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Media & EntertainmentWednesday, June 17, 2026

Daveigh Chase, Voice of Lilo and Star of The Ring, Dies at 35 from Sepsis

The former child actress, who voiced Lilo in Disney's animated hit and terrified audiences as Samara in The Ring, succumbed to complications from meningitis after a period of homelessness and malnutrition.

Daveigh Chase, the American actress who as a child gave voice to the irrepressible Lilo in Disney’s Lilo & Stitch and delivered one of early-2000s horror cinema’s most indelible villains in The Ring, has died in Los Angeles at the age of 35. Her boyfriend, Roy Hernandez, confirmed to US entertainment media that she died on Tuesday after meningitis and a severe blood infection triggered sepsis and progressive organ failure. She had been admitted to hospital earlier in the month suffering from malnutrition, a detail that, viewed from Los Angeles, underscores a harrowing final chapter for a performer who had stepped away from the screen nearly a decade ago.

Chase’s breakthrough came in 2002, a year that defined her public legacy on multiple continents. She was barely twelve when she originated the role of Lilo Pelekai, the lonely Hawaiian girl who adopts a blue alien, earning an Annie Award for voice acting and embedding herself in the childhood memories of a global generation. That same year she played Samara Morgan, the drowned child whose crawl from a television screen became a defining image of J-horror’s Hollywood remakes, a performance that won her the MTV Movie Award for Best Villain. European audiences also came to know her as the English voice of Chihiro in Studio Ghibli’s Spirited Away, while Latin American and Asian markets embraced her through dubbed versions of the same films. Across the Atlantic, Italian and Swedish obituaries this week recalled her as the “baby star dell’horror” and the “skådisen” who made the ring cycle a cultural phenomenon.

After a supporting role in Donnie Darko and a five-season run on HBO’s Big Love, Chase effectively retired from acting in 2016. Reports from US outlets, corroborated by her manager of fifteen years, John Ryan Jr., describe a woman who became increasingly reclusive, grappling with substance abuse and periods of homelessness. Friends told American media they had spent years trying to locate her, unaware that she had been living in a homeless encampment in her final months. A GoFundMe campaign launched by Hernandez before her death spoke of a “painful break with her family” and a difficult childhood, framing her medical crisis as the culmination of long-standing vulnerabilities that the entertainment industry often fails to address.

The news ricocheted through social media in multiple languages, with fans from Indonesia to Argentina sharing clips of her performances. Indian and Middle Eastern outlets noted the irony of a voice that embodied childhood innocence being silenced so young. Public-health commentators in Europe have pointed to the meningitis-sepsis pathway as a reminder of how quickly untreated infections can overwhelm a malnourished body, while industry observers in London and Los Angeles are already drawing comparisons to other former child stars whose post-fame lives ended in tragedy. Chase’s death leaves behind a complicated legacy: two iconic roles that remain untouched by time, and a private struggle that the public only glimpsed when it was too late.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

21%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa latinoamericanaStampa atlantica / anglosfera
Stampa latinoamericana
distaccopragmatismo

Actress Daveigh Chase, known for voicing Lilo in 'Lilo & Stitch' and playing Samara in 'The Ring', died at 35 from meningitis leading to sepsis. Her partner confirmed the news, noting she had been hospitalized for malnutrition. Outlets recall her career from child prodigy to horror figure.

Stampa atlantica / anglosfera
allarmepaternalismo

Daveigh Chase, the voice of Lilo and the terrifying Samara from 'The Ring', has died at just 35 after a sudden health crisis. Her boyfriend revealed she had been hospitalized for malnutrition before contracting meningitis, which led to sepsis and organ failure. The tragic end of the former child star raises questions about the pressures of early fame and the hidden struggles behind Hollywood's bright lights.

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Upd. 05:07 AM2 languages · 3 outlets
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3 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Daveigh Chase, Voice of Lilo and Star of The Ring, Dies at 35 from Sepsis

The former child actress, who voiced Lilo in Disney's animated hit and terrified audiences as Samara in The Ring, succumbed to complications from meningitis after a period of homelessness and malnutrition.

Daveigh Chase, the American actress who as a child gave voice to the irrepressible Lilo in Disney’s Lilo & Stitch and delivered one of early-2000s horror cinema’s most indelible villains in The Ring, has died in Los Angeles at the age of 35. Her boyfriend, Roy Hernandez, confirmed to US entertainment media that she died on Tuesday after meningitis and a severe blood infection triggered sepsis and progressive organ failure. She had been admitted to hospital earlier in the month suffering from malnutrition, a detail that, viewed from Los Angeles, underscores a harrowing final chapter for a performer who had stepped away from the screen nearly a decade ago.

Chase’s breakthrough came in 2002, a year that defined her public legacy on multiple continents. She was barely twelve when she originated the role of Lilo Pelekai, the lonely Hawaiian girl who adopts a blue alien, earning an Annie Award for voice acting and embedding herself in the childhood memories of a global generation. That same year she played Samara Morgan, the drowned child whose crawl from a television screen became a defining image of J-horror’s Hollywood remakes, a performance that won her the MTV Movie Award for Best Villain. European audiences also came to know her as the English voice of Chihiro in Studio Ghibli’s Spirited Away, while Latin American and Asian markets embraced her through dubbed versions of the same films. Across the Atlantic, Italian and Swedish obituaries this week recalled her as the “baby star dell’horror” and the “skådisen” who made the ring cycle a cultural phenomenon.

After a supporting role in Donnie Darko and a five-season run on HBO’s Big Love, Chase effectively retired from acting in 2016. Reports from US outlets, corroborated by her manager of fifteen years, John Ryan Jr., describe a woman who became increasingly reclusive, grappling with substance abuse and periods of homelessness. Friends told American media they had spent years trying to locate her, unaware that she had been living in a homeless encampment in her final months. A GoFundMe campaign launched by Hernandez before her death spoke of a “painful break with her family” and a difficult childhood, framing her medical crisis as the culmination of long-standing vulnerabilities that the entertainment industry often fails to address.

The news ricocheted through social media in multiple languages, with fans from Indonesia to Argentina sharing clips of her performances. Indian and Middle Eastern outlets noted the irony of a voice that embodied childhood innocence being silenced so young. Public-health commentators in Europe have pointed to the meningitis-sepsis pathway as a reminder of how quickly untreated infections can overwhelm a malnourished body, while industry observers in London and Los Angeles are already drawing comparisons to other former child stars whose post-fame lives ended in tragedy. Chase’s death leaves behind a complicated legacy: two iconic roles that remain untouched by time, and a private struggle that the public only glimpsed when it was too late.

Source divergence

Media & Entertainment · 3 outlets · 2 languages

21%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral88%
Critical12%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa latinoamericanaStampa atlantica / anglosfera
Stampa latinoamericana
distaccopragmatismo

Actress Daveigh Chase, known for voicing Lilo in 'Lilo & Stitch' and playing Samara in 'The Ring', died at 35 from meningitis leading to sepsis. Her partner confirmed the news, noting she had been hospitalized for malnutrition. Outlets recall her career from child prodigy to horror figure.

Stampa atlantica / anglosfera
allarmepaternalismo

Daveigh Chase, the voice of Lilo and the terrifying Samara from 'The Ring', has died at just 35 after a sudden health crisis. Her boyfriend revealed she had been hospitalized for malnutrition before contracting meningitis, which led to sepsis and organ failure. The tragic end of the former child star raises questions about the pressures of early fame and the hidden struggles behind Hollywood's bright lights.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 2 languages

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