please tell me why John Travoltas son was mentioned last year..I may have missed the mark how many movies was Jett in? Was it tv shows...And while I have my fingers ranting. Disrespecting Farrah Fawcett and honoring M J at the award ceremony was totally out of line!!
I can't believe the writer of this a story didn't even mention Art Linkletter. I think he was more famous than Gary Coleman was.
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I agree. The writer started counting with #2.
Damn straight! Coleman was nothing but a fu-k-in criminal! Look at his long arrest record?! His "phoney celebrity" was the only thing that saved his @ss from jail! GOOD RIDDANCE TO BAD GARBAGE! But DON'T try to put him in the same category as DENNIS HOPPER AND ART LINKLETTER, who were absolutely TRUE CELEBRITIES.
You may like linkletter better but i gaurantee you gary coleman was known by a lot more people than linkletter. This is 2010 not 1959.
glynspsa - it's scary what a moron you are! You don't have a clue - go back and read up on Linkletter and you might just learn something.
Non of us know who is Art Linketter. Only a few of you. But we all know Gary==he was sooo cute in the Different strokes
Ronnie James Dio.
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gary coleman? RONNIE JAMES DIO!!!!!!!!!
yall r crazy!! gary coleman was just like any body else. everybody makes mistakes. who r u to judge?
Wasnt there some kind of betting place where you could get odds and bet money on anyone famous on when they would die? Seem to remember someone talking about this a few yrs ago.
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Yes there is and it is called the DEATH POOL.
NAW........... They just die one at a time.
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Very, VERY True!!!
You are right... I know people like to batch things in threes, but it's been more than 3 lately, as in, this past month or two - Lena Horne, Ronnie James Dio, Art Linkletter, Gary Coleman, Paul Gray, Dennis Hopper, and Rue McClanahan. That's seven. And the articles title refers to CELEBRITIES dying in threes, not "actors," or "musicians" or "TV hosts." Whether you love them, hate them, or are unfamiliar with them, they are all a type of celebrity... who's famous to you, may not be to another, it's all relative to who you are and what kind of entertainment you enjoy. For example, I work with people who had no idea that Ronnie James Dio died, or even who he was, yet I was very upset when he died, because I have listened to heavy metal for years. I am more familiar with his music than I am familiar with Gary Coleman's acting work, or even Dennis Hopper's. So of course my first thought upon reading the title of the article was, "What do they mean 3? Did they forget Dio?"
If they are going to mention the music industry then why is PAUL GRAY not included!?!?! RIP Paul.
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Thinking Barbra Streisand, maybe. She is really old or does she just look that way.
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uhh, ... Dumb-A-s-s, you gotta be DEAD 1st!!!
Wow, atti. You're an idiot.
Art Linkletter NUFF SAID
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