The combination of her story and voice solidified Nightbirde as the most memorable auditioner of America's Got Talent season 16, with many predicting that she would win the whole competition. Unfortunately, the singer shared some bad news earlier this week when she informed her Instagram followers that her "health has taken a turn for the worse" since her audition. She announced that her "fight with cancer is demanding all of my energy and attention." Nightbirde exited AGT as a result. In her Instagram post, she remained positive, adding that she'll be "better soon" and she still has dreams despite being "pretty beat up." As a result, Nightbirde made the tough decision to leave AGT ahead of the live shows.
"Life doesn't always give breaks to those that deserve it — but we knew that already," she wrote in the caption of the post. "Since my audition, my health has taken a turn for the worse and the fight with cancer is demanding all of my energy and attention. I am so sad to announce that I won't be able to continue forward on this season of AGT," she wrote. "Life doesn't always give breaks to those that deserve it—but we knew that already. Thank you for all your support, it means the world to me. Stay with me, I'll be better soon. I'm planning my future, not my legacy. Pretty beat up, but I've still got dreams." Since my audition, my health has taken a turn for the worse and the fight with cancer is demanding all my energy and attention. I am so sad to announce that I won't be able to continue forward on this season of AGT. Life doesn't always give breaks to those that deserve it — but we knew that already.
At the time, America's Got Talent fans didn't know the full extent of her latest health update, but she opened up recently during an interview on CNN, whichNightbirdealso shared on her Instagram page. She echoed some of the comments from her Instagram post, saying, "I'm planning my future, not my legacy. Some people would call that blind denial. I prefer to call it rebellious hope, and I'm not stopping anytime soon." After dropping out of the competition, former America's Got Talent contestant Jane "Nightbirde" Marczewski opened up about her health status, revealing that her liver is "mostly cancer" right now.
The singing sensation auditioned for season 16 of the long-running talent show. At the time, she shared that she's been battling cancer in multiple areas of her body, with her doctor giving her a 2% chance of survival. Her optimism in the face of such a dire prognosis inspired viewers everywhere. For her audition, she sang an original song called "It's Okay." The judges were extremely impressed by her performance. Simon Cowell called her voice "stunning," and he hit his Golden Buzzer, sending the singer straight through to the live shows.
Another season of America's Got Talent has come to an end, and the Top 10 was chock full of golden buzzer winners still in the running for the top prize. Unfortunately, one golden buzzer never had the chance to make it to the finals, as Jane Marczewski – better known on AGT by her performance name of Nightbirde – had to withdraw from competition early on due to her battle with cancer getting worse. Simon Cowell, who had wasted no time in awarding her his golden buzzer following her audition, has shed some light on Nightbirde's cancer battle and decision to withdraw. Nightbirde, who was a favorite on this season of America's Got Talent, has been dealing with metastatic breast cancer, she told local Ohio news network WKBN, and was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2017. Her cancer then recurred twice, including in late 2019, she wrote in a blog post.
At that point, her doctors found tumors "throughout my lungs, liver, lymph nodes, ribs, and spine," she said, and they gave her up to six months to live. Jane Marczewski, also known as Nightbirde, was perfectly poised to win Season 16 of America's Got Talent. But, via video link, she spoke with the judges and host Terry Crews and shared her departure from competition prior to the live shows due to her battle with cancer. "Sharing my heart with the world on AGT has been an honor and a dream come true," she captioned a photo of herself in bed.
"My point of view this summer has been astounding. What a miracle that the pain I've walked through can be reworked into beauty that makes people all over the world open their eyes wider." Cowell hit his coveted Golden Buzzer, which automatically sent Marczewski to the live shows that started in August, but the singer announced that her "fight with cancer is demanding all of my energy and attention." But Marczewski said that her health "has taken a turn for the worse" since her audition, adding that "the fight with cancer is demanding all of my energy and attention." During auditions, the judges and host agreed to grant a group Golden Buzzer for the first time in the program's history. Although this would have meant six guaranteed places in the quarter-finals, one participant later withdrew from the competition to focus on her battle with cancer, despite receiving a Golden Buzzer. As a result of this, her place was converted into a Wildcard slot, with the process conducted via a special episode on the streaming service Peacock on the same night as the first quarter-final.
The process involved five participants picked from those who were eliminated during the deliberation phase, with viewers voting via Twitter over a three-day period on which of these would be their Wildcard in the third quarter-final. America's Got Talent fans everywhere have rallied around Nightbirde as she shared the latest on her difficult journey. As she said in the CNN interview, it's easy to just give up and surrender to the disease. Every step of the way, she has shown fans how important it is to see the positive in life. Even though Nightbirde is no longer competing on AGT, the rest of the acts are set to perform when the talent series returns following a two-week break for the Tokyo Olympics.
Hopefully, host Terry Crews and the judges will acknowledge Nightbirde's absence from the show and share heartfelt messages for the singer as she continues her health battle. She was clear that she was "so sad" to have to announce that she wouldn't be continuing on AGT, and thanked fans for their support. In June, Nightbirde was ranked third on Billboard's Top 10 Emerging Artists chart. At the time ofher audition, Nightbirde had cancer left in her lungs, spine, and liver. She had a2% chance of survival.Still, she wanted everyone to know that she is more than just the bad things that have happened to her. News that she was leaving the competition rattled fans of AGT and people who didn't even follow the season.
"Sharing my heart with the world on AGT has been an honor and a dream come true," she wrote in her new post. "My point of view this summer has been astounding. What a miracle that the pain I've walked through can be reworked into beauty that makes people all over the world open their eyes wider." The Zanesville, Ohio, artist revealed her cancer diagnosis while auditioning for "America's Got Talent." Her episode aired in June, and soon after, her performance went viral. Show creator and judge Simon Cowell called her voice "absolutely stunning" before pressing the golden buzzer, sending her straight through to the live shows in the competition.
"Sharing my heart with the world on 'AGT' has been an honor and a dream come true. What a miracle that the pain I've walked through can be reworked into beauty that makes people all over the world open their eyes wider," Nightbirde, whose real name is Jane Marczewski, wrote on Instagram. "You made the decision, rightly so, that your health is your priority right now," Cowell told Nightbirde. "I know the last time we spoke, you actually said you feel like you've let people down. I just want to say on behalf of all of us, you haven't let anyone down.
Even though you haven't competed, you've already won, as Terry said. Your clip has had such an impact on so many people with your courage and who you are. The most important thing is your well-being and your health and your recovery. On behalf of all of us here, we're sending you our love, our prayers and we can't wait to see you again soon. Thank you so much for auditioning on the show and for singing such a beautiful song."
Marczewski blew the judges away during her audition when she performed her original song, "It's OK." She also said during her audition that she only has a 2% chance of surviving metastatic breast cancer because it has spread to her spine, lungs, and liver. "Sharing my heart with the world on AGT has been an honor and a dream come true. What a miracle that the pain I've walked through can be reworked into beauty that makes people all over the world open their eyes wider," the 30-year-old wrote in the caption.
Singer Nightbirde announced she will have to drop out of America's Got Talent to focus on her "fight with cancer." Nightbirde, whose real name is Jane Marczewski, shared the update in a post on Instagram and thanked her fans for their support so far. Ohio's own singer-songwriter Nightbirde, who had to drop out of the competition to focus on her cancer battle, returned in a prerecorded clip where she spoke with the judges and host Terry Crews. Marczewski's audition for "America's Got Talent" went viral because of her moving performance of her original song "It's Okay," which tackled her personal struggles in dealing with an aggressive form of cancer. She earned the golden buzzer after performing in front of judges Simon Cowell, Heidi Klum, Sofia Vergara and Howie Mandel. With over 5 million streams on Spotify already, Nightbirde did win the love and support of the people rallying behind her. She did not get to finish out the competition, but really is the winner in the eyes of so many.
"Last time I checked, I had some cancer in my lungs and my spine and my liver," she said matter-of-factly, adding, "It's important that everyone knows I'm so much more than the bad things that happened to me." During her audition, which aired in June of this year, Nightbirde shared that she had cancer in her lungs, spine and liver. She was first diagnosed with terminal cancer on New Years Eve in 2019. "I got shocking news less than a week ago about cancer regrowth that has taken over my lungs and liver. So my liver right now is mostly cancer," she continued. "More cancer than liver in there right now. But like I said, I'm planning my future, not my legacy. Some people would call that blind denial. I prefer to call it rebellious hope. And I'm not stopping anytime soon." Metastatic breast cancer is another word for stage IV breast cancer.
In stage IV, the cancer has spread beyond the breast and nearby lymph nodes to other parts of the body, usually the bones, liver, and lungs, according to the American Cancer Society . Stage IV breast cancer is considered incurable, but treatment can help shrink tumors or slow their growth, improve symptoms, and help women live longer. "I'm petrified," the actress said when she shared the news that her breast cancer came back. Marczewski's performance earned a golden buzzer, an automatic trip to the live finals. Judge Simon Cowell, gave her the honor after her rendition of her song "It's OK," an autobiographical tale of her struggles following a divorce, which brought the notoriously prickly judge to tears.
During her audition, Marczewski shared that she was dealing with cancer in her lungs, spine and liver. Her audition video, which can be viewed below, has been brought in nearly 30 million views on YouTube. During her audition, Nightbirde—whose performance earned her a standing ovation and judge Simon Cowell's Golden Buzzer—revealed that she had cancer in her lungs, spine and liver. The fan-favorite singer who withdrew from "America's Got Talent" amid a battle with cancer shared an emotional message during the show's season finale. Judge Simon Cowell, gave her the honor after her rendition of her song "It's Ok," an autobiographical tale of her struggles following a divorce, which brought the notoriously prickly judge to tears.
After Nightbirde shared the interview on Instagram, many America's Got Talent fans took to the comments section to share how inspiring the singer is to them. Marczewski first announced that she would no longer be continuing her journey in the reality talent competition last week, Aug. 2. She told fans that her health has already "taken a turn for the worse," making her unable to perform.
Her beautiful and raw performance of her original song "It's OK" earned a coveted golden buzzer from Cowell, who is one of the four judges on the talent competition show. Nightbirde became a huge fan favorite following her appearance on the show and was seen by many as a strong contender to win the entire thing. She told the audience and judges about her struggles with cancer in the audition round and proceeded to wow everyone with a performance of her original song It's OK. She returned last week and spoke to the judges and host Terry Crews via video link, revealing her disbelief at just how many times her audition video had been viewed online. "I must be a fool in love, because even from under all this debris, I still believe Him. And when I'm too angry to ask Him to sit on my bed until I fall asleep, He still stays."
The 30-year-old singer, who was forced to drop out of America's Got Talent due to her cancer battle, shared an encouraging post on Instagram. But in a recent online revelation, the frail star opened up about her cancer battle, and how much her fans' support meant to her. During her audition, Nightbirde revealed to the judges that hercancer had spread to her lungs, spine and liver, and that doctors had only given her a two per cent chance of survival. "You made the decision, rightly so, that your health is your priority right now and I know the last time we spoke you actually said that you feel like you let people down," Cowell told her, holding back tears.
"On behalf of all of us, you haven't let anyone down. Even though you haven't competed – you already won." "It's so hard for me to not be on the @agt stage for the finals this week," wrote Nightbirde, whose real name is Jane Marczewski. "I bet you never saw someone win so hard and lose so hard at the same time." During the audition, Marczewski said she has a "2% chance of survival" with "some cancer in my lungs, spine and liver." After the Judges Cuts format was suspended in the previous season due to COVID-19, Cowell decided to replace it altogether for the second stage of auditions. His idea was to change it to a deliberation format, similar to the one used on Britain's Got Talent.
Under this new format, the judges would confer together at another site after all auditions had been completed, and deliberate on which successful participants from these they had voted for would proceed to the live rounds. Some deliberations were filmed and used to fill in the remaining portions of the final audition episode for the season, as was done for the British edition of the program. When the performer appeared during the auditions of the NBC show, she told the judges she had cancer in her liver, lungs and spine that gave her a two percent chance of survival.
America's Got Talent will miss the tunes and vocal flair of contestant Nightbirde, who shared on Monday that she will not move on with the NBC competition series to focus on her battle with cancer. What a miracle that the pain I've walked through can be reworked into beauty that makes people all over the world open their eyes wider," she continued to write. The Ohio native, whose real name is Jane Marczewski, revealed her cancer diagnosis while auditioning for the show. While introducing herself in the June episode, she noted that she'd previously been told she has a two percent chance of surviving her illness.
"Well, we've spoken a few times, and look, you made the decision, rightly so, that your health is your priority right now. And I know that the last time we spoke, you actually said you feel like you let people down. Well, I just want to say on behalf of all of us, you haven't let anyone down." The singer, real name Jane Marczewski, was poised as one of the favorites to win, but announced her departure prior to the live shows as she battles cancer.
She has been dropping subtle hints on social media and song lyrics from original music that she is working on. Ahead of the finale results show, Nightbirde wrote a post to reflect on her AGT journey. America's Got Talent Season 16 came to an end with Dustin Tavella named the winner. Those of us that have been following the season from the very beginning know that one Golden Buzzer was missing from the finale. Nightbirde dropped out of the competition due to her ongoing cancer battle.
Had she stayed in the competition, she would have walked away with the $1 million prize. Nightbirde, who soared on America's Got Talentearlier this summer with her heart-warming, golden buzzer-winning audition, has decided to leave the series to focus on her ongoing cancer battle. Her Golden Buzzer moment appeared in an episode that aired a few weeks ago.She sang the original song of the title fine, She told the story of her life last year while facing cancer.
"I've been feeling pretty rough, but I'm healing day by day. My favorite thing about this is seeing just how many people believe in miracles. And I suspect we'll see one," the singer wrote in one of her latest health updates. During the live shows in August, Nightbirde shared an emotional moment with Cowell when she made a virtual appearance and thanked everyone for the overwhelming amount of support she had received, which she said "restored my faith in humanity." The Zanesville, Ohio native, whose real name is Jane Marczewski, delivered a standout audition with her original song "It's OK," which is about the past year in her life amid her cancer fight. Fans have continued to support singer Nightbirde, 30, after she withdrew from the show, announcing on social media that she was no longer able to compete as her health had taken a "turn for the worse." AMERICA'S Got Talent singer Nightbirde shared a personal poem revealing how she would "like to die" as she continues to battle stage 4 cancer. Nightbirde, the 30-year-old singer whose original song "It's OK" stunned judges on NBC's "America's Got Talent," announced that she will be leaving the show to focus on her fight against cancer.
"I cannot say thank you enough for the opportunity to have a moment to share my story and we are witnessing such a beautiful picture of the human spirit," she said, adding that the overwhelming amount of support she received has "restored my faith in humanity." Nightbirde, a singer from Zanesville, Ohio, announced last week she was leaving 'AGT' amid her battle with cancer. "I am so sad to announce that I won't be able to continue forward on this season of AGT," she continued. "Life doesn't always give breaks to those that deserve it—but we knew that already."
On February 24, 2021, the new season's line-up of judges and host was announced, revealing that Cowell would be returning, following an accident the previous year that had forced him to be absent in the fifteenth season's live episodes. The sixteenth season of the American talent show competition series America's Got Talent was broadcast on NBC from June 1 to September 15, 2021. Although production was still impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, producers were able to involve live audiences during audition sessions and live round stages of the competition. After Simon Cowell returned to his role on the program after an accident the previous year, the Judges Cuts round was replaced by him with a new deliberation format arrangement similar to that used in Britain's Got Talent.
A planned break in the season's broadcast was also scheduled between July 20 to August 10, to avoid clashing with the network's live coverage of the 2020 Summer Olympics after they had been postponed to 2021 due to COVID-19. There is no cure for metastatic breast cancer, but doctors can use chemotherapy, immunotherapy, hormone therapy, and other targeted therapies to try to contain the disease and extend a patient's life. In some cases, surgery can also help manage the symptoms, such as preventing broken bones, the Cleveland Clinic says. Metastatic breast cancer is an advanced form of the disease that occurs when the cancer has spread to other parts of the body, the Cleveland Clinic explains. Only 6% to 9% of people have metastatic breast cancer when they're first diagnosed, the Cleveland Clinic says. It's more common for someone to be treated for a different type of breast cancer and then have it recur as metastatic breast cancer later on.
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