Bruce Willis' 90-Year-Old Mom Praised as 'Icon' for 22 Years of Volunteering with LAPD

Bruce Willis' 90-year-old mother, Marlene Willis, spends her Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays volunteering for the LAPD

People Bruce Willis and his mother Marlene in 2011Credit: Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Collection via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Marlene, known as Mrs. Willis around the station, has been volunteering with the West Los Angeles station for 22 years

  • She has previously been recognized as the volunteer of the year

Bruce Willis' 90-year-old mother, Marlene Willis, spends her weekday afternoons with a special hobby.

Marlene is receiving recognition after volunteering with the Los Angeles Police Department for 22 years. Marlene, who is known as "Mrs. Willis" to those working at the West Los Angeles station, spends her Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays checking grammar and adding notes to police reports, perNBC Los Angeles.

"I want to help so much, so much," Marlene told the outlet. "You have no idea. You cannot imagine how much I want to help."

While she is close with her own big family, Marlene also finds close friendships within the LAPD.

"This is my family," Marlene told the outlet of the LAPD. "I mean that 100%."

"Mrs. Willis is a very integral part of West Los Angeles and the LAPD," Cpt. Rich Gabaldon, the West LA station's commanding officer, said. "She is an icon here."

Police officers working at the station told NBC Los Angeles that Marlene's "presence alone" could bring a smile to their faces on hard days.

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"I think she means the very best of people that are individuals who believe in the work that our men and women do," former LAPD Chief Michel Moore told NBC Los Angeles.

Moore previously presented the LAPD volunteer of the year award to Marlene, along with another unique honor.

Bruce Willis with his mother Marlene in 2008Credit: Gregg DeGuire/WireImage

"While I can't make her a cop, I can at least give her the greatest symbol of what it means to be a cop," Moore told NBC Los Angeles. "And that is a badge of the law center police department.

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"Marlene, there are people in our lives that when you cross their path; they leave a lasting impression," Moore, now retired and living in Tennessee, told the news station in a message to Marlene. "You are one that has risen to the top of one of the best impressions. To you and the work you do, we will be forever grateful."

Marlene does not discuss her famous son or her manygrandchildrenand great-grandchildren around the station, but her screensaver is a photo of herself giving Bruce, 71, a hug.

"She was never one to wear her identity as his mother on her sleeve or even involve him in even passing references of her life, which impressed me," Moore told NBC Los Angeles.

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Bruce Willis' 90-Year-Old Mom Praised as 'Icon' for 22 Years of Volunteering with LAPD

Bruce Willis' 90-year-old mother, Marlene Willis, spends her Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays volunteering for the...
Belle Burden's Divorce Memoir Is Getting Hollywood's Attention

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Elle Strangers, Belle Burden

Despite descending from New York royalty, Belle Burden lived a quiet, happy life out of the spotlight for 53 years. As much as a Vanderbilt heiress could anyway.

Then she blew it all up with aviral "Modern Love" essaydetailing her hedge-fund husband of 20 years abruptly leaving her and their three kids at the start of the pandemic. Unlike the famed women in her bloodline (you may know her socialitegrandmother, Babe Paley, from FX'sFeud), she refused to stay quiet about her husband's infidelity and other upper-crust taboos—complete with prenup drama, a contentious divorce, and snooty social club rejections.

Strangers, her page-turner of the divorce and its aftermath, captured the hearts of Hollywood and high society alike. Fans include Katie Couric, Judy Blume, and everyone in your—and your mom's—book clubs. The first-time author's memoir became an instantNew York Timesbestseller, followed by a bidding war over film rights, with Gwyneth Paltrow executive producing and scoringthe lead role.

On a cloudy spring day this week in New York City, Burden shares the fallout—and despite it all, rebirth—with ELLE. Like in her memoir, she is vulnerable, kind, forthright, and self-aware. Read on for her take on Gwyneth, how the book impacted her kids, and why she made peace with the financial mistakes of her past. And yes, we get into the outrageous sandwich scene.

Your book debuted onThe New York Timesbestseller list in January and hasn't left since. What has surprised you most about the reception so far?

I'm honestly really surprised it's doing so well. I was rejected by all the major book clubs—Oprah and Reese and Drew—so I thought,This is not going to be a big hit, and that's okay.So when it exploded right away, I was quite surprised. I did not expect this kind of immediate enthusiasm, and it's been really wonderful. It has felt like a tidal wave of support from mostly women (and some men) around the world really seeing themselves in it.

Varietyreported that there was a "heated six-way"bidding warover the film rights, which have now sold to Netflix, with Gwyneth Paltrow set to portray you.

It's hard to imagine any great actress playing me. It feels like such a leap, but I think she would be great. She was so fantastic inMarty Supremeand it's so great she's returning to acting.

I'm assuming you would negotiate the production rights afterwriting an op-ed in theTimescriticizing how your grandmother, Babe Paley, was portrayed in FX'sFeud: Capote vs. the Swans.

I have no interest in writing the script, but I would want to be involved in the process since it's my life.

Have any celebrities slid into your DMs?

[Laughs.] No, no celebrities sliding into my DMs, but I got to meet Judy Blume last week in Key West, and for me, that's such an exciting thing because I worshipped her as a kid, as a writer. She taught me to read. She wrote the first books that I ever got excited about reading.

For my next book, I'm trying to write fiction, which is what I wrote when I was a teenager. And I haven't tried it in 30 years. I find it so much harder because I don't know what's going to happen next. Judy Blume actually told me the characters will tell you what happens next, and I like that.

Were there any negative reactions to the book that surprised you?

The negative is what I expected, which is: you should not speak openly about the transgressions of your children's father. So that does not surprise me.

One surprising thing was the very strong feelings around me making the sandwich [for my ex-husband after we told our kids we were getting a divorce]. Some people didn't really understand why I would've made it, and the key issue is that my daughter was sitting right there. I was really wrestling with what to model for her, and wanting to model that her dad and I would continue to be caring and kind to each other. Some people had seen it just as my compliance and being a doormat, but it was more complex than that.

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Strangers: A Memoir of Marriageby Belle Burden

How have your kids reacted to the book now that it's out in the world?

It's been a slow process, because first there was a decision around"Modern Love,"and then there was a decision around signing the book deal, and then two-and-a-half years went by, and I waited until my youngest daughter was 18 to publish. I never wanted to ask their permission because I think that is too heavy a choice for kids to make, because you're asking them to decide between supporting their mom and hurting their dad, but I did want to be very transparent and listen to them and hear their feelings about it. Their strongest feelings were changing their names in it, which I did. I had different fake names for them, and they wanted new ones.

I try not to talk very much about how they feel about the book because that is their opinion to share, not mine. I will say that they're very proud of me, and they also love and support their dad, so I am conscious every day that this is very complicated for them.

How involved were your kids in deciding what to omit and what to include?

They were not involved at that level. I was conscious the whole time I wrote it that they were going to read it. So there is nothing in the book that they had not lived through themselves or been aware of. My hope is that I have actually reconstructed for them the love story between their father and me, our many happy years as a family. When marriages end like this, it becomes only about the terrible ending, and everything before it gets lost, and I did not want that for them. I didn't want that for myself. I don't want that for my ex-husband, so I really thought about them the whole time that I wrote [it].

Given how intense the divorce was, were you at all worried about being sued over the book?

I went through four very, very rigorous legal reviews, and I feel very comfortable that I have written something that cannot be attacked legally. Random House in the U.S. and U.K. was not going to publish something that did not have backup for every single thing. I will say that my ex and I do not have an NDA in our settlement agreement.

Do you have any sense of how your ex-husband responded to it?

I know he read it last summer. Someone gave him a galley, but he has never told me what he thinks of it.

That feels like good news, I think.

Yeah, hopefully no news is good news, who knows? I do have sympathy. It's a lot for one person to handle.

I can't stop thinking about the financial vulnerability you faced because of what theTimesdescribed as an"oppressive" prenup. Against your family lawyer's advice, you agreed to your ex-husband's request to revise it so that anything earned during the marriage wouldn't be split in a divorce, while anything held in both your names would be. I wonder whether it might have been better not to have a prenup at all under New York law, but therevised agreementhe pushed for seems to have taken things to the worst possible place.

Well, it went to the worst place because I agreed to change it. So if I hadn't agreed to change it, it probably would have been the best-case scenario for me because I would have kept what I came into the marriage with, and we would have split what was earned during the marriage. But as you read, I put my assets into joint name, and he did not. I try not to talk about the prenup that much because I am not a trust and estates lawyer and I'm not an accountant, but I do think it's really important to have these conversations before you get married, whether you sign a prenup or not.

Did the prenup ever cross your mind when you put both your names on the houses you bought with your money?

I did think about it. I just thought that we were going to share everything. I thought that when he started earning money, that he would share that with me. It didn't occur to me that he wouldn't. The prenup said that we would share anything that we put into joint name. So I assumed that he would share his assets, and I can't go into more detail about that.

When you used your trust money to buy the family homes, do you think (maybe even subconsciously) you were trying to correct a power imbalance tied to your inherited wealth?

I was conscious of the power imbalance, and I never wanted him to feel less than. I think we try to build men up, and so often that is around finances and them being in charge of finances, but I think my decision to put our homes in joint name was really from a place of love and an intention to share everything.

What do you hope readers will take away from the book?

I hope that women who are going through something similar feel less alone. I think that's probably my most important thing. I hope that it makes people understand a little bit more the emotional damage that is left behind sometimes when marriages end. I hope that both my contemporaries, older and younger, take it as a wake-up call about really paying attention to their finances.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

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Belle Burden’s Divorce Memoir Is Getting Hollywood’s Attention

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What's next in the investigation into the deadly Air Canada collision at LaGuardia

An Air Canada regional jet landing at one of the country's busiest and most prominent airportsslammed into a fire truck at more than 100 miles per houron Sunday, leaving federal investigators and frightened passengers questioning what could have gone wrong.

CNN National Transportation Safety Board investigators examin the wreckage of an Air Canada Express regional jet at New York's LaGuardia Airport on Monday. - Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

The National Transportation Safety Board combed through wreckage, collecting data and physical evidence to find answers in the first days of an investigation that will take a year or longer.

"We have a lot of data right now, a lot of information, including information on tower staffing, but the NTSB deals in facts," said Jennifer Homendy, chair of the NTSB, at a news conference on Monday. "We don't speculate. We don't take one person at their word. We verify that information carefully before we provide it."

Investigators have released the plane to Air Canada, the airline said, which will move it into a secured hangar where teams will begin reuniting passengers with the personal belongings they left behind as they evacuated.

"Items will be safely returned as soon as possible, although the process of sorting and identifying all belongings from the aircraft will take time," the airline said Wednesday.

Air Canada Express flight 8646, operated by Jazz Aviation, had 72 passengers and four crew members on board for the flight from Montreal to New York's LaGuardia. The two pilots died and four of the dozens of passengers and crew who were injured in the collision remain in the hospital, the airline said.

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada, the airline and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the airport, will also participate as parties to the investigation.

The first several days of the investigation are going to be focused on data collection, according to Jim Brauchle, an attorney that represents plaintiffs in aviation disasters for the law firm Motley Rice.

"They won't be doing a lot of analysis the first few days," Brauchle said. "That's more facts and data collection and getting witness statements and those kind of things, while it's still fresh."

What happened in the tower?

Questions about the people in the control tower, their responsibilities, and if all proper procedures were followed will be answered in the course of the investigation.

Homendy confirmed Tuesday there were two controllers working in the tower cab, the top of the control tower which looks out over the airfield, at the time of collision. The "local controller" manages active runways and the immediate airspace surrounding the airport. The "controller in charge" is a supervisor responsible for the safety of operations, and on the night of the crash, they were also assigned to give pilots departure information.

The NTSB says the staffing was standard operating procedure for LaGuardia at that time of the night, but whether that procedure was adequate will also be investigated.

"We saw that there was a pretty heavy workload for these two controllers where you had an emergency going on; you had several flights that they had to attend to," Homendy told CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins on The Source Wednesday. "We will look at controller staffing entirely in this tower, but then across the national airspace."

Another part of the investigation is to determine which of the controllers were responsible for the aircraft and vehicles on the ground.

The FAA Air Traffic Control tower at LaGuardia Airport, New York. - Michael Nagle/Bloomberg/Getty Images/File

"It is not clear who was conducting the duties of the ground controller. We have conflicting information," Homendy said. That person would be tasked with managing all aircraft and vehicle movements on taxiways but typically not active runways.

There is also "conflicting information, including dates and times on the logs," of who else was elsewhere in the air traffic control facility, she said. The NTSB will have to "rectify some of those inconsistencies," Homendy continued.

The controllers involved in the crash continued to work for some time after the crash, and the NTSB will also investigate why they were not relieved more rapidly.

Eighteen minutes after the collision, one controller appeared to blame himself for the crash in a conversation with a pilot who saw it happen.

"That wasn't good to watch," the pilot said in audio recorded by LiveATC.net.

"Yeah, I know. I tried to reach out to them," the noticeably distraught controller said. "We were dealing with an emergency earlier. I messed up."

The pilot responded, "Nah man, you did the best you could."

Investigators will probe far beyond the comment and investigate every aspect of what happened and always note accidents often have complicated causes.

"Our aviation system is incredibly safe because there are multiple, multiple layers of defense built in to prevent an accident," Homendy said. "So, when something goes wrong, that means many, many things went wrong."

The NTSB interviewed the local controller on Tuesday night and continued interviews with others on staff through Wednesday, Homendy said. Investigators will also examine audio recordings the Federal Aviation Administration keeps of every tower radio transmission to determine what exactly was said and by who.

"It looks like it's a communication error," Brauchle said, noting that publicly available recordings of air traffic control audio appear to show "the tower both cleared the aircraft to land, and also cleared the fire truck to cross the active runway."

But he said investigations can sometimes reveal more than is apparent in the first moments.

Why didn't the controllers see the collision coming earlier?

LaGuardia Airport has systems designed to prevent vehicles on the ground from colliding, and investigators will want to know why they were not able to stop this crash.

The airport's surface detection equipment –ASDE-X– uses radar to track ground vehicles but did not warn the controllers ahead of the collision, according to the NTSB.

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"Due to the close proximity of vehicles merging and unmerging near the runway," no alert was issued, Homendy said.

The radar returns on the screen showed two "blobs" on the taxiway, but never showed one go in front of the plane, she said.

Another revelation was that the fire truck involved in the crash was not equipped with a transponder to help air traffic controllers identify it and know its precise location. Though a vehicle without a transponder should show up on radar, no other information would be displayed, and obstructions might prevent radar returns. Why a transponder was not installed will be part of the investigation.

While stressing the need to wait for the investigation's findings, Homendy said Wednesday that she and the team believe all vehicles on tarmacs should have transponders so controllers can see them.

An aircraft rescue and firefighting vehicle lays on its side after colliding with an Air Canada Express regional jet landing at LaGuardia Airport, New York. - Ryan Murphy/AP

Did the fire truck hear the warning from the control tower to stop?

Another area of the investigation will include looking at the radio transmissions between pilots of Flight 8646, the firefighters, and the control tower.

"Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop, truck 1. Stop," one of the controllers yelled as the fire truck pulled in front of the plane landing on Runway 4.

Nine seconds after the first warning, they collided.

The first radio call the fire truck made to the control tower more than a minute before the collision was "stepped on" by another transmission and was apparently not audible in the control tower, recordings from that night show, but later transmissions appeared to go through.

Investigators will want to know what was transmitted and what was heard, and will review recordings from the control tower, the plane's cockpit voice recorder, and interview other people listening to the frequency that night.

During the investigation into the 2025 midair collision between an Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines regional jet over the Potomac River, the NTSB found the soldiers in the helicopter didn't hear all the directions given by air traffic control due to a problem with the frequency.

For Sunday's collision at LaGuardia, investigators also will be looking into the status of the airport's runway status lights. These are a type of traffic light system that is embedded in pavement of taxiways and runways.

The lights should, for instance, automatically signal vehicle operators whether it is unsafe to cross a runway,according to the FAA.

"We … know from the replay that the runway status lights were functioning," Homendy said Tuesday. "But we still have to verify that with tech ops from the FAA."

Why was the fire truck cleared to cross the runway?

Perhaps the most vexing question: Why did the controller apparently clear the fire truck to cross Runway 4 when the plane was speeding toward it?

Controllers are working in high stress situations with long hours and busy airfields to manage. Investigators want to know if something was going on with them that may have contributed to the crash.

The two controllers started their shifts about an hour before the 11:37 p.m. collision and at some point took over duties in the tower cab, the NTSB noted.

Shortly before the collision, another plane on the other side of the airport declared an emergency after an aborted landing and odor in the cabin. Controllers dispatched the fire trucks and were working to find a gate for the plane in the minutes before the accident.

"This is a heavy workload environment," Homendy noted, but said no one should jump to conclusions.

"I would caution (against) pointing fingers at controllers and saying distraction was involved," she said. "We still have to determine what happened at shift change, which was around 10:30. We have to determine who else was in the tower and the facility and available at the time. We rarely, if ever, investigate a major accident where it was one failure."

The wreckage of an Air Canada Express regional jet and Port Authority of New York and New Jersey fire truck sit on Runway 4 at New York's LaGuardia Airport, on Monday. - Seth Wenig/AP

What was going on in the plane?

The cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, often referred to as black boxes, are two "critical" pieces to the puzzle in any aviation incident investigation, Peter Goelz, former NTSB managing director and CNN aviation analyst told CNN Monday.

The data recorders are expected to give some insight into what happened during the flight's final moments,capturing everything from what was said in the cockpit, to the sound of switches and automated warnings as well as what the aircraft's instruments were reading.

"They give you the functionality of the plane," Goelz said. "It will tell you exactly when it touched down. Did the pilots attempt to do a go-around? Did the speed brake work effectively? And it will discuss the comments between the pilots on whether they were following procedures, what they saw and how they reacted."

Investigators had to "cut a hole," on top of the aircraft to retrieve the recorders, Homendy said. They were then driven to the NTSB's headquarters in Washington, DC, for analysis.

The cockpit voice recorder contained more than 25 hours of good quality audio across four separate channels, said Doug Brazy, NTSB lead investigator. The flight data recorder contained approximately 80 hours of data and recorded more than 400 parameters.

What will the debris tell us?

While investigators moved quickly to recover data and comb the wreckage before any clue is lost to time or the elements, they have to be careful because some of what is left of the plane and fire truck is complex and hazardous.

"There is a tremendous, tremendous amount of debris from taxiway delta across Runway 4," Homendy said. "It's pretty expansive, and we want to make sure, because as you're walking around, you can get injured. There's also hazardous materials, of course, on the firefighting vehicle itself."

Runway 4 at LaGuardia remains closed until Friday afternoon, according to a FAA notice, while the NTSB conducts its investigation.

The airport, meanwhile, has reopened with flights using a perpendicular runway. As they whiz by, passengers can catch a glimpse of the wreckage and the investigators making sure they understand what went wrong so it never happens again.

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What’s next in the investigation into the deadly Air Canada collision at LaGuardia

An Air Canada regional jet landing at one of the country's busiest and most prominent airportsslammed into a fire tr...
Record-high temperatures set in over a dozen states as heat wave moves east

Temperatures reached record highs in multiple states on Wednesday, asa heat wavethat has been scorching the West since last week expanded into the middle of the country.

CBS News

The unusually warm weather tied or broke records across the western half of the U.S. over the course of the day, according to the National Weather Service, and warmer temperatures are expected to continue in the coming days as the wave moves east.

Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Utah and Wyoming were among the states impacted, with temperatures hitting 90 degrees and higher in major cities throughout the region.

The heat wave that has been scorching the western U.S. since last week is forecast to slowly move eastward, reaching the East Coast on Friday. / Credit: CBS News

Denversaw its hottest March dayon record, hitting 88 degrees at Denver International Airport. The previous record was 86 degrees, set just four days earlier, on March 21.

Phoenix was among the cities to see the most extreme conditions, after weathering triple-digit temperatures on multiple days already since the heat wave began, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration'sNational Digital Forecast Database. The Arizona capital hit a high of 100 degrees Wednesday, a daily record, theNational Weather Service confirmed. The city's last record-high temperature for this date was set in 2022.

A new record warm low was also set Wednesday in Phoenix, which recorded 68 degrees as its low temperature, theNWS said. The previous record was 66 degrees, set in 2025 and 2004.

Map shows forecast high temperatures for Wednesday, March 25, 2026. / Credit: CBS News

Other cities that broke their daily records include Yuma, Arizona; Las Vegas, Nevada; Salt Lake City, Utah; Rawlins, Wyoming, and Pocatello, Idaho.

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Tucson's seven-day streak of tying or breaking maximum daily record highs came to an end Wednesday when it recorded a high of 95 degrees, just one degree shy of the record,the NWS said.

Salt Lake City broke its daily record with 83 degrees. The old record was 78 degrees, set in 2022.

More than 200 additional daily temperature records could be broken through Sunday, said CBS News meteorologist Nikki Nolan. The heat wave is forecast to slowly move eastward this week and eventually reach the East Coast on Friday.

Map shows forecast high temperatures for Thursday, March 26. 2026. / Credit: CBS News

Central states are expected to see temperatures of 30 or 40 degrees above average for the time being, and Nolan warned that warmth settling into the Northern Plains will increase fire risks in that region through Thursday.

Numerousfire weather alertswere in effect Wednesday for a large strip of the central U.S., from Montana to Texas, and forecasters warned there is a "critical threat" of fire weather through Thursday for sections of the Rocky Mountains down to the Southern Plains. In addition to the heat, wind gusts in those areas could reach up to 40 or 50 mph this week, while relative humidity is expected to drop to as low as 4% in certain places, Nolan said. Those types of dry, blustery conditions can be conducive to wildfires.

Map shows risk of fire conditions for Thursday, March 26, 2026. / Credit: CBS News

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Kevin McKidd and Kim Raver to leave 'Grey's Anatomy' after 16 seasons

"Grey's Anatomy" is parking ways with two core characters, Kevin McKidd's Dr. Owen Hunt and Kim Raver's Dr. Teddy Altman, seemingly over creative differences.

USA TODAY

Kevin McKiddandKim Raverare both set to exit the long-running ABC medical drama after the Season 22 finale, the actors confirmed on Wednesday, March 25. Their exits are due to creative decisions based on a storyline, but the door is open for their characters returning in the future, USA TODAY has learned.

The show "has been a huge chapter of my life, creatively and personally, and I'm deeply grateful for everything the show has given me over the years," McKidd said in a statement shared with USA TODAY. "I've had the privilege of working with an extraordinary group of people throughout that time."

Kim Raver and Kevin McKidd in the Season 22 premiere of "Grey's Anatomy."

McKidd, who has portrayed the trauma surgeon since the Season 5 premiere in 2008 and has become a series regular ever since, added he was "particularly thankful to Shonda Rhimes for creating Owen, and for the encouragement she gave me as I stepped into directing."

His character, while not always the most beloved by fans, has been integral to the major plot lines from Hunt's stint as chief of surgery at the hospital to his romances with Cristina Yang (Sandra Oh), Amelia Shepherd (Caterina Scorscone) and also Teddy Altman (Raver).

Kim Raver says Teddy Altman holds 'special place in my heart'

Raver's cardiothoracic surgeon, Dr. Teddy, made her "Grey's Anatomy" debut in Season 6, joining alongside fellow 2009 additions Jackson Avery (Jesse Williams) and April Kepner (Sarah Drew). Altman was not only introduced as a mentor figure for Cristina Yang but also as a best friend and unrequited flame to Owen Hunt, after the pair served in the U.S. Army as trauma surgeons in Iraq.

"Playing Dr. Teddy Altman will always hold a dear and special place in my heart,"Raver wrote on Instagram. "To the fans, your unwavering devotion and support are the reason this show remains such a force. Thank you for making this set my place of magic and my home."

Teddy left the hospital in the Season 8 finale following the death of her husband, Henry Burton (Scott Foley), and later reprised her role as a guest star in Season 14 before becoming a series regular again in Season 15.

"I feel so fortunate to have worked under the brilliance of Debbie Allen, who not only mentored me but welcomed me into the Director's chair," her social media statement continued. "To my amazingly talented castmates and our formidable, tireless crew: playing in this arena with you has been a joy, and I will carry this company in my heart always."

McKidd and Raver's characters have been intertwined since Season 6, with Owen initially grappling with his long-term feelings for Teddy while also being in love with Cristina Yang.

By Season 15, the characters finally pursued a relationship together and later repeatedly faced tribulations from new love interests, including Dr. Tom Koracick (Greg Germann) and Dr. Cass Beckman (Sophia Bush), while sharing two children.

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The actors have also directed several episodes of the show, with McKidd having directed the most episodes in the show's history.

'Grey Anatomy' fans react to Owen Hunt's departure

While Raver and McKidd's exits are somber for the "Grey's Anatomy" family, some fans are cheering at the exit of the character Owen Hunt, who, at times, was far from being a fan favorite.

The trauma surgeon was heavily scrutinized for his actions in his past relationships, including screaming at Cristina for having an abortion in Season 7 and cheating on her in Season 8. Many fans blame him for the deaths of beloved characters Dr. Lexie Grey (Chyler Leigh) and Mark Sloan (Eric Dane), who died in a plane crash that occurred because Owen had booked a cheap flight from an airline with an unreliable history during his tenure as chief.

"Wait I'm actually shocked. Can they kill Owen off and keep teddy tho," X user @eggscrams wrote while@lovingbenleywrote, "NO WAY ARE WE ACTUALLY FREE OF OWEN HUNT???????"

"Oh look, finally Owen leaves a decade after I quit watching. I wanted him to die the year he came on the show 😂 …the character …I love Kevin Mckidd," user@MollyVegaswrote on X.

Shonda Rhimes says goodbye to 'bittersweet and joyful' exit

Series creator and former showrunner Shonda Rhimes shared a tribute to McKidd's and Raver's exit over a decade after she created their characters.

"Over the years, we have had the privilege of watching Owen and Teddy's love story evolve and deepen- two characters who always seem to find their way back to each other. It is both bittersweet and joyful to give this couple the happy ending their story deserves," she wrote in a statement.

She thanked McKidd and Raver for bringing "extraordinary talent, nuance and heart" to their roles and leaving "an indelible mark on Grey's Anatomy, both in front of and behind the camera."

<p style=Isaiah Washington (Dr. Preston Burke, Seasons 1-3): The quiet but intense cardiothoracic surgeon left fiancée Cristina Yang at the altar in the Season 3 finale.

Burke went on to win a prestigious award at another hospital and later ran a private research hospital in Switzerland, which he later turned over to Yang when Oh left at the end of Season 10. He then moved to Italy with his wife and two daughters.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Richard Flood (Cormac Hayes, Seasons 16-18): Hayes is introduced in Season 16 as Karev's replacement for chief of pediatric surgery.

A single parent and widower, Hayes later bonded with Meredith Grey over the grief of losing a spouse. He left Grey Sloan Memorial in Season 18 after deciding to return to Ireland with his children.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Chris Carmack (Atticus "Link" Lincoln, Seasons 15-22): A child cancer survivor, Dr. Lincoln joined Grey Sloan Memorial as the hospital's chief of orthopedic surgery.

Lincoln starts up a romance with Amelia Shepherd after her breakup with Owen Hunt. Although the couple goes on to raise Shepherd's child together, Shepherd turns down Lincoln's proposal for marriage in Season 17.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Jake Borelli (Dr. Levi Schmitt, Seasons 14-21): Something of an underdog, Schmitt was initially known as the intern whose glasses infamously fell on a patient during surgery. Despite the rocky start, he goes on to become a general surgical resident.

In his personal life, Schmitt came out as gay in Season 15 and began a relationship with orthopedic fellow Nico Kim.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Greg Germann (Tom Koracick, Seasons 14-19, 21): Koracick came to the rescue in Season 14 when he removed Amelia Shepherd's tumor and continued as her substitute while she recovered.

Koracick also struck up a tumultuous love affair with Teddy Altman, despite Altman expecting a baby with Owen Hunt. In Season 17, following a bout of COVID-19, he moved to Boston to work at the Catherine Fox Foundation.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Anthony Hill (Winston Ndugu, Seasons 16-22): Ndugu, an attending cardiothoracic surgeon from Boston's Tufts Medical Center, sparked a romance with his former teacher, Maggie Pierce, in Season 17 when they reconnected during a conference.

Ndugu and Pierce eventually married following a long-distance relationship that culminated in Ndugu moving to Seattle. The couple separated in Season 19 when Pierce moves to Chicago and Ndugu becomes the chief of cardiothoracic surgery at Grey Sloan Memorial.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Alexis Floyd (Simone Griffith, Seasons 19-22): Dr. Griffith works as a general surgical intern at Grey Sloan Memorial after losing her residency at another hospital following a viral incident, in which Griffith spoke up against a racist superior

Griffith lived for a period of time at Meredith's house but later moved out after Meredith moved to Boston.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Harry Shum Jr. (Benson "Blue" Kwan, Seasons 19-22): A Yale University dropout, Kwan was forced to leave medical school when his mother became terminally ill, and he was saddled with debt from his mom's treatments.

Kwan resumed his medical career after enrolling at a school in the Caribbean, later becoming a general surgical intern at Grey Sloan Memorial. He also developed an on-again-off-again relationship with Jules Millin.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Adelaide Kane (Jules Millin, Seasons 19-22): Millin, a general surgical intern, was reluctant to enter a romance with Kwan after she failed her previous residency placement due to becoming distracted by a relationship.

Millin also struggles in her relationship with her irresponsible family, whom she often has to bail out of legal trouble.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Niko Terho (Lucas Adams, Seasons 19-22): The nephew of Amelia Shepherd and Derek Shepherd, Adams works hard to hide his family legacy and prove himself at Grey Sloan Memorial, where he works as a general surgical intern.

Adams later moves into Meredith Grey's house after spending weeks living at the Grey Sloan on-call room.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Trevor Jackson (Wes Bryant, Seasons 21-22): Bryant, a charismatic and brash surgical intern, shakes things up at Grey Sloan Memorial with his messy love triangle with Simone Griffith and Lucas Adams.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Midori Francis (Mika Yasuda, Seasons 19-21): Yasuda, a competitive surgical intern, fights for her career ambitions amid her struggle with student debt.

Yasuda's financial troubles inspired Taryn Helm (Jaicy Elliot) to advocate for disadvantaged residents. Yasuda and Helm later start dating, which leads to tensions when Helm becomes Yasuda's boss as co-chief resident.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Scott Speedman (Nick Marsh, Seasons 14, 18-20): Marsh, a transplant surgeon from the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, met Meredith Grey in Season 14 when he collapsed during a visit to Grey Sloan Memorial (Grey treated him for a kidney transplant-related blood clot).

Marsh and Grey reconnected in Season 18 and developed a romantic relationship when Grey began visiting Minnesota to develop a cure for Parkinson's disease. Despite later splitting up, Grey offered him a position as director of Grey's residency program after the pair performed a triple organ transplant.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

'Grey's Anatomy' doctors who've come and gone, including Eric Dane

Isaiah Washington (Dr. Preston Burke, Seasons 1-3): The quiet but intense cardiothoracic surgeon left fiancée Cristina Yang at the altar in the Season 3 finale.Burke went on to win a prestigious award at another hospital and later ran a private research hospital in Switzerland, which he later turned over to Yang when Oh left at the end of Season 10. He then moved to Italy with his wife and two daughters.

"I'm so grateful to have had the opportunity to work with them both and to see them shine. While we will all miss seeing them in the halls of Grey Sloan Memorial each day, I am excited to witness where Kim's and Kevin's journeys will take them in the future," she wrote.

Current showrunner Meg Marinis said the two stars will always be "cherished members of the Grey's Anatomy" family.

"While their story is coming to a close, this is never truly a goodbye," Marinis wrote. "We are endlessly grateful for the years, the artistry and the memories they've given to the show and we look forward to cheering them on in whatever comes next."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Kevin McKidd and Kim Raver to exit 'Grey's Anatomy' after finale

Kevin McKidd and Kim Raver to leave 'Grey's Anatomy' after 16 seasons

"Grey's Anatomy" is parking ways with two core characters, Kevin McKidd's Dr. Owen Hunt and Kim Raver...

 

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